In Re Estate of Bogner

184 N.W.2d 718
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1971
DocketCiv. 8588
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 N.W.2d 718 (In Re Estate of Bogner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Bogner, 184 N.W.2d 718 (N.D. 1971).

Opinion

PAULSON, Judge

(on reassignment).

This case is on appeal from a June 23, 1969, judgment issued by the district court of Stark County, North Dakota, which affirmed an order of the county court of Stark County admitting the Last Will and Testament of Philip Bogner to probate. A demand for a trial de novo has been made.

On February 13, 1956, Philip Bogner made and executed his Last Will and Testament. Paragraph Three of Mr. Bogner’s will devised and bequeathed to his daughter, Helen Bogner Fallgren, and to her husband, Curtis Fallgren, or to the survivor of them, each an undivided one-half interest in certain real and personal property, which included Mr. Bogner’s farm implement business, described in said Paragraph Three. Helen Bogner Fallgren is the sole heir of Mr. Bogner and, at the time of the execution of Mr. Bogner’s will, the appellant, Curtis Fallgren, and Helen Bogner Fallgren were husband and wife, to which marriage eight children were born. From 1946 until October of 1956, Curtis Fallgren was employed in his father-in-law’s business, for which employment he received an annual salary of $5,800 and a home was furnished for his family and himself. Late in 1956, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Fallgren and their family moved to Oregon where they purchased a poultry ranch for the sum of approximately $20,000. The money was acquired through a loan from an insurance company on a policy purchased by Mr. Bogner for his daughter, Helen Bogner Fallgren. Mr. Bogner later repaid the $20,000 loan on this insurance policy when it became apparent that Mr. Fallgren would be unable to do so. Some time thereafter it became known to Mr. Bogner, both through information furnished to him by a Dickinson physician and in conversation with his daughter, Mrs. Curtis Fallgren, that his son-in-law had been participating in depraved moral conduct, including incestuous relationships with one of his daughters, before the family had moved to Oregon, and that such activity continued for some years thereafter. Partly upon the advice of her father, Mrs. Fallgren obtained a divorce from her husband in Oregon in March of 1965, upon grounds of infidelity, and was awarded custody of the minor children. Later in that year, Mrs. Fallgren returned to Dickinson, North Dakota, where her father provided a home for her and her children. About the time of the divorce in 1965, Mr. *721 Bogner had a conference with the Fallgren family counselor and social worker in Oregon and Mr. Bogner informed him that because of his son-in-law’s conduct, Mr. Bogner was going to arrange his estate so that Mr. Fallgren would be disinherited. At Christmastime in 1965, Mr. Bogner informed his sister that Mr. Fallgren was not going to inherit any part of the Bogner estate. In addition, Mr. Bogner made the same declaration to one of his employees, Ernest Ficek. On September 3, 1968, Mr. Bogner died and his Last Will and Testament was subsequently found in a metal box taken from his office safe. Upon examination of the will by Mr. Bogner’s daughter and in the presence of Mr. Bogner’s attorney and of several other witnesses, it was found that Paragraph Three of Mr. Bogner’s Last Will and Testament read, in pertinent part:

“THIRD: To my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, and her husband, Curtis Falgren, or to the survivor of them * * * ” [Emphasis ours.]

and that Paragraph Six of Mr. Bogner’s Last Will and Testament read, in pertinent part:

“SIXTH: I appoint my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, to be my Executrix under this Will, and if she fails or ceases to act, I appoint Curtis Falgren, Sr., husband of my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, to be Executor and successor Trustee of the trust herein-above provided. If my daughter does not survive me, or dies before a grandchild of mine attains the age of 21 years, without having appointed a guardian of the persons and estates of my grandchildren, I appoint Curtis Falgren, Sr. to be guardian of the persons of such grandchildren and of their estates. * * ” [Emphasis ours.]

However, lines had been forcefully drawn through the above emphasized words so that the contested portions of Paragraph Three and of Paragraph Six of Mr. Bogner’s Last Will and Testament then read as follows:

“THIRD: To my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, and- -or to the survivor of them * * * ”
⅜ ⅜ ⅝ ⅜ ⅝ *
“SIXTH: I appoint my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, to be my Executrix under this Will, and if she fails or ceases to act, I appoint - of my daughter, Helen Bogner Falgren, to be Executor and successor Trustee of the trust hereinabove provided. If my daughter does not survive me, or dies before a grandchild of mine attains the age of 21 years, without having appointed a guardian of the persons and estates of my grandchildren, I appoint - -to be guardian of the persons of such grandchildren and of their estates. * * * ”

These obliterations were not in existence at the time the will was originally executed; nor were any new dispositive provisions or other testamentary dispositions of the testator found; nor were the obliterations initialed, dated, or signed by the testator; nor were the obliterations attested by any witnesses thereto.

The issues are as follows:

1. Did the decedent, Philip Bogner, make the obliterations found in his Last Will and Testament ?

2. If Mr. Bogner made the obliterations in his will, did he have the intent to revoke his bequest and devise to Mr. Fallgren?

3. Did Mr. Bogner intend to add any further dispositive language to his will?

4. If Mr. Bogner made these obliter-ations, do they become effective within the purview of the following provisions of the North Dakota Century Code?

56-04-01, N.D.C.C. “Mode of revoking a will. — Except as is otherwise *722 provided in this chapter, a written will, in whole or part, can be revoked or altered only:
1. By a written will or other writing of the testator, declaring such revocation or alteration and executed with the same formalities with which a will should be executed by'such testator; or
2. By being burnt, torn, canceled, obliterated, or destroyed, with the intent and for the purpose of revoking the same, by the testator himself or by some other person in his presence and by his direction.”
56-04-02, N.D.C.C. “How cancellation must be proved. — When a will is canceled or destroyed by any person other than the testator, the direction of the testator and the fact of such injury or destruction must be proved by two witnesses.”
56-04-03, N.D.C.C. “Effect of partial erasure or obliteration. — A revocation by obliteration on the face of the will may be partial or total, and is complete if the material part is so obliterated as to show an intention to revoke, but when, in order to effect a new disposition, the testator attempts to revoke a provision of the will by altering or obliterating it on the face thereof, such revocation is not valid unless the new disposition is legally effected.”
56-05-01, N.D.C.C. “Intention of testator governs interpretation.

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184 N.W.2d 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bogner-nd-1971.