In Re Estate of Johannes

227 P.2d 148, 170 Kan. 407, 24 A.L.R. 2d 507, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1951
Docket38,007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 227 P.2d 148 (In Re Estate of Johannes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas 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 Johannes, 227 P.2d 148, 170 Kan. 407, 24 A.L.R. 2d 507, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 238 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court that the will later referred to was entitled to probate.

As no question of procedure has been raised, we note briefly that petitions were filed in the probate court of Rrown county, alleging that George A. Johannes, a resident of that county, died February 17, 1948, testate, and setting forth the names of his heirs at law and the legatees and devisees under his will, and praying that the will be admitted to probate and letters testamentary be issued to the executors therein named. To these petitions the persons named as heirs filed their written objections alleging that the will had been revoked; that at the time of its execution Johannes was of unsound mind and under restraint, and also that the will was not executed as provided by statute in that it was not signed at the end thereof nor attested as so provided. At the hearing the probate court ordered the will admitted to probate and appointed the executors named. In due time the objecting heirs perfected their appeal to the district court. At the trial in the district court the issues presented by the pleadings were fully tried. That court found that the will was properly executed according to law and was unrevoked; that the sequence of writing of the will was continuous and in proper order and executed at the end thereof after the will had been completed; that tire will should be admitted to probate and of record in the probate court, and the order of the probate court admitting the will to probate should be affirmed, and it entered judgment accordingly. From the judgment the objecting heirs have appealed to this court.

*409 Before taking up appellants’ specifications of error we note that the will in form as presented to the probate court is on a single sheet of paper at the top of which appears “Jan. 3, 1923, Horton, Kans.” following which is an opening paragraph stating that “I, George A. Johannes . . . make this my last will and testament” followed by eight numbered paragraphs, which we summarize. First, provided for payment of his debts and for his burial; second, designated his place of burial; third, provided for mausoleum; fourth, provided who was to prepare and bury his body; fifth, directed that specified real estate be transferred to the board of trustees of the State Orphans Home at Atchison for the benefit of the unfortunate inmates of the home; sixth, obliterated; seventh, left the balance of his estate to the Morrill Free Public Library of Hiawatha; eight, appointed William Schmidt and R. L. Funk, executors. At the end thereof appears the signature of the maker George A. Johannes and of three witnesses: L. Reynolds, L. W. Shannon and R. L. Funk.

During the course of the trial it was stated that Reynolds and Shannon were both dead. The proponents showed by R. L. Funk that he was the scrivener of the will and that it was completed in all its parts before being signed by the testator and attested by the witnesses. The objectors produced a handwriting expert who testified in his opinion that the seventh and eighth paragraphs were written into the will after Johannes had signed his name and the proponents produced a handwriting expert who testified to the contrary. Although recognizing the rule that this court will not review conflicting evidence to determine a fact, appellants direct attention to decisions such as In re Estate of Kemper, 157 Kan. 727, 145 P. 2d 103, holding that where the controlling evidence on an issue of fact is written or documentary in character or in the form of depositions or transcripts, it is the responsibility of this court to decide the issue, and contend that the will being in writing we are in a position to determine from the will itself whether certain paragraphs of the will were written over the signature of Johannes, and whether he signed at the end of the will. The contention cannot be sustained. On the face of the will Johannes did sign at the end. For us to reach a different conclusion we would have to resolve ourselves into handwriting experts and conclude that paragraphs seventh and eighth were written over Johannes’ signature. ' That was the issue on which Funk and the two handwriting witnesses testified. That was an issue to be determined by the trial court and it is not one *410 which we can determine by inspection of the original will. The finding of the trial court that the sequence of writing of the will was continuous, all made at the same time and in proper order and executed according to law at the end thereof after the body of the will had been completed, is based upon substantial testimony and is conclusive on appeal.

The important question in this appeal is whether the will was revoked, and as to that phase no serious dispute of fact is involved. Mr. Johannes had never married and the objectors are his collateral heirs. On January 3, 1923, he was in a hospital at Horton, Kan., to undergo an operation. Shortly before that event his will was written by Dr. R. L. Funk and was executed by the testator as soon as it was prepared. At that time the will bore no alterations, cancellations, erasures or obliterations. Mr. Johannes recovered from the operation and returned to his farm home in Brown county, where he remained until shortly before his death on February 17, 1948, when he moved into a hotel room in Hiawatha. Mr. Johannes had left his motor car in front of his doctor’s office. After his death a search of the car was made and the will was found in the glove compartment, and in the. car were many other papers including canceled checks, postal savings certificates, insurance policies and abstracts of title. At that time the condition of the will showed soiled places along the lines where it had been folded, and that the lower quarter was soiled perhaps from contact with other papers or exposure. The sixth paragraph, which was in the lower quarter of the page, had been so obliterated by erasure that all that now appears of that paragraph is “Sixth, I”. What was originally in that paragraph cannot be determined from an inspection of the will.

The gist of appellants’ argument that the will had been revoked is that under the statute (G. S. 1947 Supp. 59-611) revocation in part is not permitted; that so far as the evidence discloses, the will was at all times in the possession of the maker; that under the authorities generally and under our decisions in Sellards v. Kirby, 82 Kan. 291, 298, 108 Pac. 73, 136 Am. St. 110, 28 L. R. A. (n.s.) 270, and In re Kemper, supra, at page 737, where a mutilated will is found among the testator’s effects the presumption arises that the mutilation was his own act done with a revoking purpose and, in effect, that the presumption was not overcome and the obliteration made was sufficient to establish intent of Johannes to revoke his will.

Appellees do not dispute the rules of law contended for by the appellants but they direct attention to the fact that Johannes kept *411

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P.2d 148, 170 Kan. 407, 24 A.L.R. 2d 507, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-johannes-kan-1951.