In Re Estate of Wehrhane

372 A.2d 1365, 149 N.J. Super. 41
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 1, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 372 A.2d 1365 (In Re Estate of Wehrhane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division 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 Wehrhane, 372 A.2d 1365, 149 N.J. Super. 41 (N.J. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

149 N.J. Super. 41 (1977)
372 A.2d 1365

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CORA TALMAGE WEHRHANE, DECEASED.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.

Decided April 1, 1977.

*43 Mr. Robert E. Swanson for United States Trust Company of New York, successor trustee under the estate of Cora T. Wehrhane.

Mr. William B. Lawless, a member of the New York Bar, argued the cause for defendant John Gardiner Lord (Messrs. Hawkins, Delafield and Wood, attorneys of counsel), and Mr. William P. Ford, attorney.

Mr. Everett M. Scherer for defendants The Hospital Center at Orange, Community Services for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, and St. John's Guild (Messrs. Riker, Danzig, Scherer and Debevoise, attorneys).

Mr. Dean A. Gaver, Mr. Ashley Steinhart and Mr. Robert C. Epstein argued the cause for defendants David T. McGovern and Coleman B. McGovern, executors of the estate of *44 Doris M. McGovern and Maud Pilkington Blacker, Ind. (Messrs. Hannoch, Weisman, Stern and Besser, attorneys).

Mr. George Warren appeared on behalf of Mally Lord Ramos, Talmage Lord and Jennifer R. Lord (Messrs. Warren, Goldberg and Berman, attorneys).

LESTER, J.S.C.

This case comes before the court on the third intermediate accounting of the trust under the will of Cora T. Wehrhane. One a prior accounting the New Jersey Supreme Court held that a provision in a will leaving property to "issue" of another is presumed not to include the adopted child of the daughter of the testatrix. We are now asked to reconsider the question based on subsequent changes in the decisional law of this State. The case raises a substantial, if not altogether novel, question of the duty of a court to enforce a prior holding, the legal reasoning of which having been undermined by later rulings.

Mrs. Wehrhane died on March 13, 1925, and her will was admitted to probate soon after. Letters testamentary and of trusteeship were issued to her husband, Henry H. Wehrhane, who remained executor and trustee until his death in 1950, whereupon plaintiff was appointed successor trustee.

Mrs. Wehrhane's will, bearing the date January 5, 1925, provided for payment of her residuary estate to the trustee in trust, to pay the net income first to Mr. Wehrhane for life and then to her daughter, Dorothy Wehrhane Lord, for life. After the death of the daughter, this fund was designated to go to the "issue" of the daughter, per stirpes, and if no issue, to be divided in a specified proportion between Dorothy's husband, if living; Doris M. McGovern, decedent's cousin, and six charitable institutions. If Dorothy left no husband or issue, the husband's share would be shared between Doris M. McGovern and Maud Pilkington Blacker.

On January 14, 1931, nearly six years after the death of testatrix, Dorothy and her then husband adopted a son, who was named John Gardiner Lord. The daughter, up until the *45 adoption and thereafter, had no natural children. At the time of the filing of plaintiff's first accounting for the period March 13, 1950, to May 3, 1954, on October 22, 1954, the adopted son, John Gardiner Lord, on behalf of himself and his infant children, filed a complaint in the Chancery Division seeking to establish his interest in the estate as "issue" of his mother Dorothy, as the term was used in the will of Cora T. Wehrhane. The cases were consolidated and, after trial, it was determined by Judge Drewen, J.C.C. temporarily assigned, that the adopted son did not qualify as "issue" under the will of Cora T. Wehrhane to claim any interest in the estate. Judge Drewen held Doris McGovern and the six charities to have vested remainder interests, subject to divestment by the birth and survival of a natural child of the daughter of decedent. In re Wehrhane's Estate, 41 N.J. Super. 158 (Ch. Div. 1956), aff'd 23 N.J. 205 (1956) (Weintraub, J., dissenting) (hereinafter Wehrhane I). In view of this decision, the adopted son had no participation in the second accounting for the period May 9, 1954 to September 13, 1961, approved April 19, 1963. Subsequent New Jersey Supreme Court cases changed the state of the law as it was announced in Wehrhane I, holding that the terms "children" and "issue" in a will included adopted children, in the absence of language or evidence evincing a contrary intent, even for wills executed prior to the passage of reform legislation. In re Coe, 42 N.J. 485 (1964); In re Thompson, 53 N.J. 276 (1969).

In the present complaint for the third intermediate accounting, Paragraph 11 states that by virtue of the subsequent changes in New Jersey law, as announced by the Coe and Thompson decisions, the court should make a determination whether John Gardiner Lord and his issue qualify as issue of Dorothy Wehrhane Lord (now Nicholas) within the meaning of the will of Cora T. Wehrhane.

The opinion of Justice Oliphant in Wehrhane I stated the applicability to the case at bar of the "stranger-to-the-adoption rule." This rule provided that a gift made to children *46 or issue of another "is presumed not to include an adopted child or children * * *" (Wehrhane I, supra, 23 N.J. at 208) a presumption which may be rebutted by other language in the will or "circumstances surrounding and existent at its execution or the death of the testator." Id. In the remainder of the opinion Justice Oliphant endeavored to find any such language or factual circumstance that might disturb the presumption of exclusion. He found none. In his scrutiny of will terminology he found, to the contrary, that use of the term "issue" was a term deliberately used by the draftsman to exclude the possibility of adopted children taking under the will.

The evidence adduced by Mr. Lord in an attempt to rebut the presumption of exclusion was that the will indicated a design to benefit the persons nearest and dearest to Mrs. Wehrhane's daughter. This evidence was found inadequate by the court, which cited that there was no evidence that Dorothy would not have a natural child or that it was present to Mrs. Wehrhane's mind that any plans for adoption were contemplated. In addition, the court was unpersuaded by expert opinion that grandparents ordinarily do not discriminate against their adopted grandchildren by noting the portion of the expert testimony in which it was remarked that attitudes toward adopted children have changed considerably in the last 25 years. Wehrhane I, supra at 210, 211.

The court rejected the view that the operation of the exclusionary presumption may be altered by the existing adoption statute which gave adopted children full rights to inheritance. R.S. 9:3-9, as superseded by N.J.S.A. 9:3-30. The court specifically found that this statute, adopted in 1877, not to have created

* * * a rule of testamentary construction opposed to the judicial presumption that has always been attached to the word "issue" as a term of purchase and its consequent effect in determining the inclusion or exclusion of adopted children. [at 209]

*47 As a result, the presumption of exclusion was found applicable and unrebutted. Since the burden was on Mr. Lord to establish proof of an incusionary intent, there was no affirmative proof offered of any exclusionary intent, other than the fact that the legal consequences of exclusion of the term "issue" were understood by the draftsman.

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372 A.2d 1365, 149 N.J. Super. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-wehrhane-njsuperctappdiv-1977.