Estate of Lackey
This text of 17 Cal. App. 3d 247 (Estate of Lackey) 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.
Opinion
Estate of GEORGE LACKEY, Deceased.
ETHEL MONTGOMERY, as Executrix, etc., et al., Petitioners and Appellants,
v.
MAURINE BARCAL, Objector and Appellant.
PATRICIA CARSON, Objector and Respondent.
BERTHA CLIFTON, Claimant and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Three.
*249 COUNSEL
Miller & McKechnie, Robert Clifton and James A. McKechnie for Petitioners and Appellants and for Claimant and Appellant.
Gilbert, Thompson, Kelly, Crowley & Jennett, William D. Jennett and Jean Wunderlich for Objector and Appellant and for Objector and Respondent.
*250 OPINION
COBEY, Acting P.J.
These are cross-appeals challenging the incongruous result that two inter vivos gifts by a testator, George Lackey, to two of his predeceased wife's cousins in the amounts of their legacies had different legal consequences. As regards Mrs. Maurine Barcal the trial court found that her legacy of $20,000 in George Lackey's will was adeemed by the lifetime gift to her of this amount. As regards Mrs. Patricia Carson, the court found that the lifetime gift to her of $10,000, the amount of her legacy in George Lackey's will, did not have this effect. This result occurred because the court concluded that as regards Mrs. Barcal the requirements of Probate Code section 1050 for an ademption had been met, but that with respect to Mrs. Carson they had not.
BACKGROUND
On August 14, 1956, George and Lavina Lackey, husband and wife, made reciprocal wills under which the estate of each was left to the other. In the event the spouses died about the same time or in the event the spouse, who would have received the estate of the other, predeceased the other, each will provided for general legacies in various amounts to certain specified relatives of the spouses and residual devises and bequests to other specified relatives. Among the general legacies were five to Lavina's cousins. These were $20,000 to Mrs. Barcal, $10,000 apiece to her daughter Mrs. Carson and Walter Condon and $5,000 apiece to Frances Bartlett and Ethel Young.
On March 10, 1966, Lavina Lackey died. In July, September and October of 1966 George Lackey delivered checks in the amounts of the aforementioned legacies to each of Lavina's aforementioned five cousins named in the Lackeywills.[1] He handed Mrs. Barcal the checks to herself and her daughter, Mrs. Carson and apparently mailed the others to the payees named therein. Apparently he made no written explanations of these gifts to the recipients.
Following the death of George Lackey on April 16, 1969, proceedings were instituted for the probate of his will and the administration of his estate thereunder. In September of 1969 counsel for his personal representatives prepared and obtained from Walter Condon, Ethel Young and Frances Bartlett written acknowledgements that the monies George Lackey had given them in 1966 following his wife's death were "an advancement *251 of the legacy made to me in the will of George Lackey, dated August 15, 1956."[2] They were, however, apparently unable to obtain these from Mrs. Barcal and Mrs. Carson.
MRS. BARCAL'S LEGACY
(1a) Probate Code section 1050 provides in pertinent part that a gift before death shall be considered as an ademption of a general legacy, but that this result shall not obtain unless the testator expresses such an intention in writing, or unless the donee acknowledges it in writing to be such. No contention is made that George Lackey expressed such an intention in writing with regard to Mrs. Barcal's legacy of $20,000 specifically. The trial court based its conclusion of ademption on its interpretation of a letter which Mrs. Barcal wrote to George Lackey on or about August 24, 1966, probably about a month after she received her check. In this letter she asked him what he thought of the idea of her setting aside $1,000 apiece (from the proceeds of this check) for her two granddaughters to be given to them on their eighteenth birthdays as something which Lavina had left directly to them. She proposed this as something Lavina would have wanted and alluded to the fact that "this will was made before the children [the granddaughters] were born."
On the witness stand Mrs. Barcal admitted that in this letter to George she impliedly referred to the $20,000 he had either given her or was about to give her. She also admitted that George had shown her a copy of Lavina's will and that she was aware that all of Lavina's property had been left to George by Lavina's will. She further admitted that she had had an opportunity to examine George's will but she did not state when and if she availed herself of this opportunity.
From the foregoing evidence the trial court apparently inferred that at the time Mrs. Barcal wrote her letter of August 24, 1966, to George Lackey she was aware of the contents of both Lackey wills and that George's check to her was in satisfaction of his legacy in this amount to her in his will. On this basis the trial court concluded that her letter to him constituted an acknowledgement of this intention on his part.[3]
(2) Under Probate Code section 1050 the written acknowledgement of *252 a donee is apparently not required to be in any special form or words. (See Estate of Hayne, 165 Cal. 568, 573 [133 P. 277]; Estate of Nielsen, 169 Cal. App.2d 297, 303 [337 P.2d 87]; Estate of Hoefflin, 176 Cal. App.2d 619, 629 [1 Cal. Rptr. 642].) (1b) The trial court's conclusion that the legacy to Mrs. Barcal had been adeemed was based not merely on her letter to George Lackey itself but also on the extrinsic evidence she gave at the trial.
(3) The trial court's interpretation of Mrs. Barcal's letter to George Lackey is not binding on us, however, since there is no conflict in the extrinsic evidence admitted in aid of its interpretation. (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co., 62 Cal.2d 861, 865 [44 Cal. Rptr. 767, 402 P.2d 839].) (1c) It is true that conflicting inferences may be drawn from this evidence, but if we accept Mrs. Barcal's knowledge of the situation at the time she wrote the letter as being that apparently inferred by the trial court and already recounted by us, we still have the problem that Probate Code section 1050 required her to acknowledge in writing that George Lackey intended by his gift to her to adeem the legacy to her in his will. Regardless of her knowledge of the situation, there is no expression to this effect in her letter to him. The letter, so far as here relevant, is concerned only with proposed future gifts to her granddaughters of a part of the money George had given her. The only reference to a will in the letter is, from the context in which the reference was made, clearly to Lavina's will and not to George's will which is not even mentioned. Under these circumstances we hold that Mrs. Barcal's letter to George did not constitute the written acknowledgement required by Probate Code section 1050.
MRS. CARSON'S LEGACY
(4) On the issue of whether an ademption of Mrs.
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17 Cal. App. 3d 247, 94 Cal. Rptr. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-lackey-calctapp-1971.