In re Lanart's Estate

9 Alaska 535
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJuly 15, 1939
DocketNo. 4182-A
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Alaska 535 (In re Lanart's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Lanart's Estate, 9 Alaska 535 (D. Alaska 1939).

Opinion

ALEXANDER, District Judge.

This is an appeal from the court of thé United States Commissioner (and ex-officio Probate Judge) for the Territory of Alaska, Juneau Commissioner’s Precinct, in the above-entitled matter, from an order entitled “Order Setting Aside Purported Will Admitted to Probate and Decree Admitting the Claims of Erik Einar Krister Lof[540]*540skog and Svanhild Sally Vilhelmina Abrahamson as sole heirs thereto,” made by the judge of said court on February 9, 1938.

It appears from the proceedings had in the Commissioner’s court that a petition for letters of administration was filed on December 31st, 1936, and pursuant thereto Guy McNaughton was duly appointed and qualified as administrator of said estate. That thereafter, on July 27, an instrument purporting to b,e the holographic will of the-deceased was filed with petition for probate. Thereafter, on August 10, 1937, hearing was had for proof of the-will, and on the same date an order entered admitting the document in question to probate as the last will and testament of the deceased and letters testamentary issued.

Thereafter a petition was filed on behalf of Erik Einar Krister Lofskog and Svanhild Sally Vilhelmina Abraham-son, attacking the validity of the document theretofore-admitted to probate as the will of the deceased and claiming the estate of deceased as the brother and sister and only heirs of the deceased. Hearings were had thereon and on February 9, 1938, an order was entered setting-aside the probate of the purported will and decreeing the claimants to be the rightful heirs of said estate.

From this decree appeal was taken by the American National Red Cross to this court.

The questions involved in this appeal are:

First: Whether or not the purported holographic or olographic will of deceased first admitted to probate by the Commissioner and ex-officio Probate Judge, and later-set aside by him, is a valid will.

Second: Whether it is sufficient to bequeath the property of the deceased to the appellant American National. Red Cross.

An “holographic will”, as described and defined' in Ruling Case Law, Vol. 28, under Section 16 of [541]*541“Wills”, is: “One entirely written, dated and signed by the testator in his own handwriting.”

Our law expressly recognizes holographic wills, and provides how they may be proven. Section 4624, C.L.A. 1933: “Olographic wills; how proved. Olographic wills, with or without attestation, shall be admitted to probate the same as other wills and be proved in the same manner as other private writings.”

The document in question meets all the requirements of our law. The entire document is admittedly written, dated and signed wholly in the handwriting of the testator in conformity with our statute, and should be considered together as one document.

The uncontradicted testimony shows, and the court finds, that the purported will is “one entirely written, dated and signed by the testator in his own handwriting”; that the testator was at the time qualified under our law to make a will, being of sound mind, over twenty-one years old, and not acting under any fraud, duress or undue influence, and that said instrument was duly proved as provided by law as the last will and testament of Gustaf- Lanart, deceased, and entitled to probate as such.

Having determined that the document in question is an holographic will and that the testator was qualified to make a will under our law, we pass to the discussion of the wording of the instrument and whether or not it is sufficient to dispose of the testator’s estate. This, of course, will have to be determined by the general rules governing the construction of wills.

As has already been pointed out, “Aside from the requirement as to writing, date and signature, an holographic will is subject to no other form. It is sufficient if the writing expresses, however informally, a testamentary purpose in language sufficiently clear to be understood.”

[542]*542Ruling Case Law makes this statement of the law: “The cardinal rule of testamentary construction is to ascertain the intent of the testator and give it- effect, unless the testator attempts to accomplish a purpose or to make a disposition contrary to some rule of law or public policy. All rules of construction are designed to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the testator and all rules or presumptions are subordinate to the intent of the testator where that has been ascertained. The intention will control any arbitrary rule, however ancient may be its origin, unless the testator attempts to effect that which the law forbids.” 28 R.C.L. Sec. 173, pp. 213, 214.

And again: “The intent of the'testator is to be collected from the whole will and from a consideration of all the provisions of the instrument taken together rather than from any particular form of words. The intention is not to be gathered from detached portions alone, and the court should not consider merely the particular clause of the will which is in dispute. The language employed in a single sentence is not to control as against the evident purpose and intent as shown by the whole will. In'other words, a will is not to be construed per parcella but by the entirety. As sometimes expressed, the intent is. to be ascertained from a full view of everything within the four corners of the instrument. If the whole will clearly indicates what was the testator’s intent the rules of law which aid in the construction of wills need not he invoked. 28 R.C.L. Sec. 175.

The policy of the law is to uphold wills and to make them valid and effective if that can be done. In doing so the courts have gone to great lengths and have repeatedly held that the intent of a testator need not be declared in express terms. . Quoting again from Ruling Case Law, we find this statement: “The intent of the testator need hot be declared in express terms in the will but it is sufficient if the intention can be clearly inferred from the particular provisions of the will and from its [543]*543general scope and import. The courts will seize upon the slightest indications of that intention which can be found in the will to determine the real objects and subjects of the testator’s bounty. The clear intention of the testator should prevail although it would require some departure from the literal construction of one of the clauses in the will. The general pervading purpose of the testator may override any inconsistent specific provisions found in the will, and it has been held that the testator’s particular intent, as shown by a single provision standing by itself, must yield to the general leading intent as manifested in the whole instrument. In the interpretation of a will the dominant or primary intention, gathered from the whole thereof and all its provisions, must be allowed to control, and a particular and minor intent is never permitted to frustrate a general and ulterior object of paramount consideration. Accordingly in interpreting wills favor will be accorded to those beneficiaries who appear to be the special objects of the testator’s bounty.” 28 R.C.L. Secs. 177-178.

“In the construction of wills the object is not to seek flaws and declare them invalid, but to assist them if legally possible, and the presumption is that the testator intended a lawful rather than an unlawful thing.

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9 Alaska 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lanarts-estate-akd-1939.