In Re Estate of Thompson

198 P. 795, 185 Cal. 763, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 602
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6354.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 198 P. 795 (In Re Estate of Thompson) 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 Thompson, 198 P. 795, 185 Cal. 763, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 602 (Cal. 1921).

Opinions

WILBUR, J.

Respondent, the sister of the deceased, filed a will dated May 13, 1908, for probate. The surviving husband, the appellant, filed a contest of this will on the ground that the will had been revoked by a later will executed November 25,1916, which will he alleged had been destroyed without the intention of reviving the former will. Thereupon the sister filed a petition for the admission to probate of the will of 1916 as a lost or destroyed will. She also answered the contest of the will of 1908 by denying that the will of 1916 had been destroyed with the intention to revoke the same. Appellant filed no formal contest to the will of November 25, 1916, but he appeared at the time of the hearing, presented evidence, and claimed that the existence of the lost will was not established by two witnesses, and opposed its probate on that ground.

The will of 1916 appointed the respondent executrix without bonds and left all the property of the testatrix to the respondent except a bequest of five dollars to the appellant; another five dollars to a brother of testatrix, and one of five dollars to a half-brother. The will also made certain provisions applicable only in the event that respondent predeceased her, which, because the sister survived the deceased,, are immaterial. By the will of 1908 the respondent was made executrix thereof without bonds, and everything was given to the respondent except one dollar bequeathed to the appellant.

At the time of the trial the respondent contended that the will of 1916 copld not be proved because there were not two witnesses to prove its contents as required by section 1339 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Respondent offered proof of the due execution of the will of 1908, and thereupon rested. The court took the position that the second petition of re *766 spondent for the probate of the will of 1916 was in effect an amendment of the original petition for the probate of the will of 1908 and, therefore, announced that the will of 1908 could not be admitted to probate.

Respondent thereupon stated her position thus: “We are claiming under the first will absolutely, if your honor please. It cannot prejudice the contestant’s right for me to say that when we submitted the copy, so-called copy, of what we thought we might be able to establish in accordance with the law of a lost or destroyed will, that we believed that both witnesses to the second will were still alive and that we could prove it under the statute that requires a lost or destroyed will to be proved by two credible witnesses. We filed that and made that similar statement to his honor, Judges Rives, on the hearing of this first will.”

The court took the position that if there was a later will, whether its terms could be proven or not, the first will was thereby revoked, and directed respondent to proceed with proof of the lost will. Respondent’s counsel protested that they desired to rest with proof of the first will, and proceeded under protest to call B. G. Hurlburt, stating “there is only one witness we know of that could prove this will, and we will call that gentleman. That is the only witness we have any knowledge of.” This witness testified to the contents and the due execution of the will of 1916. The only other witness testifying to the contents of the will of 1916 was the respondent, who was examined on that subject by the court. To this testimony respondent’s attorney objected as follows: “I would like to object to her positive testimony that she received a copy on the ground that it is hearsay and not the best evidence.” The objection being overruled the court elicited the testimony of the witness to the effect that respondent had received a letter at Portland, Oregon, in 1916, from the testatrix inclosing a copy of the will of 1916, and stating that it was her last will. The letter itself had been destroyed. The statement that the enclosed copy of a will was her last will was merely a declaration of the testatrix, so that the question presented here resolves itself into this: [1] Can a lost or destroyed will be proved by the testimony of one witness who saw the original will and by evidence of the declarations of the deceased as to its contents? The fact that the decedent accompanied her declara *767 tion by a carbon copy of the will did not place the recipient thereof in a position to testify of her own knowledge as to the contents of the lost or destroyed will, which she had never seen. Her testimony would merely establish the hearsay declaration of the deceased. In this state the statute (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1339), requires two credible witnesses and the testimony of the declarations of the decedent cannot supply the place of one of these witnesses. This was held by the supreme court of the state of Washington, under a similar statute, in Estate of Needham, 70 Wash. 229, [126 Pac. 429], and as we agree with that decision, the order admitting the will of 1916 to probate must be reversed: The will of 1916 should have been denied probate.

[2] The next question to be considered is whether or not the evidence of one witness to the due execution of the will of 1916, and to its contents is sufficient to show a revocation of the will of 1908, and thus to show that the will of 1908 was not the last will of the decedent, and hence, as the will of 1916 cannot be effectively established by probate, that the decedent died intestate. If the will of 1916 had been revoked by cancellation or otherwise, the evidence of one witness to the contents of the will of 1916 would be sufficient to establish that it contained a revoking clause, for section 1297 of the Civil Code declares that the revocation of a revoking will does not revive the first will “unless it appears by the terms of such revocation that it was the intention to revive and give effect to the first will.” No doubt can be entertained that where the second testamentary act is revoked, evidence of the contents of the revoked will may be considered to determine the effect of such revocation upon an earlier will still in existence.

[3] This is not a case where a will containing a revoking clause has been destroyed animo revocandi.

The trial court found that the will of 1916 was in existence at the time of the death of the testatrix and was her last will. The finding is attacked by the appellant as not supported by the evidence. This finding is sustained solely by the declaration of the deceased and by the circumstances in the ease. But the evidence is sufficient. This evidence is as follows: During her last illness the testatrix frequently stated to her nurse that she had left a will and that her papers were with her attorney, B. Gr. Hurlburt, and confirmed this *768 statement only a few hours before her death on. December 8, 1918. She further stated she desired her sister to have everything and did not desire her husband to have anything. The respondent testified that repeatedly between the date of the execution of the will up to July, 1918, the testatrix wrote to her stating that she wanted respondent to have everything and repeatedly referred to the will as still in existence.

As we have held in the Estate of Sweetman, ante, p. 27, [195 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P. 795, 185 Cal. 763, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-thompson-cal-1921.