Cedars of Lebanon Hospital v. Pagel

125 P.2d 853, 52 Cal. App. 2d 38, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1942
DocketCiv. 13578
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 125 P.2d 853 (Cedars of Lebanon Hospital v. Pagel) 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
Cedars of Lebanon Hospital v. Pagel, 125 P.2d 853, 52 Cal. App. 2d 38, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 237 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*40 HANSON, J. pro tem.

In its final analysis the question for decision is whether a letter dated and signed by the decedent in his own handwriting and directed to the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital is or is not to be regarded as a testamentary disposition of his property to the hospital. The letter was admitted to probate as an holographic will, but thereafter at the behest of a brother and nephew of the decedent its probate was revoked on the ground that it did not disclose an intent that it should operate as a will. Accordingly, Cedars of Lebanon Hospital is here as appellant, contending, not that the document on its face was necessarily executed with animus testandi, but that the court erred prejudically in refusing to receive and consider parol evidence of certain declarations by decedent, made prior and subsequent to the execution of the letter, bearing on decedent’s intent that the letter should operate as a will.

We shall state the facts as they could have been found on the evidence received, refused and stricken, as we think that on all of such evidence the court would not have been entitled to find for appellant.

The decedent having been a patient of Cedars of Lebanon Hospital some time prior to October 15,-1939, he was again admitted therein as a patient on or about that date. He died in the hospital on November 26, 1939. On November 21, 1939, the decedent requested the presence of the manager of the hospital at his bedside. When the manager came the decedent handed him a sealed envelope and requested that he write on it, “To be opened after my death by Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. ’ ’ This was done, and thereupon decedent delivered the envelope to the manager with the remark that he was leaving all of his money to the hospital. After the death of decedent the sealed envelope was opened and was found to contain a letter directed to the hospital in decedent’s handwriting, written in German and signed by him under date of October 17, 1939. This letter was offered for probate as a holographic will and probated as such. As translated it is set forth in the margin. 1

*41 On the same day that decedent entered the hospital, October 15,1939, he told his landlord, a Mr. Cohen, that he had written a letter leaving all his belongings to the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. Whether the letter offered for probate, which is dated October 17, 1939, was postdated or erroneously dated, or is the letter referred to, is not shown by the record. On November 15, 1939, one Sommers, an employee of a Jewish social welfare organization, visited the decedent, and according to his testimony decedent said: “Can you get me an attorney so I can make a will leaving my property to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. I have relatives but my relations with them are strained. ’ ’ The court refused to receive the testimony of Cohen and struck out the testimony of Sommers.

In cases of the character of the one here involved little assistance is to be derived from a consideration of the facts found in the adjudicated eases. Accordingly we shall have occasion only to state the controlling principles of law and apply them to the facts of the case before us.

The American and English authorities are unanimous in holding that any writing executed with the formalities required for an attested or holographic will and containing posthumous dispositions may, regardless of its form, be given effect as a will. (54 A. L. R. 918; 28 R. C. L. 113.) The fact that there are nontestamentary provisions, as here, along with those testamentary, and that the latter are a very small part of the bulk of the document, does not make such small part inoperative as a will. (Estate of Button, 209 Cal. 325 [287 Pac. 964]; 1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed., § 46.) Moreover, while all the courts agree that the writing must be executed with animus testandi, there is nevertheless a difference of opinion as to the manner in which testamentary intent is or may be shown. Where a testamentary intent is clearly deducible from the writing itself and it meets the other formalities required for a will, all the authorities hold there is a presumption of testamentary intent. (1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed. §§ 50-52, 59. *42 See, also, Estate of Maloney, 27 Cal. App. (2d) 332 [80 P. (2d) 998]—hearing denied by Supreme Court.) While the courts often say that this presumption is rebuttable, an examination of the cases will show that the presumption is rebuttable only where an issue is made that the maker was without testamentary capacity, or that the will was procured by fraud, duress or undue influence, or that it had been revoked, or when executed it was not intended to operate as a will. (Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd ed., § 2421; Estate of Janes, 18 Cal. (2d) 512 [116 P. (2d) 438] ; In re Siemers’ Estate, 202 Cal. 424 [261 Pac. 298]; 1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed., § 53.) Moreover, if the writing is free from ambiguity on its face it may not be shown that the maker thereof it to operate as an instrument of a type different from that which on its face it purports to be, except in England and in a few American jurisdictions, of which California is not one. (1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed., § 59.) Where, however, a writing executed with the formalities of a will does not disclose a posthumous disposition by the very terms of the writing, parol evidence may not be received to supply the necessary animus testandi, either in this state (Estate of Young, 123 Cal. 337 [55 Pac. 1011]; Estate of Kenyon, 42 Cal. App. (2d) 423 [109 P. (2d) 38]) or by the great weight of authority in this country. (1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed., §§ 57, 59.) But if the language of the instrument is ambiguous, so that it is not clear whether the maker did or did not intend the writing to operate as a will, by the great weight of American authority, as well as by English authority, extrinsic parol evidence is admissible to show the fact. (In re Spitzer’s Estate, 196 Cal. 301 [237 Pac. 739] ; 1 Page on Wills, 3rd ed., § 59.) But the type of parol evidence admissible is necessarily governed by general rules of evidence. statements of a decedent made prior to the writing relied upon as a will are admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule, as they involve a future plan or design (In re Spitzer’s Estate, supra). But statements made after the execution of the writing relied upon are not within any recognized exception to the hearsay rule (Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd ed., §§ 1735, 1736) and so by the weight of authority are not admissible. However, some courts have evolved a special exception to the rule and so admit declarations of the maker that he has or has not made a will or one of a particular tenor. Still others hold the declarations are admissible on the theory that *43 represent a state of mind, i. e., opinion or belief, and so are within that recognized exception to the hearsay rule. (Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd ed., § 1736.) In cases where the issue is forgery California follows this rule. (Morrison’s Estate, 198 Cal. 1 [242 Pac. 939]; Thompson’s Estate, 200 Cal. 410 [253 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
125 P.2d 853, 52 Cal. App. 2d 38, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedars-of-lebanon-hospital-v-pagel-calctapp-1942.