Brown v. Nicholas

171 Cal. App. 3d 1064, 218 Cal. Rptr. 108, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2482
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 1985
DocketDocket Nos. B008277, B008956
StatusPublished

This text of 171 Cal. App. 3d 1064 (Brown v. Nicholas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Nicholas, 171 Cal. App. 3d 1064, 218 Cal. Rptr. 108, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2482 (Cal. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Opinion

GATES, J.

Eleanor Brown appeals from the judgment that admitted to probate the two documents we attach hereto as an appendix, thereby pre *1066 cluding her from inheriting her adoptive mother’s estate which consisted of only the family residence valued by the inheritance tax referee at $32,500. Although argued both here and below under many different headings, the one determinative question presented is:

“May a formal will inadmissible in probate because of the false declarations made by each of its purported witnesses, nonetheless be given effect by treating it as if the testatrix had intended it to be a holographic instrument?”

Appellant’s testimony, which was unchallenged, established that though she and her mother had the same name they were not actually related, a fact appellant discovered only after her mother’s death. It appears that appellant’s mother and respondent Geraldine Nicholas, the mother’s sister, were at least 78 years old at the time of the mother’s death. Throughout her life the mother had led appellant to believe appellant was actually her granddaughter, whom the mother had adopted following the death of her own daughter.

Until early 1979, appellant had lived at home, attending school, working part time and caring for her mother. During the mother’s extended illness appellant took her to visit her doctor “a couple of times a month.” In mid-February of 1979, however, appellant, having obtained full-time employment, decided to move. A week or two prior thereto, appellant had met her aunt, the respondent, for the first time. Respondent resides in New Orleans, Louisiana and had come to California only for a visit.

Appellant’s decision to live by herself offended her mother. Therefore, the mother composed the two documents that form the basis for this proceeding, although concededly not on January 1, 1979, the date shown on their face. The first, a formal will that failed to mention appellant, and the second, a “To Whom It May Concern” letter that expressed the mother’s anger and purported to explain why the will read as it did.

Appellant further testified without contradiction or challenge that after respondent had returned to New Orleans, appellant’s mother “apologized and we made up and that was the last I heard about it [her mother’s initial displeasure] until after she died.” During the remaining months of her mother’s life appellant continued to care for her as she had done previously. That is to say, appellant would visit her mother every weekend, cash her social security check for her, purchase her groceries, etc., etc.

Appellant’s mother died on December 12, 1979, and appellant’s petition for letters of administration filed February 7, 1980, was granted. Four years *1067 later, however, respondent objected to appellant’s petition for distribution and on February 22, 1984, filed the subject instruments for probate.

Respondent did not testify at trial but the parties entered into a stipulation which provided that if she had been called she would have said that she saw appellant’s mother “working on the documents” during her visit to Los Angeles and that appellant’s mother “gave” them to her when she returned to New Orleans sometime in February. 1

Respondent did not aver, however, that the mother had ever declared the testamentary instrument was her will, or that she intended it to be effective until the attestation clause she had prepared had been completed. Further, respondent did not assert that the mother appeared to be of sound mind and acting free of any form of undue influence at the time she decided to give all her small estate to respondent and even to have respondent’s son act as her executor.

Most remarkable of all, perhaps, respondent did not explain when or how she came to complete the formal will by having three residents of New Orleans at some unknown date perjure themselves by falsely asserting that they had been witnesses to its execution by appellant’s mother.

The parties argue at great length the many arcane points that would arise if the mother’s incompleted formal will were to be transformed into a holographic one, e.g.: Could the mother’s nontestamentary “To Whom It May Concern” letter be treated as a species of codicil, or by some theory such as integration or incorporation be stretched to defeat appellant’s rights as a pretermitted heir? We need not consider such issues, however, for we conclude the will itself is invalid, per se.

“Our courts in California have gone a long, long way to carry into effect wishes of testators, despite informalities in holographic wills. Reference to our case law will disclose a considerable number of such instances. Undoubtedly the reason for this benevolent approach to the probate of holo *1068 graphic wills has been the human desire of men for a time clothed with judicial power to comply with the wishes of those who have gone to Hamlet’s ‘undiscover’d country from whose bourn No traveller returns . . . (Estate of McNamara (1953) 119 Cal.App.2d 744, 747 [260 P.2d 182].)

The current high-water mark in this effort to salvage a writing intended to be an immediately effective informal will was reached by the four-to-three majority decision in Estate of Black (1982) 30 Cal.3d 880 [181 Cal.Rptr. 222, 641 P.2d 754]. There a decedent, by striking virtually all the printed words on three 1-page will forms, drafted a document which she expressly intended and hoped would be given testamentary disposition without further formality. To thus salvage a will a testator clearly intended to be of the holographic variety is one thing; to convert a failed formal will into such an instrument is quite another.

As noted in Bird, Sleight of Handwriting: The Holographic Will in California (1981) 32 Hastings L.J. 605, 632: “. . . the formalities prescribed by the Statute of Frauds and subsequent Wills Acts are not mere formalism. They serve very basic and necessary purposes. If a document has been executed with the usual testamentary formalities, a court can be reasonably certain that it was actually executed by the decedent; that it was seriously intended as a will; what its contents are; and that the testator was free from at least immediate duress at the time of its execution. Only the first of these functions is served by the holographic wills statute, and even that not very effectively. Because the holographic form does not serve these other essential purposes, it leaves these matters open to doubt and hence to litigation.”

Here, except for the most laconic stipulated statement of respondent, we have no evidence to establish how the subject documents even came into respondent’s possession. On the other hand, from the face of the will itself it is clear that the testatrix anticipated there would be further formalities before it would become effective. Respondent obviously was aware of this fact for at some unspecified time and in some unknown manner she caused the will to be attested, albeit falsely, by three persons residing in New Orleans.

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Related

Estate of Baker
381 P.2d 913 (California Supreme Court, 1963)
Estate of Black
641 P.2d 754 (California Supreme Court, 1982)
Estate of McNamara
260 P.2d 182 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
Crosby v. Crockeranglo National Bank
381 P.2d 913 (California Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
171 Cal. App. 3d 1064, 218 Cal. Rptr. 108, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 2482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-nicholas-calctapp-1985.