Barnett v. Bellows

287 S.W. 604, 315 Mo. 1100, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 765
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 604 (Barnett v. Bellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Bellows, 287 S.W. 604, 315 Mo. 1100, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 765 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*1104 BLAIR, J.

Action to have a will declared revoked. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendants have appealed.

The testatrix was Delia Butler. She was a widow of John P. Butler, a former circuit judge of this State, and was childless at the time she executed the will in question. Subsequently she married one W. L. M. Witter. No children were born of that marriage. Respondent is a nephew of a deceased sister of testatrix. The residue of the estate, after making provision for certain small specific bequests, was given by the will to appellant Wineva Witter Phillips, a half sister of respondent Barnett. The estate amounted to $40,000 or more. Witter, the surviving husband of testatrix, demanded one-half of the estate under the provisions of Section 320, Revised Statutes 1919.

The trial court held that the marriage of testatrix, after sne executed her will, revoked such will under the provisions of Section 510, Revised Statutes 1919, and found for plaintiff, respondent here.

Appellants offered testimony tending to show that, aftex- her marriage to Witter, testatrix orally republished her said will. This testimony ivas offered on the theory that, if the court held that the will was revoked under Section 510, by the marriage of testatrix, it was nevertheless in force at the time of the death of testatrix, because she had orally republished same. The only questions for consideration, therefore, deal with the correctness of the trial court's rulings in such respects.

Section 510 reads as follows: “A will executed by an unmarried woman shall be deemed revoked by her subsequent marriage.”

Appellants contend that said section has been repealed by implication because of the enactment of our several married woman’s acts, including the right of a married woman to make disposition of her property by will. On the other hand, respondent contends that the married woman’s acts have not had such effect.

Appellants argue that Section 510 “is but declaratory of the common law enacted at a time when a married woman could not make a will, and when her incapacity to make a will after marriage prevented her from altering or revoking one made before marriage; and, this incapacity constituted the reason upon which the common-law rule as to revocation by marriage was founded; and, since these ‘fetters’ and disabilities have been one hundred per cent removed by enabling statutes, the reason of the rule has ceased to exist, and it has accordingly been held that the rule itself is repealed.”

*1105 It is true that Section 510 is but declaratory of the common law. At common law a married woman could not make a will and dispose of her separate property unless in accordance with an ante-nuptial agreement. It was therefore necessary that marriage should be held to revoke a will made while the woman was single, because her subsequent marriage destroyed her power to change her will. When the common-law rule that married women could not devise their property by law was abrogated by statutes giving them the same right to make a will as was possessed by a femme sole, the rea son for the common-law rule, that the will of a single woman is revoked by her subsequent marriage, ceased to exist, and, when the reason for the rule failed, the rule itself failed. Such in substance is the holding in the cases cited by appellants. However, the eases throughout the country are not all in harmony even upon that point.

But Missouri has enacted a statute on the subject which is declaratory of the common law. Let it be assumed that there is no longer in this State any reason for the existence of Section 510, for the reason that, by Laws of 1921, page 117, a woman of twenty-one years or upwards, whether married or single, may dispose of her real and personal property by will. But the repeal of a statute by amplication, on the ground that the reason for the existence of such statute has failed, is a thing far different from holding that a rule of the common law ceases to be in force when the reason for such common-law rule has failed.

A statute can be regarded as repealed by implication only when such statute and a subsequently enacted statute upon the same subject are in such conflict that both cannot stand. This rule is well stated in one of the cases cited by respondent. [St. Louis v. Heilman, 235 Mo. 687.] The rule is so well established that citation of further authority is unnecessary.

Appellants have not undertaken to show that there is any necessary conflict or repugnancy between Section 510, providing for the revocation of the will of a single woman upon her subsequent marriage, and any subsequent statute. It may be granted that the reason for Section 510 no longer exists. But statutes do not depend upon reason for their force and vigor. It is sufficient that the Legislature enacted the statute and that it violates no constitutional restrictions. That Section 510 no longer serves any useful pur pose, because a woman upon her marriage may immediately execute the same character of will which she had executed while single, may also be granted. Yet, unless there is necessary and unavoidable conflict or repugnancy between said section and statutes subsequently-enacted, Section 510 must be held to be in force. No such conflict has been pointed out and we axe unable to discover any.

*1106 The right to dispose of property by will is not a natural fight. It is entirely competent for the Legislature to regulate both the manner and the extent of such disposition or to impose such restrictions or conditions thereon as it wills. [State ex rel. McClintock v. Guinotte, 275 Mo. 298, l. c. 310 to 315.] As the Legislature has not seen fit expressly to repeal Section 510, it must be regarded as in full force and effect, because the Legislature has not enacted subsequent laws upon the same subject which can be said to be in conflict therewith. It may be that the Legislature should repeal said section as a useless incumbrance upon our statute books. But it is sufficient for the courts that the Legislature has not done so.

In Cohen v. Herbert, 205 Mo. 537, it was held that the will there being considered might have been contested upon the ground that testatrix contracted marriage after the will was executed. But, as the will was not contested upon that ground within five years and said will had been duly probated in New York, the will, made while testatrix was single, was given full force and effect in this State. The ease really rode off on the last consideration named and the court merely assumed, without fully considering the question, that what is now Section 510 was in full force and effect. Hence what was there said about the effect of said section was obiter. But we think it was a correct statement nevertheless.

In the State of New York a statute provided that upon marriage a single woman’s will “shall be deemed revoked.” It was held that the so-called married woman’s acts giving married women the right to make wills did not repeal the statute. [Lathrop v. Dunlop, 4 Hun (N. Y.) 213.] See also Brown v. Clark, 77 N. Y. 369, and Matter of McLarney, 153 N. Y. 416.

We

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 604, 315 Mo. 1100, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-bellows-mo-1926.