Arment v. Shriners Crippled Childrens Hospitals

1956 OK 53, 298 P.2d 1048, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 14, 1956
Docket36792
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1956 OK 53 (Arment v. Shriners Crippled Childrens Hospitals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arment v. Shriners Crippled Childrens Hospitals, 1956 OK 53, 298 P.2d 1048, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 511 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

HUNT, Justice.

On March 24, 1952, L. A. Bewley, resident of Tulsa, Oklahoma, died. Surviving him were his wife, Mildred E. Bewley, and plaintiff in error, a daughter by a previous marriage, who was 44 years of age at the time, and suffering from physical disability resulting from illness during childhood.

On April 10, 1952, the widow petitioned the county court to admit to probate a sealed instrument offered as deceased’s last will and testament. In due course the instrument was admitted to probate as a valid, holographic will, and a bank was appointed executor of the estate. The widow filed an election not to take under the will, but to take under the laws of succession, thereby being entitled to one-half of the distributive estate. Plaintiff appealed to the District Court from the order admitting the will to probate, but thereafter dismissed such appeal.

In performance of the customary duties the executor filed inventory and appraisal of the property enumerated in the will and made the subject of seven specific devises, upon the assumption same were a part of testator’s estate. Thereafter the executor discovered that legal title to six of. the eight tracts of real property which decedent had undertaken to devise was vested in decedent and his wife as joint tenants, and upon his death legal title thereto vested in the surviving widow. One tract had been sold by decedent prior to death. Of the property sought to be devised only one tract mentioned in the will was legally devisable.

Upon such discovery the executor filed an amended inventory and appraisal, excluding therefrom the joint tenancy properties. The widow then procured a decree of the County Court establishing termination of the joint tenancy and the vesting of sole ownership to these properties in herself as the survivor. This left for consideration only the property devised under what decedent designated in the will as “Distribution of Assets No. One”. This portion of the will provided, in substance, as follows: The real property located at 510-512-514½-516-516½ South Denver in Tulsa, Oklahoma, together with property (described by street address) in Cushing, Oklahoma, was to be distributed to the trustee, First National Bank & Trust Company of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the use of or income therefrom was to go to the surviving widow for her lifetime, and upon her death this property was to go to the Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children. However, the described property in Cushing, Oklahoma, was one of the joint tenancy properties mentioned heretofore and comprised no part of the estate.

Plaintiff in error was devised a life estate in two pieces of real property, one of which was subject to a prior life estate in favor of her mother, another bequest of real property was made to the divorced wife of the testator, one to a sister, one to his brother, one to 'a nephew, and one to a former employee, such bequests being a life estate with remainders principally to educational and eleemosynary institutions. With the exception of the first bequest of a life estate in certain real property to the widow and remainder to the defendant in error, the decedent' did not have any legal right to dispose of such property. The will contained no residuary clause and made no disposition of a limited amount of personal property nor of a parcel of real estate, the appraised value of which was $591, nor of *1051 the-homestead, appraised at $1,530.53, which was owned by decedent and his wife as tenants in common.

During the course of administration the property in Tulsa, mentioned in the first bequest, was taken in condemnation proceedings at a price of $40,000. Liquidation ■of existing indebtedness and settlement of •attorneys’ fees and expenses will reduce this amount approximately to $15,000, and it is this fund, in lieu of real estate, which is the subject of this litigation.

The executor filed petition for determination of heirs and distribution of the estate. Plaintiff then filed objections thereto and petition asking that- the will be declared void and the estate be distributed as intestate property. The petition set forth that the will disclosed testator’s intention to provide for his wife and child, but the legal impossibility of carrying out the entire plan destroyed such intention, precluded •a fair construction thereof as a proper instrument for distribution of the estate, and worked an obvious injustice by eliminating plaintiff as a beneficiary if the one remaining bequest in the will should be enforced.

The County Court, in its final decree of distribution, sustained the objections of Jeanette Bewley Arment to the-distribution of the estate under the will. Paragraph 2 of the court’s decree is in part as follows:

“2. That the failure of all the terms of said will except a part of Request Numbered One, which pertains to the property located on South Denver Street, and which is described as, The South 75 feet of Lot 2, Block 152, Original Town, Tulsa, Oklahoma, has so completely changed the subject matter upon which the will was intended to operate that it is impossible for the Court to effectuate the testator’s manifest intent, purpose and general scheme by enforcing the remaining part of said will.”

The County Court decreed the entire will void and inoperative as a proper vehicle of distribution, and ordered the estate-distributed in equal shares to the surviving widow and plaintiff, as decedent’s legal heirs, except as to the homestead, in which the widow was decreed a three-fourths interest and the daughter a one-fourth interest;

' Defendant in error, Shriners Crippled Childrens- Hospitals, appealed to the District Court from such order and judgment. After consideration of the case the District Court made written findings of fact and conclusions of law, the substance of which, is noted hereafter, vacated the orders of the County Court and entered judgment upholding the will as to the devise, Bequest No. One, to the defendant in error.

The Court concluded as a matter of law that the rule of law relied upon in the case of Scott v. Dawson, 177 Okl. 213, 58 P.2d 538, and McLaughlin v. Yingling, 90 Okl. 159, 213 P. 552, and cited by the plaintiff in error, did not apply in the present action, and that the petition to declare the will void and distribute the estate as intestate property should be overruled. Judgment was entered in accordance with the findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the case was remanded to the probate court with directions to distribute the property, most of which had been converted into money, in accordance with the devise, Number One, in the will.

Plaintiff’s theory of the case is presented under three propositions, the first two of which are based upon the rules announced in the two cases cited above and may be considered together. The foundation of the plaintiff’s appeal rests upon the application to the present case of the following rule, announced in the fifth paragraph of the syllabus in Scott v. Dawson, supra:

“Bequests' in a will, valid in themselves, must be rejected with the invalid ones, if the retention of them would defeat the testator’s general scheme adopted, or if manifest injustice would result to the beneficiaries.”

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1956 OK 53, 298 P.2d 1048, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arment-v-shriners-crippled-childrens-hospitals-okla-1956.