In Re Estate of Hopkins

570 A.2d 1058, 391 Pa. Super. 211, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 13, 1990
Docket00951
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 570 A.2d 1058 (In Re Estate of Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 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 Hopkins, 570 A.2d 1058, 391 Pa. Super. 211, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 318 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

The issue presented in this appeal is whether an undated document was admitted correctly to probate as a last will and testament. We conclude that since the document fails to dispose of any of decedent’s assests and since the document was not signed at the end, it was admitted incorrectly to probate. Accordingly, we reverse.

On December 16, 1987, the Register of Wills of Blair County admitted a handwritten document to probate as the last will and testament of Edna A. Hopkins, deceased. The document, which is written on lined notepad paper, states as follows:

1
[Page one]
Father Kenneth Greiner
Executors and
Logi Krywokulski
Masses to be said by Father Greiner
Money to Guilfoyle H.S[ 1 ]
Amt undecided
Lawyer — Atty. Foor
I give devise & bequeath to:
Father Greiner
Mr. & Mrs. Krywokulski
Bishop Guilfoyle H.S.
If I should pre-decease my husband Ward, I make provision for his care in the following manner
Call Sheedy, M.D. and make appt for my physical examination to be declared competent and transfer my care from Haduck to Sheedy.
[Page two]
I want it understood that Atty. Gibboney is no longer in charge of my affairs, and Atty. Thomas Foor has agreed to represent me as of 1st of yr. 1987.
*214 [Page three]
List all assets
Govt. Bonds " Notes
cxs
Dreyfus
Home 2410-14 Ave. to be sold and the land Personal property:
Insurance
Clothing
Jewelry
Other Valuables
[Page four]
In conclusion
all the rest residue and remainder of my estate both personal and real and wherever situated I give and bequeath Clothing to Salvation Army

The document is four pages long, and each page is signed vertically along the margin of the page. On December 14, 1988, Mid-State Bank and Trust Company, as administrator of the estate of William W. Hopkins, filed an appeal from probate to the orphans’ court. William Hopkins was decedent’s widower, and he died on November 21, 1987, within a month of his wife. He was the sole intestate heir of decedent.

The petition sur appeal alleges, among other things, that the document was not a will. Following a hearing held on April 4, 1989, the orphans’ court sustained the register’s decree of probate determining, inter alia, that the writing is in such form as to constitute a will. Following denial of its exceptions to the decree sustaining probate, Mid-State filed this timely appeal.

The first issue presented returns us to the basic definition of a will. It always has been the rule of law in this Commonwealth that no special form of words is necessary to constitute a will. See, e.g., Turner v. Scott, 51 Pa. 126 (1867); Rose v. Quick, 30 Pa. 225 (1858); Clingan v. Mitcheltree, 31 Pa. 25 (1857). However, there is one essen *215 tial element, which is that the document dispose of property.

Instructive is the case of Mannarelli Estate, 436 Pa. 141, 259 A.2d 169 (1969), where the court sustained the orphans’ court’s refusal to probate a letter as a will. The court ruled that the document was not a testamentary disposition because the subject matter of the bequest was not known, although the beneficiary was stated. The court noted that “[w]here a writing by its terms clearly does not constitute a testamentary disposition,” testamentary intent is not relevant. Id., 436 Pa. at 142, 259 A.2d at 170 (emphasis added); see also Sciutti’s Estate, 371 Pa. 536, 92 A.2d 188 (1952) (where letter contained no dispositive provisions, even though it pertained to matters to be considered following scrivner’s death, letter was not a will).

More recently, the supreme court sustained an orphans’ court refusal to probate a document that clearly was a set of instructions to the decedent’s attorney regarding proposed changes to her will. Estate of Moore, 443 Pa. 477, 277 A.2d 825 (1971). The set of instructions examined in Moore was significantly more specific as to the proposed beneficiaries and the subject matter to be distributed than the mishmash of notes that we examine here. See also Estate of Ritchie, 480 Pa. 57, 389 A.2d 83 (1978), where the supreme court found that a document was not a will since it was not dispositive in nature where the document listed decedent’s two daughters as executors, then listed his property and stated that the assets shall be divided fifty/fifty. The court noted that the writing was a set of instructions for use in drafting a will and did not contain a testamentary disposition. Once again, the set of instructions at issue in Ritchie at least could be interpreted so as to match the beneficiaries and the subject matter of the bequest.

Instantly, reviewing each line of the note, the following is stated. Decedent placed the word “executors” next to two names. There is no appointment language. Next, she gives directions regarding a funeral matter. Then, she “gives” money to a beneficiary, but expressly states that *216 the amount is undecided. Her attorney’s name appears next. The name is followed by clear language that she wants to give three beneficiaries something, but she fails to indicate what they are to receive. She then turns to a discussion of her husband, stating that she wants to provide for him in the following manner; yet, she fails to state any manner. Instead, she writes a note to herself to call a doctor regarding a determination of her competency. Next, she notes a change in her preference of attorneys. The following page of the document contains a list of her property, but no beneficiaries. On the next page, the decedent sets forth a residuary bequest, but then fails to name the beneficiaries of that bequest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
570 A.2d 1058, 391 Pa. Super. 211, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hopkins-pa-1990.