In re Estate of Garraud

35 Cal. 336
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 35 Cal. 336 (In re Estate of Garraud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 Garraud, 35 Cal. 336 (Cal. 1868).

Opinion

By the Court, Crockett, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the Probate Court decreeing distribution of the estate of Jean Garraud, deceased.

The facts are, that Garraud died, leaving a widow and several minor children, and leaving also a last will and testament, which was duly probated, wherein he devised to his wife his whole estate, and appointed her sole executrix. He did not mention or make any reference whatever to his children in the will. When the executrix had made her final settlement, she filed a petition for distribution, claiming the whole estate as sole devisee under the will. The minors also appeared, and- contested her right, on the ground that not having been mentioned or referred to in the will, they were entitled, under section seventeen of the “Act concerning wills,” to share in the distribution of the estate. This section of the Act is in the following words, to wit:

“When any testator shall omit to provide in his or her will for any of his or her children, or for the issue of any [339]*339deceased child, unless it shall appear that such omission was intentional, such child shall have the same share in the estate of the testator as if he or she had died intestate, to he assigned as provided in the preceding section.”

On the trial the widow offered oral proofs tending to show that the omission of the testator to provide for his children was intentional. This testimony was objected to on behalf of the children; but the Court admitted the testimony, and ordered the whole estate to be distributed to the widow as sole devisee. The minors, having duly excepted to the ruling of the Court, have appealed from the order for distribution.

The sole question presented on the appeal is, whether the Court erred in admitting parol testimony as to the intention of the testator in omitting the children from the will, or whether the will alone is to be consulted.

The question is not freé from doubt, and we are not aware that it has ever been passed upon by this Court.

The next preceding section of the Act provides for children born after the making of the will, and enacts that if the will makes no provision for such children they shall have the same share in the estate as if the testator had died intestate, unless it shall be apparent from the will that it was the intention of the testator that no provision should be made for such child.” Section twenty-one provides that “ every devise of land in any will shall be construed to convey all the estate of the devisor therein which he could lawfully devise, unless it shall clearly appear by the will that he intended to- convey a less estate.” Section twenty-two provides that “ any estate, right, or interest in lands acquired by the testator after the making of his or her will, shall pass thereby, and in like manner as if it passed at the time of making the will, if such shall manifestly appear by the will to have been the intention of the testator.” Section twelve provides that “if after the making of any will the testator shall marry, and the wife shall he living at the death of the testator, such will shall be [340]*340deemed revoked, unless provision shall have been made for her by marriage contract, or unless she shall be provided for in the will, or in such way mentioned therein as to show an intention not to make such provision, and no other evidence to rebut the presumption of revocation shall be received.” The italics in these quotations are ours. It is claimed on behalf of the widow that in all these sections, except section seventeen, the will itself is specifically referred to as the only criterion by which the intention of the testator is to be ascertained; and that inasmuch as section seventeen omits the reference to the will as affording the only proof of the testator’s intention, and provides for the children, “ unless it shall appear that such omission was intentional,” without specifying in what manner it shall be made to appear, the presumption is that in section seventeen the reference to the will was omitted ex industria, leaving the fact of the testator’s intention to omit his children open to be established by proofs dehors the will. The argument is plausible, but we think is not sound.

It may be stated as a general proposition, not open to controversy, that wills, like other written instruments, cannot be varied, altered, added to, or contradicted by parol evidence. Without referring to numerous English cases, it is sufficient on this point to cite the following decisions of American Courts: Jackson v. Sill, 11 Johns. 201; Mann v. Mann, 1 Johns. Ch. 231; same case, 14 Johns. 1; Avery v. Chappel, 6 Conn. 270; Bradley v. Bradley, 24 Mo. 311; Rothmahler v. Myers, 4 Dessau, 215. See, also, 1 Jarman on Wills, 350; 1 Greenl. Ev. Sec. 290; 1 Redfield on Wills, 589, 540.

In the case we are considering, it is proposed to show by parol that the testator intentionally omitted to provide for his children. In other words, to show the testator’s intention, not by appealing to his will, but by proving his acts or declarations before or at the time he made the will. In Jackson v. Sill the same effort was made. It was proposed to show that the testator intended to include, in a specific [341]*341devise, a certain tract of land, and that he so instructed the attorney who wrote the will,-but the attorney, by mistake or inadvertence, omitted to include it. But the Court held that the will must speak for itself, and that parol evidence of the testator’s intention was inadmissible. Numerous authorities to the same effect are found in the books.

Indeed, we do not understand the counsel for the respondent to deny that this was the common law rule. But he rests the case wholly on the statute, and on a Massachusetts case, which we will notice hereafter. In construing the statute, we assume that the Legislature was familiar with the common law rule above referred to; and there is no reason to infer that it intended to relax it. On the contrary, the whole Act relating to wills evinces the vigilance with which it was intended to guard and protect from fraud the most solemn act of the testator’s life. To this end the Act provides (section seven) that a nuncupative will shall only be valid when the estate bequeathed does not exceed five hundred dollars; nor unless the same be proved by two witnesses, and that the testator at the time requested some one present to bear witness that it was his will; nor unless it was made in his last sickness and at the dwelling place of the deceased, unless he died from home; nor unless the will was reduced to writing within thirty days and proved within six months. (Section 8.) The statute contains minute provisions as to the mode of executing or revoking a will, and prohibits a married woman from making or revoking a will without the consent of her husband, to be annexed to the will or revocation, and to be attested and proved by two witnesses, unless the wife has power to make a will conferred upon her by a marriage contract or authority in writing executed by the husband before marriage.

These provisions exhibit the intention of the Legislature not only to adhere to the safeguards which the common law provided as a protection against fraud, but rather to increase and strengthen them by new enactments.

With this view, nothing short of an explicit enactment, [342]

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Bluebook (online)
35 Cal. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-garraud-cal-1868.