Estate of Hand

2016 Ohio 7437
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 2016
DocketCA2016-02-034
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 7437 (Estate of Hand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Hand, 2016 Ohio 7437 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as Estate of Hand, 2016-Ohio-7437.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

BUTLER COUNTY

ESTATE OF: ERIC ANTHONY HAND, : DECEASED CASE NO. CA2016-02-034 : OPINION : 10/24/2016

:

APPEAL FROM BUTLER COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS PROBATE DIVISION Case No. PE14-10-0974

Katzman Logan Halper & Bennett, Steven D. Halper, 9000 Plainfield Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45236, for appellant

Ginger S. Bock, P.O. Box 31122, Cincinnati, Ohio 45231, for appellant

Graydon Head & Ritchey LLP, Michael D. McNeil and Darren W. Ford, 1900 Fifth Third Center, 511 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202, for appellee guardian

Catherine L. Evans, 9032 Union Centre Boulevard, Suite 200, West Chester, Ohio 45069, for appellee administrator

M. POWELL, P.J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Natalie Hand, appeals a decision of the Butler County Court of

Common Pleas, Probate Division, denying her application to admit to probate the purported

will of her husband, Eric Anthony Hand (Decedent).

{¶ 2} Appellant and Decedent were married in April 2014. Decedent died on

September 7, 2014. He was survived by appellant and by his four minor children from a Butler CA2016-02-034

previous marriage. Shannon Hand ("Hand") is the children's mother and Decedent's former

spouse.

{¶ 3} In searching for a will, appellant discovered in a box of love letters she had

received from Decedent over the years a three-page handwritten letter dated January 23,

2014 ("Love Letter Will"). Unlike Decedent's other love letters, this one was signed by

Decedent with his full name. The letter included three paragraphs and a post-scriptum. The

first two paragraphs professed Decedent's love for appellant; the last paragraph read as

follows1:

As my last will and testament, I appoint you the primary beneficiary of all I have and all I have worked for. With the complete trust that you will look after the children, my business interests and all the other things that I have put together over the years and not let anyone try to deprive you of those things.

I love you eternally, ERIC ANTHONY HAND s/ Eric Anthony Hand

{¶ 4} Subsequently, appellant discovered atop a tall bookcase in Decedent's office a

draft titled "The Last Will and Testament of Eric Hand," which Decedent had prepared

through LegalZoom.com, an online digital forms company ("LegalZoom Will"). The

LegalZoom Will was unsigned. It left 52 percent of Decedent's estate to appellant and 48

percent of his estate to his four children. The record indicates Decedent paid LegalZoom

and prepared the LegalZoom Will the day before he wrote the Love Letter Will.

{¶ 5} Appellant initially sought to admit the Love Letter Will to probate as a lost,

spoliated, or destroyed will. Hand objected to appellant's application on behalf of Decedent's

children. Finding the Love Letter Will to be an original document, the probate court ordered

1. The post-scriptum is not relevant to this appeal and provided: "At some point, I would very much like us to bring Mark to court for his extortion of control leveraged by very real threats of blackmail, dis-incorporation of the businesses (to be later re-instituted as his sole entity)." -2- Butler CA2016-02-034

appellant to submit a new application. Appellant did so on December 11, 2014. The probate

court issued an interlocutory order denying admission of the Love Letter Will to probate and

set the matter for a hearing. The hearing was held in October 2015.

{¶ 6} At the hearing, appellant submitted the testimony of two friends, Angela Lester

and Frances Boon. Both women originally claimed they had witnessed Decedent sign the

Love Letter Will at his home on January 23, 2014. However, it was established that Boon

could not have witnessed the event on January 23, 2014, because she was in Indiana that

day and did not arrive at Decedent's home until the next day. Both women subsequently

changed their testimony and asserted they had witnessed Decedent sign the Love Letter Will

at a later time in January 2014. Both women had a different recollection as to where in the

house they had witnessed Decedent sign the Love Letter Will. Neither Boon nor Lester

signed the Love Letter Will as witnesses. Neither Boon nor Lester remembered the Love

Letter Will when Decedent died.

{¶ 7} Appellant testified that after Decedent signed the Love Letter Will, he gave it to

her and told her "what it was." Appellant took it upstairs and put it in the box with the other

love letters. Later that evening, Decedent told her he was going to prepare a LegalZoom

document. Lester testified that when Decedent called her and Boon into the room, "he

explained to us that this was his will and he would get it legally done at a later date."

{¶ 8} On January 21, 2015, the probate court denied appellant's application to admit

the Love Letter Will to probate. The probate court found that the purported will could not be

admitted to probate under R.C. 2107.03 or 2107.181 because it was not signed by Boon and

Lester. The probate court further found that the purported will could not be admitted to

probate under R.C. 2107.24 because while there was clear and convincing evidence

Decedent prepared the Love Letter Will and signed it in the presence of Boon and Lester,

there was no clear and convincing evidence Decedent "intended the three page hand-printed -3- Butler CA2016-02-034

document to constitute his will."

{¶ 9} Appellant now appeals, raising one assignment of error:

{¶ 10} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY FINDING THAT ERIC ANTHONY HAND DID

NOT INTEND FOR THE WILL TO CONSTITUTE HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.

{¶ 11} Appellant argues the probate court erred in denying her application to admit the

Love Letter Will to probate under R.C. 2107.24. Appellant first asserts that Decedent's

testamentary intent, that is, whether he intended the document to be his will, is a question of

law which we must review de novo. Appellant further asserts that contrary to the probate

court's finding, the Love Letter Will clearly and convincingly shows Decedent's testamentary

intent.

{¶ 12} In Ohio, a will must meet certain statutory requirements before it can be

admitted to probate. In re Estate of Pittson, 5th Dist. Stark No. 2008 CA 00014, 2009-Ohio-

1862, ¶ 11. In order to be valid, a will must be (1) in writing, (2) signed at the end by the

testator or by some other person in the testator's conscious presence and at the testator's

express direction, and (3) attested and subscribed in the conscious presence of the testator

by two or more competent witnesses who saw the testator subscribe or heard the testator

acknowledge the testator's signature. R.C. 2107.03.

{¶ 13} Attestation and subscription to a will are two separate and distinct requirements

for proper execution under R.C. 2107.03. Black v. Watson, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 103600,

2016-Ohio-1470, ¶ 25. Subscription is the physical act of affixing a signature for

identification purposes. Id. Attestation is the act by which the subscribing witnesses hear the

testator acknowledge his or her signature or see him or her sign the document in their

presence. Id. Because the Love Letter Will was only signed by Decedent, it did not comply

with R.C. 2107.03.

{¶ 14} Pursuant to R.C. 2107.24, if a will does not comply with R.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 Ohio 7437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hand-ohioctapp-2016.