Estate of Phifer
This text of 152 Cal. App. 3d 813 (Estate of Phifer) 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 BURL RICHARD PHIFER, JR., Deceased.
BANK OF AMERICA, as Executor, etc., et al., Petitioners and Respondents,
v.
PATRICK GRADY WHITMAN, Objector and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Two.
*814 COUNSEL
Clyde L. Bronn for Objector and Appellant.
Baker & Auw and Pierre E. Auw for Petitioners and Respondents.
OPINION
ROTH, P.J.
The decedent, Burl Richard Phifer, Jr., died on or about May 4, 1981. His body was discovered in a motel room in Oceanside, California and the cause of his death was attributed to suicide.
On or about May 3, 1981, the decedent made certain identical holographic additions, deletions and interlineations on several copies of his formal, witnessed will dated February 20, 1981,[1] which may be illustrated as follows:[2]
"LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF BURL RICHARD PHIFER, JR.
A RESIDENT OF CALIFORNIA
[Amended by written intil [sic] 5-3-81 Burl Richard Phifer, Jr.]
"FOURTH: I give and bequeath my interests in the real property located at 233 Seal Beach Blvd, Seal Beach, California to [Patrick Grady Whitman] [Larry B. Stevenson BRP 5-3-81]. Should he predecease me said property *815 shall pass in equal portions to [Larry B. Stevenson] [BRP] and my brother, Robert Dale Phifer of Savanna, Oklahoma.
"FIFTH: I give and bequeath to Patrick Grady Whitman [75] [30 BRP 5-3-81] per cent interest in my veterinary practice known as Seal Beach Marina Veterinary Clinic.... I bequest the remainder of the practice interest in the following manner, [20] [50 BRP 5-3-81] per cent to Delia Marie Burchfield, D.V.M., 1216 South Main Street, Fallbrook California and [5] [20 BRP 5-3-81] per cent to Ethel Roberts....
"SIXTH: I give and bequeath my interests in the real property located at 1216 South Main Street, Fallbrook, California to [Patrick Grady Whitman.] [Delia Marie Burchfield 5-3-81 BRP]
".... .... .... .... .... .... . .
"EIGHTH: I give and bequeath to Patrick Grady Whitman [60] [10 BRP 5-3-81] per cent interest in my veterinary practice known a Huntington Harbour Veterninary Clinic ... I bequest the remainder of the practice interest in the following manner [40] [90 BRP 5-3-81] per cent to Delia Marie Burchfield, D.V.M.....
".... .... .... .... .... .... .
"TWELVETH: I give and bequeath to [Patrick Whitman] [Bobby Dale Phifer and Clara Jean Gillin] [BRP 5-3-81] the real property, including house, barn, and 162 acres, located at Route 1, Purdy, Barry County...."
The decedent also composed the following handwritten letter:
"5-4-81
"Patrick
"I tried to call you to tell you I loved you one last time but you weren't home.
"I made some changes in the will but not from any ill feelings. Simply maybe the one change will help Larry out of a financial bind. The other change I believe is legal in that a licensed DVM is req [sic] to own a major portion of a practice & the Third change is the ranch is valuless [sic] to you & might help my Brother & Sister.
"Please know you are my only love & the thought of continuing life under present circumstances I cannot cope with.
"All of my love RP"*816 On May 10, 1983, the trial court made its order admitting codicils to probate which provided in part that:
"2. The decedent made changes on his former will dated February 20, 1981, by a valid holographic codicil dated May 3, 1981, said codicil being located in the upper right-hand corner of the first page of the formal will heretofore admitted to probate, and reading: `Amended by hand written initial 5-3-81 Burl Richard Phifer, Jr.' By inference from all the facts and circumstances surrounding its execution, said codicil incorporated by reference the various holographic deletions and interlineations on pages 2, 3 and 4 of the formal will.
"3. As an additional and independent ground for admitting the written deletions and interlineations to probate as a holographic codicil, the court finds that individually, each deletion and interlineation, with the exception of those deletions and interlineations appearing on lines 4 and 5 of paragraph Fourth on page 2, qualifies as a valid holographic codicil since each was in the handwriting of, and was dated and signed by the decedent in conformity with Probate Code § 53. Each change is dated and each change, except as noted above, is initialed `BRP.'
"5. The decedent's letter dated May 4, 1981, addressed to PATRICK is also a valid holographic codicil written entirely in the decedent's handwriting, dated and signed by using the testator's initials. The court finds that the document was executed with testamentary intent in that it explains and clarifies the construction of certain provisions contained in the formal will and the codicil dated May 3, 1981."
The appeal is from this order. (See Prob. Code, § 1240, subd. (c).)
At the pertinent times herein,[3] Probate Code section 53 provided that: "A holographic Will is one that is entirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator himself. It is subject to no other form, and need not be witnessed. No address, date or other matter written, printed or stamped upon the document, which is not incorporated in the provisions which are in the handwriting of the decedent, shall be considered as any part of the will." (Italics added.)
*817 (1) Stated simply, we are persuaded no more is required to conclude the requirements of this statute were not met under the circumstances described and that the trial court's rulings were therefor in error than to refer to the opinion in Estate of Black (1982) 30 Cal.3d 880 [181 Cal. Rptr. 222, 641 P.2d 754]. What was reiterated there was that the necessity for a holographic will to be entirely in the handwriting of the testator is satisfied in spite of the presence in the instrument of printed (nonhandwritten) matter, so long as the printed words were "`not relevant to [the holograph's] substance or essential to its validity as a will or codicil.'" (Id. at p. 884), where the "substance" of the holograph was understood as meaning its "dispositive provisions." (Ibid. at p. 885.) In contrast to the facts present in Black, however, where the printed matter was viewed essentially as surplusage to an otherwise complete testamentary document, the handwriting involved here is wholly unintelligible, devoid of testamentary intent and without substance as previously defined, except insofar as it is explained by incorporating the typewritten provisions of the formal will to which it relates.
So, standing alone, what was set down by the decedent was:
"Amended by Handwritten initil [sic] 5-3-81
"Larry B. Stevenson BRP 5-3-81
"BRP
"30 BRP 5-3-81
"50 BRP 5-3-81
"20 BRP 5-3-81
"Delia Marie Burchfield 5-3-81 BRP
"10 BRP 5-3-81
"90 BRP 5-3-81
"Bobby Dale Phifer & Clara Jean Gillin BRP 5-3-81"
Such being the case, and no matter how liberally the majority opinion in Black
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152 Cal. App. 3d 813, 200 Cal. Rptr. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-phifer-calctapp-1984.