Beall v. Hardie

279 P.2d 276, 177 Kan. 353, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1955
Docket39,569
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 279 P.2d 276 (Beall v. Hardie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beall v. Hardie, 279 P.2d 276, 177 Kan. 353, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 224 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This was an action for construction of a joint will and to quiet title to real estate. The case was submitted to the trial court on the pleadings and stipulation of facts, and the court entered judgment quieting title in plaintiff, from which ruling defendants have appealed.

The facts are substantially as follows: John M. Wise and Ellen C. Wise were husband and wife. On June 8, 1915, they duly executed their joint will. It was headed “Joint Will of John M. Wise and Ellen C. Wise, Husband and Wife.” Immediately below the heading it stated: “We, John M. Wise and Ellen C. Wise . . , Husband and Wife, being of sound mind . . . declare the following to be our Last Will and Testament that our property may be disposed of according to our present wishes in the manner and form following, that is to say:”

Paragraph 1 provides for the payment of debts, and the remaining provisions insofar as pertinent hereto are as follows:

“2nd In case of the death of John M. Wise it is his Will and wish and he here directs that his surviving widow, Ellen C. Wise shall come into possession of all property both personal and real that he may at the time of his *355 death be in possession of or any interest in any personal property or real estate that he may at that time hold in any such property. “3rd Should Ellen C. Wise die first it is her will and wish and she here directs that all property that she may then possess either personal or real estate shall come into the possession of her surviving husband, John M. Wise, or any interest in any such property that she may at the time of her death have.
“5th It is the Will and wish of both Testators to this Will that upon the death of either of the members of this union that any and all property left by tire deceased shall come into the possession and be the sole and absolute property of the surviving testator to this Will.
“6th It is the Will and wish of both members of this Will that no Appraisement or Inventory be taken and that what property is left the surviving member, be not sold, only upon the wish and desire of the surviving companion.
“It is the Will, desire and wish of each member of this Will and Covenant that when both the members of this Will are dead that the real estate belonging to the said Testators of this Will the said John M. Wise and the said Ellen C. Wise that it shall be divided as follows between the two heirs and the only heirs named above, that is to say: — That all the following described real estate shall go to Willie Walker Wise, . . . and the following described real estate shall become the property of the said Clara S. Beall . . . ” (Our italics.)

John M. Wise died November 29, 1915 leaving his widow, Ellen C. Wise, and their two children, Willie Walker Wise, appellant, and Clara Samantha Beall, appellee. The will was admitted to probate, his widow, Ellen, electing to take under the provisions of the will, and the estate was closed on February 2, 1917. On February 20, 1947, Ellen executed a warranty deed conveying all her interest in the real estate in question to appellee Clara Samantha Beall. Appellee claims title by virtue of the warranty deed from Ellen, and contends that under the terms of the will Ellen had the power to sell the property during her lifetime.

Appellant contends that the will was contractual and the real estate in question was devised to Willie Walker Wise, and that the most Ellen took, as survivor under the joint will, was a life estate without power of disposition.

The determinative question presented here on the pleadings and stipulation of facts is the same as that presented to the trial court, i. e., what type of estate did Ellen C. Wise acquire in the real estate under the joint will at the death of John?

The answer to the question presented depends upon the proper *356 interpretation of the will. A rule for the construction of wills to which all other rules are subordinate is that the intention of the testator as garnered from all parts of the will is to be given effect, and that doubtful or inaccurate expressions in the will shall not override the obvious intention of the testator. In construing a will, the court must put itself as nearly as possible in the situation of the testator when he made the will and from a consideration of that situation and from the language used in every part of the will, determine as best it can the purpose of the testator and the intentions he endeavored to convey by the language used. (Lawrence National Bank v. Shirk, 173 Kan. 76, 244 P. 2d 179; 5 Hatcher’s Kansas Digest [Rev. Ed.], Wills, §101; West’s Kansas Digest, Wills, §§439, 440 and 441.)

This brings us to the first question. Was the joint will contractual? The terms of a joint will, or the circumstances under which it was executed, may show the existence of a contract, directly or by inference, so that equity will enforce its provisions in a proper case. (In re Estate of Adkins, 161 Kan. 239, 248, 167 P. 2d 618.) Throughout the will, the language used by the testators supplies evidence of an underlying obligation. At the beginning of the will it is stated that John and Ellen declared the instrument to be “our last will and testament”; that “our” property be disposed of according to “our present wishes”. They used the word “we” not “I”, “our” not “my”. They further used the words “will and covenant”, all of which imported a joint disposition of the collective property of both, and not an independent disposition of each of his or her own property. The word “covenant” means to enter into a formal agreement; to bind oneself in contract; to make a stipulation. The word “covenant” is also defined as an agreement, convention or promise of two or more parties, by deed in writing signed, and delivered, by which either of the parties pledges himself to the other that something is either done or shall be done or stipulates for the truth of certain facts. (Curry v. Cotton, 356 Ill. 538, 191 N. E. 307, 310.) The language of the will leaves no room for construction as to what the intention of the parties might have been. The will on its face shows it was contractual, and the real estate in question passed according to the terms of the joint will.

The next question for consideration is the construction of the will itself to determine what disposition was made of the property in question.

*357 Paragraph No. 5 of the will provides that upon the death of either spouse, any and all property left by the deceased shall be the sole and absolute property of the surviving testator.

Paragraph No. 6 expresses the wish that the property be not sold only upon the wish and desire of the surviving companion. From these two provisions, it is clear that the surviving testator by the terms of the will received a life estate with a qualified power of disposition, the only qualification or restriction being that the survivor could not make a testamentary disposition of the property covered by the will, in contravention of the interest of the remainder-man, set forth in the subsequent subdivision of paragraph 6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P.2d 276, 177 Kan. 353, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beall-v-hardie-kan-1955.