In Re Estate of Novotny

273 P. 58, 94 Cal. App. 782, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 745
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6236.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 P. 58 (In Re Estate of Novotny) 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.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Novotny, 273 P. 58, 94 Cal. App. 782, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 745 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

THOMPSON (IRA F.), J.

This is an appeal by proponent from a judgment denying probate to the instrument offered as the last will and testament of Grace L. Novotny, deceased. Before probate, a contest was filed by the surviving husband on his own behalf and as guardian ad litem of his minor daughter Jean Ann Novotny. The contest was tried before a jury and resulted in a disagreement. The court then set the hearing of the formal proof of the will before himself and as a matter of grace permitted counsel for the contestants to cross-examine the witnesses. Erances Avery, one of the subscribing witnesses, called by the court, testified in substance that she had known Mrs. Novotny for about three and one-half years before her death and in the capacity of a practical nurse had helped to take care of the deceased as well as her infant child Jean; that about three days before the execution of the will Mrs. Novotny’s mother visited her daughter and raised “Ned in general” because her daughter was married to Mr. Novotny and “wanted her to leave him” because “all he married her for was what she had” and “told her daughter that she had no business to get married until she was dead”; that on the following day at the request of Mrs. Novotny she called Mr. Lantz, an attorney, and the proponent of the will, who came and talked with the deceased alone for about an hour. Two days later and on August 2d, Mr. Lantz returned and asked Mrs. Avery to leave the room and during her absence therefrom and while earing for the' child Mr. Lantz called her back; that when she returned to the room proponent was holding a white paper in his hand which he asked her if she would sign. When she answered in the affirmative he asked Mrs. Novotny if she wanted the witness to sign and Mrs. Novotny said, “Why, will you?” to which she also replied in the affirmative. The witness further testified that proponent then inquired who would be the other witness and answered his own question by suggesting his son, who was waiting in an automobile outside. While Mrs. Avery was getting pen and ink Mr. Lantz called his son. As soon as the son came' in Mrs. Avery signed the paper and immediately left the room. She fqr *785 ther testified that she did not see the other witness, Mr. Lantz’s son sign, nor did she see Mrs. Novotny sign, nor did Mrs. Novotny say she had signed or that the instrument was her will; that all she saw at the time was one sheet of paper without a cover, whereas it appears that the instrument proposed consisted of three pages and cover. She also says that when Mr. Lantz placed the sheet of paper before her for her signature that he folded it and that she did not even read the attestation clause. In this connection the stenographer of proponent testified that she typewrote „the will for her employer and handed the pieces of paper to him without fastening them together. There was also testimony substantiating what appears from the face of the signature itself, to wit, that a line drawn under the signature of Grace L. Novotny was drawn after the signature was appended. On cross-examination by counsel for proponent Mrs. Avery was questioned as follows:

“Q. Now, do you remember Mr. Lantz asking the question ■ of Mrs. Novotny what that was when he handed her that paper? A. Yes sir.
“Q. And what did she say? A. He says, 'Do you remember what you got in your hands or what you are signing?’ And then she asked him, and he says, 'Why, it is your will.’
“Q. Let me get that wording, just that answer again, please. ’ ’
(The reporter read the answer.)
“Q. Isn’t it a fact that Mr. Lantz asked Mrs. Novotny at that time the question ‘What is this?’ and is it not a fact that Mrs. Novotny said ‘That is my will?’ ”
(No response.)
“Did you understand the question? A. Bead the question over again, please.”
(The reporter read the question.)
“A. He asked her if she knew what she was signing or what this paper was, and she hesitated, she didn’t know, and he says, ‘Isn’t it a fact you are signing your will?’
“Q. And what did she say to that? A. ‘Oh.’
‘ ‘ Q. What is that ? A. ‘ Oh. ’
“Q. She just said ‘oh,’ and then after that she asked you to write—to sign your name to it? A. No, not after that. She asked me before that,”

*786 The other subscribing witness, C. Chapman Lantz, testified that the will was. signed by Mrs. Novotny and declared to be her last will in the presence of himself and Mrs. Avery and that they signed in the presence of each other.

In general the will devised all of the property to Charles Lantz, but, nevertheless, in trust for the purpose of paying the income to Mrs. Novotny’s mother during her lifetime or in the event that her husband died before she did without adequate provision for their daughter, for the purpose of distributing the income to the daughter and mother in a proportion to be determined by the trustee. The will also provided for the determination of the trust and the distribution of the funds to the daughter Jean Ann Novotny, after the death of her grandmother and upon attaining her majority. The husband was left nothing. Charles Lantz was also nominated guardian of the estate of the daughter, in the event one became necessary, and in the event of the resignation, death, or disability of Charles Lantz, T. A. Box, Jr., shown by the testimony to be proponent’s son-in-law, was to act as trustee and also as executor in the place of Mr. Lantz, under the same circumstances. Mr. Lantz’s testimony shows that he recommended his son-in-law to Mrs. Novotny for the appointment and wrote his name into the will with pen and ink in blank spaces provided therefor.

In this situation appellant urges three reasons as grounds for reversal, first, that the formal proof of the will was complete and all statutory requirements complied with; second, that the court erred in permitting the guardian ad litem, of the minor daughter to participate in opposing the probate of the will, and, third, that the court erred in refusing to permit proponent to introduce certain additional testimony.

In support of his first contention the appellant asserts that even though Mrs. Avery had stepped into the kitchen, i. e., into another room of the apartment at the time Mrs. Novotny signed the will, she was nevertheless in the presence of the testatrix and “of the other witness to the will.” He also argues that when from some cause or another a subscribing witness to a will testifies contrary to the solemn act of attestation, the testimony should be *787 weighed with grave suspicion. While it is true that there was no door between the bedroom in which it is said Mrs. Novotny signed the instrument, and the kitchen, yet the wall between the two, according to the plat which was introduced, practically covered the head of the bed. Mrs. Avery was positive in her assertion that she was not present when Mrs. Novotny signed the instrument and also that she did not acknowledge it to be her signature.

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273 P. 58, 94 Cal. App. 782, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-novotny-calctapp-1928.