Muller v. Muller

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE BUBNAM

Beversinu.

Appellants, without notice to appellees, caused a papen dated July 22, 1893, to be probated in the McCracken County Court on the 12th day of May, 1897, as the last will and testament of Barbara Muller, deceased. Appellees appealed to the circuit court, and on the trial the jury found the .paper not to be the last will of Barbara Muller, and judgment was rendered in accordance therewith. This paper devised to appellants property of the value of several thousand dollars-, and excluded appellees, with the exception of a bequest of five dollars to each of them.

The grounds relied upon by appellees for setting aside. *513the will probated by the county court were: First, that that testatrix had subsequent. to its execution, in 1865, executed another will, in which she made an entirely different disposition of her property, and in which she pro. vided for appellees equally with appellants, and which had either been mislaid or destroyed subsequently; second, that the will of 1893 was procured by reason of the undue influence of William Muller and others over testatrix. Appellants denied, in substance, that the will of 1893 was re-' yoked by testatrix by the execution of any • subsequent paper, or that she wTas induced to execute it by undue influence. There seems to have been little or no testimony offered to support the charge of undue influence,, and the real point relied upon by appellees to invalidate the will of 1893, was that the execution of the will of 1895, in due form of law, ipso facto revoked all previous wills executed by testatrix, while on the other hand it was the contention of appellants that the mere proof of the execution of the paper of 1895 did not necessarily revoke the will of 1893, and that the burden was upon appellees to have shown either that it contained a clause expressly revoking the earlier will, which existed uncanceled, or that testatrix by the execution of the last paper made a disposition of her property which was entirely inconsistent with the will of 1893, and that it wa& intended by her to take the place of the former paper.

Section 4832 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that “the will of a testator will be revoked by his subsequent marriage,” with certain exceptions pointed out in the statute. Section 4833 provides that “no will or codicil, or any part thereof, shall be revoked unless by the marriage of the testator, or by a subsequent will or codicil or by some writ*514ing declaring an intention to revoke the same executed in the manner in which a will is- required to be executed.” The statute does not say that the mere execution by testator of a subsequent testamentary paper, or paper purporting to be a subsequent will, shall ipso facto revoke all previous wills. On the contrary, it provides that a will duly executed shall not be revoked except by the marriage of testator, or by a subsequent will or codicil or writing, declaring an intention to revoke, executed in the same manner in which a will is required to be executed. If the mere execution of a subsequent testamentary paper, without regard to its intent or contents, necessarily revokes in toto all former wills, it would follow that the execution of a codicil, without regard to its contents, would also have the same effect to revoke a prior will in toto, as the statute uses the term “subsequent will or codicil” in exactly' the same sense. The law is well settled that a subsequent will does not revoke a former one unless it contains a clause of revocation, or is substantially inconsistent with it. AYhere it is inconsistent with the former will only in some of its provisions, it is only a revocation pro tanto. See Nelson v. McGiffert, 3 Barb. Ch., 158; Brant v. Wilson, 8 Cow., 56; and Minor v. Guthrie, (Ky.), 4 S. W., 179. Schouler, Wills, section 407, says: “The latter will, though well executed, does not revoke the earlier one, as such, and without express words of revocation, except by being inconsistent with it. And by the extent of such inconsistency must be measured the extent of the revocation. To operate a total revocation in such a case, the two dispositions must be so plainly inconsistent as to be incapable of standing together. Only a revocation pro tanto results where the effect is that of a partial inconsistency. It is like making a will, and then adding a codicil; the final disposition reading by the *515light of both instruments together, as a correct whole. For any number of testamentary instruments-, executed at different times, may constitute one’s ‘last will,’ in legal effect. . . . The governing principle in all such cases is the testator’s intention. And one’s intention in making a new will may have been to dispose of other property or make new provisions perfectly consistent with the former, or else thereby to revoke pro tanto by amendment. It does not follow that a full revocation was intended.” And the same author, in secttion 412, says: “The execution of a subsequent will of different tenor operates to revoke a former one, notwithstanding the latter will be lost or mislaid, or at least can not be found at testator’s death. . . . But where a will which can not be produced is relied upon, as revoking by implication a former one, its contents should be thoroughly established. And the mere fact that a later will was made by no means justifies the inference that it revokes in effect, without proof of its actual contents.” Williams, Ex’rs, section 162, says: “A subsequent will revokes only so much of a former will as is inconsistent with the last instrument. If, therefore, the latter or latest will dispose of the whole of the testator’s estate, all former wills are thereby revoked; but if, in the absence of an expressed revocation, a partial disposition of the estate is thereby made, consistent with the dispositions made in the prior will or wills, or with a portion of them, they may both or all stand as the last will of the testator, to the extent to which the latter do not exclude the former. It is clear that it is the duty of the court to give effect to every part of every will of the testator, if the several dispositions can be reconciled; the rule of construction being substantially the same where there are several wills to be harmonized, as where there are several *516clauses in the same will or in a will and codicil. Subsequent wills, indeed, perform the office of codicils. It is held that the revocation of a will may be proved by proving the execution of a subsequent will by the testator, which is lost, and has not been, therefore, admitted to probate. This rule is necessarily confined to cases where the subsequent will either expressly revokes the former, or contains a different disposition of the whole estate, as by appointment of an executor and residuary legatee; and the evidence to establish its execution, as well' as its inconsistency with the former will, should be clear and satisfactory. There can be no revocation by a later will,-of which, the contents are unknown.”

The testimony in this case shows conclusively the execution by the testatrix in 1895 of a testamentary paper. Graves, one of the attesting witnesses, says that decedent came to the office of Mr. Lightfoot and himself, accompanied by his son, for the purpose of having a will prepared; that he wrote tbe will at the dictation of Mr. Light-foot; that 'each clause was read and explained to testatrix; that it was duly signed and executed by her, and attested bjr himself and Mr. Winchester; that she took the will away with her; and that he had never seen it after-wards. The testimony of Winchester is to the same effect.

Contestants offered to prove by the witness Graves that the paper prepared by him was a lengthy document, purporting to dispose of the whole estate of testatrix, and that it was his recollection that it gave to contestant John P. Muller a house and lot in Paducah, Ky. This testimony was objected to, and the objection sustained, and we think erroneously. After proof that this paper was lost and could not be found, it was competent to establish its contents by parol testimony, and to show either that it con*517tained a. clause revoking all former wills, or that it made a disposition of her property which was inconsistent with the bequests of the former will; and the declaration of the testatrix as to the contents of the will itself were competent, as secondary evidence, to show its provisions, and to establish the fact that they were inconsistent with those of the former paper, as the burden of proof was on contestants not only to show a due and proper execution of the last instrument, but also that the disposition of the property of testatrix therein made was substantially different from that made in the will offered for probate, and inconsistent therewith.

In all of the instructions given, to the jury on the trial they were told, in substance, that the mere execution of a subsequent will was of itself sufficient to authorize them to find that the prior will had thereby been revoked, and all testimony offered byv contestants conducing to establish the contents of the last will, and to show its inconsistency with the former will, was excluded upon the ground that it was immaterial. We think the court erred in the instruction given to the jury and in the rejection of this testimony, and for these reasons the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.

Judge G-uffy dissents.