Estate of Bourn

78 P.2d 193, 25 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 866
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1938
DocketCiv. 10644
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 78 P.2d 193 (Estate of Bourn) 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
Estate of Bourn, 78 P.2d 193, 25 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 866 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

At the time of the final settlement of the estate of Agnes M. Bourn, deceased, the probate court was called upon to construe one of the provisions of a codicil to the decedent’s will creating an annuity in favor of the respondent, Mrs. Maud Bourn Hayne, the point at issue being as to the amount of annual payment that should be made thereunder; and from that portion of the decree of final distribution determining said issue the executors and several beneficiaries have appealed, contending as main ground for reversal that the court erred in construing in their technical sense certain technical words used in the provision creating said annuity.

The pertinent facts are these: The decedent was the wife of William B. Bourn, ghe died January 3, 1936, and her husband’s death occurred six months later. By the provisions of article IV of her will Mrs. Bourn set aside a trust fund of $550,000, and directed payment therefrom of nine annuities. On the same day, geptember 17, 1929, she executed a codicil increasing the corpus of the trust to $600,000, and creating three additional annuities. The annuitants named were Mr. Bourn’s three sisters, one of whom was Mrs. Hayne; and the separate provisions of the codicil creating said three annuities were identical in form. The will and the codicil were drawn by an attorney; and the following is the provision of the codicil creating the annuity in favor of Mrs. Hayne.- “I . . . add to the annuities provided for in said article (IV) the following: An annuity to Maud Bourn Hayne, the sister of my husband, during her life, in such amount as will, when added to any annuity or annuities otherwise provided for her by my husband by will or otherwise, or by my husband and myself, directly or through the medium of Filoli Estate, or otherwise, make a total annuity of eighty-four hundred (8400) dollars a year.” (Italics ours.) At the time the codicil was executed Mr. Bourn had already made his will, and Mrs. Bourn knew of its contents. In that will he had' provided Mrs. Hayne *594 with an annual annuity of $3,600; and through the medium of Piloli estate (a family corporation) she had been provided with and was then receiving an annual annuity of $2,400, of which Mrs. Bourn was also aware; so that if those conditions had remained unchanged the amount of annuity Mrs. Hayne would have been entitled to receive from Mrs. Bourn’s estate would have been $2,400 a year. However, on October 3, 1934, fifteen months before Mrs. Bourn died and approximately twenty-one months prior to the death of Mr. -Bourn, he made a new will. It was drawn by the same attorney who drew Mrs. Bourn’s will and codicil, and in his later will Mr. Bourn made no provision for an annuity for Mrs. Hayne, as he had in his earlier will, but in lieu thereof he bequeathed to her during her life one-third of the net income of his residual estate. Appellants claimed, however, on proceedings for final distribution, that whatever she received under Mr. Bourn’s will as such gift of income, although admittedly not constituting an annuity, must nevertheless be taken into account in reducing the amount of annuity she was entitled to receive under the codicil to Mrs. Bourn’s will; that accordingly if her share of said income in any one year when added to the Piloli estate annuity equalled $8,400, she would be entitled to nothing from Mrs. Bourn’s estate; or if when added to the Piloli estate annuity it did not equal $8,400 she would be entitled only to the difference. After hearing the evidence, however, the probate court held in effect that there was no ambiguity or uncertainty in the language used in the codicil to Mrs. Bourn’s will creating said annuity in favor of Mrs. Hayne, and that the codicil and the will had been drawn by a lawyer of profound legal learning and many years experience; that therefore, under the provisions of section 106 of the Probate Code, the technical words “annuity or annuities’’ over which the controversy arose, must be taken in their technical sense. The court then went on to hold in conformity with the established law upon the subject that a gift of income is not an annuity; that such being the case the proceeds received by Mrs. Hayne as her share of the income from Mr. Bourn’s estate could not be taken into consideration in computing the amount of the annuity bequeathed to her by Mrs. Bourn; that consequently she was entitled to an annual annuity from Mrs. Bourn’s estate in *595 the sum uf $6,000; and an adjudication to that effect was embodied in its decree.

We are of the opinion that the probate court’s decision is fully supported. As declared by said section 106, “ . . . technical words in a will are to be taken in their technical sense, unless the context clearly indicates a contrary intention, or unless it satisfactorily appears that the will was drawn solely by the testator, and that he was unacquainted with such technical sense”; and it is held generally that where the will is drawn by a lawyer whose experience and competence are beyond question, the presumption that legal terms embodied in the will are used in their legal sense is all but conclusive. (See Hay v. Dole, 119 Me. 421 [111 Atl. 713]; In re Leonard’s Will, 143 Misc. 172 [256 N. Y. Supp. 355], citing numerous authorities.) Here, as pointed out by the probate court, the will and the codicils thereto (there were four of them) were drafted by a lawyer of competence and experience; and admittedly there is a broad, well-recognized legal distinction between an annuity and a gift of income; furthermore, the estate which was to be disposed of by said testamentary documents was known to be very large, the same having been later appraised at more than three million dollars. It is certain, therefore, that in order to express accurately the true intent and wishes of the testatrix, and to avoid ambiguity and hence future dispute, all of said documents were prepared with deliberation, and all legal terms employed in drafting the same selected with studied care.

Moreover, the numerous provision^ of said testamentary documents themselves demonstrate beyond question that at the time Mrs. Bourn executed the same she had definitely in mind the difference between an annuity and a mere gift of income, and that in disposing of her vast estate she used each of those terms advisedly and with discrimination. In this respect it appears that by said testamentary documents she created seventeen or more cash legacies and directed that the amounts of several of them be computed in a manner prescribed therein by her; that in addition thereto she created, but in very different and appropriate language, some thirteen annuities, and directed also that the amounts of the three created by the first codicil be computed in a manner therein prescribed by her, but which was widely different *596 from the one prescribed for the computing of the amounts of said legacies. Thus with respect to the legacies she directed that the gift to Mills Memorial Hospital be reduced by “amounts given it by my husband either by will or otherwise”; that the gift to St. Luke’s Hospital be reduced by any “gift or gifts to said hospital” received by it from “my husband by will or otherwise”; that the gift to Episcopal Cathedral of San Francisco be reduced by “any gifts by my husband for the same purpose ’ ’.

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Bluebook (online)
78 P.2d 193, 25 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bourn-calctapp-1938.