DeBuck v. Hillaert

313 Mich. 344
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1946
DocketDocket No. 69; Calendar No. 43,014
StatusPublished

This text of 313 Mich. 344 (DeBuck v. Hillaert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeBuck v. Hillaert, 313 Mich. 344 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

North, J.

Mrs. Lena Hillaert died testate in April, 1943. Upon filing of a petition in the Wayne county probate court for the probate of decedent’s will, her surviving husband, Alphonse Hillaert, filed objections to the admittance of the will to probate. The controversy was certified to the circuit court of Wayne county. Upon trial by jury the will was sustained. Contestant has appealed.

One of the grounds relied upon by contestant is that subsequent to the making of the will in suit, a common-law marriage was consummated between contestant and decedent, and contestant claims that in consequence of such marriage decedent’s will was revoked.

Testatrix and contestant were first married in 1915. In 1937 she secured a divorce from contestant. Shortly thereafter she married a man by the name of Vander Heyden; but testatrix divorced him in 1939. Thereafter in 1939 testatrix made the will in suit. In answer to a special question the jury found, and for the purpose of decision herein it may be admitted, that subsequent to her divorce from Vander Heyden, testatrix and contestant in September, 1941, entered into a common-law marriage. There were no children born of the marriáges of testatrix to contestant. With the exception of two small bequests, testatrix left her estate in equal shares to her sister, Mrs. William Blaess, and her niece, Mrs. Eay DeBuck, the latter being the proponent of the will.

[346]*346Contestant asserts that his marriage to testatrix in 1941, notwithstanding there was no issue of such marriage, revoked the will made prior to such marriage. But he is confronted with our holding in Noyes v. Southworth, 55 Mich. 173 (54 Am. Rep. 359), wherein the syllabus reads: “A woman’s will is not revoked by her subsequent marriage so long, at least, as no children are born.” However, appellant points out that in Durfee v. Risch, 142 Mich. 504 (5 L. R. A. [N. S.] 1084, 7 Ann. Cas. 785), we held, again quoting the syllabus: “Marriage and birth of a child to a woman revokes a will made by her prior to her marriage.” And, it is contestant’s contention that since by statute (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13440, as amended by Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 13440, Stat. Ann. § 26.981]), and subsequent to our decision in the Noyes Case, a husband inherits one-third of the real property of his deceased intestate wife, he was thereby made ah heir of his wife; and he urges that within the reasoning back of the holding in the Durfee Case, i. e., that the advent of an heir (birth of a child) revokes a woman’s will made prior to marriage, his marriage subsequent to the making of his wife’s will revoked the will even though there is no issue of the marriage, because by their marriage contestant became an heir of his wife under the above-cited statute.

In an effort to distinguish Noyes v. Southworth, supra, or to avoid the effect of a holding therein, contestant iii his brief says:

“Upon this principle (of revocation by implication of a will in consequence of testatrix subse- . quently having an heir) there was prior to 1931 no [347]*347occasion to hold that the acquisition of a husband operated to revoke her will because the husband was not then an heir. However, since 1931 (referring to Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931), when the husband was by statute made an heir, the same reason for revocation by operation of law is applicable as in case of her acquisition of an heir by having a child.”

The pertinent portion of Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931, controlling descent of real property reads: “if the intestate shall be a married woman, one-third thereof (shall descend) to her husband.”

Such was not the exact condition of the law at the time the controlling circumstances occurred in the Noyes Case. In that case the testatrix made her will in 1881, and she married Noyes on February 21, 1882, which was the date upon which her will would have been revoked by the marriage, if at all. The applicable statute then in force provided that under given conditions the husband of a wife •who died intestate and without children of the marriage, inherited a share of her real estate. See Act No. 35, Pub. Acts 1881 (How. Stat. § 5772a).

Contestant is somewhat inaccurate in saying that prior to 1931 “the husband was not then an heir” of his wife who died intestate. Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931, amended section 13440 of Compiled Laws 1929. Among the other provisions in that section governing descent of real property are the following : . .

“If the intestate shall leave a husband or widow and no issue, one-half of the estate of such intestate shall descend to such husband or widow. * * *

“If the intestate shall leave a husband or wife and no issue, nor father, mother, brother nor sister, and there be no child of brother or sister, the estate of such intestate shall descend to the husband or wife of such intestate, as the case may be,”

[348]*348In quoting the above statutory provisions we are not unmindful that they are applicable only in case the intestate wife dies without issue; whereas, the surviving husband’s inheritance provided in Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931, is not dependent upon the death of the intestate wife without issue. Nonetheless, we think the above provisions have a material bearing upqn the soundness or unsoundness of contestant’s contention that it is only since the 1931 act became effective that the “marriage creates a new heir, her husband, by the very act of marriage.” Instead the marriage, in event of there being no issue, resulted in the husband becoming an heir of his intestate wife under the provisions of the statute as they existed long prior to the 1931 act.

Further, the fallacy of contestant’s contention that a husband first became an heir of his wife in consequence of the provisions found in Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931, is also quite conclusively disclosed when it is noted that for many years our statutes have provided that upon the death of an intestate wife the surviving husband takes one-third of her personal property, subject to payment of debts, et cetera. See 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 15726, subd. 7 (Stat. Ann. §27.2891). As now embodied in the probate code, see Act No. 288, chap. 2, § 93, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 16289-2 [93], Stat. Ann. 1943 Rev. § 27.3178 [163]). A like provision was in the statutes as long ago as when Act No. 138, Pub. Acts 1867, became a part of our law. It was also the law when the Noyes Case was decided. See 2 Comp. Laws 1871, § 4377, and Breen v. Pangborn, 51 Mich. 29. Contestant’s contention that a husband was not an heir at law of his intestate wife prior to Act No. 79, Pub. Acts 1931, is not tenable. No reason is made to appear why we should depart from the former holding of this Court in [349]*349Noyes v. Southworth, supra; and the circuit judge was correct in holding as a matter of law that the will in suit was not revoked by implication in consequence of testatrix’s subsequent marriage to contestant.

Another ground of this appeal is indicated by the following question submitted by contestant: “Was the will of the deceased revoked by a later writing under the probate code, Act No. 288, chap. 2, § 9, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 16289-2 [9], Stat. Ann. 1943 Eev. § 27.3178 [79]) f” The section of the statute to which reference is made reads:

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Related

In Re Leech's Estate
269 N.W. 181 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1936)
Breen v. Pangborn
16 N.W. 188 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1883)
Noyes v. Southworth
20 N.W. 891 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1884)
Durfee v. Risch
105 N.W. 1114 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
313 Mich. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debuck-v-hillaert-mich-1946.