Shoults v. Williams
Shoults v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
The superior court of Los Angeles County denied a petition for the revocation of an order which admitted to probate a certain written instrument, holographic in form, as the last will and testament of Harry Streeton, deceased. Petitioner appeals. The respondent herein is the administratrix with the will annexed. The petitioner, an heir at law of said decedent, sought to have the probate of the will revoked, apparently upon three grounds: (1) That the instrument was not executed as required by law; (2) that the will had been revoked; (3) that the decedent was not of sound mind at the time the instrument was executed. In view of substantial conflict in the evidence, the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the trial court upon the question of mental competence is not challenged, and petitioner, upon this appeal, relies entirely upon the first two grounds.
After the death of Harry Streeton the instrument in question, which consists of a single sheet of paper, was found in an envelope. At the time it was found, the lower portion of the page had been torn off in such a way as to disclose, by “pencil-marks and dots” appearing along the torn edge of the paper, that there were written words on the part torn off. There were creases in the paper indicating that it had been crumpled. The document is entirely in the handwriting of decedent; the date is written in the upper right-hand corner of the page and, in the upper left-hand corner, on a line with the date and above all the other writing, appears the name of decedent.
*287 The condition of the will is best portrayed by a photographic reproduction thereof, which appears in the record, and is, therefore, reproduced in this opinion as follows:
*288
The alleged defect in the execution of the will is the claimed insufficiency of the signature as a token of authenticity.
*289
would seem to be the signing of the instrument with the intention of authenticating the same. This conclusion becomes the more compelling when we consider that the name is written in a blank space at the
beginning
of the instrument, for such a space is the most natural one in which to place a signature when the usual place at the end of the document is unavailable. The fact that the end of the page was torn off, whatever its importance in a determination of the question of revocation, if of any weight in a consideration of the sufficiency of the signature, tends to support, rather than defeat, the inference that the name was written at the top of the page with the intention of authenticating the instrument.
*290 With reference to the question of revocation there was the following testimony of respondent concerning the' condition in which the will was found:
“Q. It appears from the pencil-marks and dots along the tear that there was other writing upon this paper. Can you give us any light on that, or do you know anything about it ?
“A. I don’t know anything about it. I got it after he died. I. opened the envelope and that was the condition of the will.
“Q. With reference to the crumpled condition, is that the condition that it was?
“A. That is the condition—I suppose laying around. I have no other reason—I don’t know why.”
No other evidence was adduced. Petitioner, however, claims to have thereby borne the burden of proving a revocation. In this behalf petitioner relies upon the statement in
Estate of Olmsted,
122 Cal. 224, 230, [54 Pac. 745], to the effect that, where it appeared that an instrument during the lifetime of the maker had been in his secure possession and, when discovered by the two parties in interest, bore marks of cancellation, “From these circumstances alone arise the presumptions: 1. That the cancellations were the act of the testator; and 2. That they were performed with the intent and purpose of revoking the instrument.” The facts of that case 'are, however, distinguishable from the facts now presented. . In the case at bar'there was, apparently, no proof that the will had been continually under the control of the testator until the time of his death; moreover, the acts from which it is claimed the intent to revoke is presumed are of a different character from the acts proved in the
Estate of Olmsted.
In that case it was also said: “What act of destruction will supply the requirement of the statute is a question much discussed. It is apparent that the destruction may be total or partial. The will, for example, may be wholly burned or totally obliterated, or it may be but partially destroyed, and still legible. Generally, it may be said that,
if the intent to revoke clearly appears, a slight act within the statute will he deemed sufficient.”
(Italics are ours.)
Nor does the fact that a portion of the will as originally drafted was torn from the remaining text raise any presumption of an intention to revoke the whole instrument. “The slightest act of tearing with intent to revoke the whole will is sufficient for the purpose. But the whole will is not necessarily revoked by the destruction of a part. It is the
animus
which must govern the extent and measure of operation to be attributed to the act, and determine whether the act shall effect the revocation of the whole instrument, or only of some, and what portion thereof. It is obvious that the mutilation may be of such a part as to afford evidence that the deceased did not intend the document any longer to operate as his will.
*292 The document was carefully torn so as to leave the portion found in the envelope intact and complete in itself. The torn edge is practically horizontal, with the exception of the lower left-hand corner, where the horizontal line is departed from so as to preserve two syllables of a word divided at the ' end of the preceding line. The mutilation is a partial one “which does not affect the instrument as an entirety, or destroy that part which gives effect to the whole. ’ ’
The order is affirmed.
Wilbur, J., and Sloane, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of the Estate of HARRY STREETON, Deceased. EMMA LOUISE SHOULTS, Appellant, v. NELLIE WILLIAMS, Administratrix, Respondent
- Cited By
- 29 cases
- Status
- Published