In Re Shepherd's Estate

194 P.2d 425, 183 Or. 629, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 200
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 194 P.2d 425 (In Re Shepherd's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Shepherd's Estate, 194 P.2d 425, 183 Or. 629, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 200 (Or. 1948).

Opinion

*630 KELLY, J.

This is a proceeding brought to revoke letters of administration theretofore issued to Andrew Shepherd the surviving husband of Ada B. Shepherd, deceased; to secure an order admitting to probate the purported last will and testament of said deceased, and to procure the issuance of letters testamentary to Birdie Graves a sister of said deceased. From an order and decree that said Ada B. Shepherd died intestate; that said purported last will and testament was revoked by decedent on the 3rd day of September, 1919; that this proceeding be dismissed and that the appointment of Andrew Shepherd, as administrator of the estate of said Ada B. Shepherd, deceased, be confirmed, said Birdie Graves has appealed.

The controlling question presented here is whether a will executed by said deceased on the 20th day of August, 1919, was revoked by the marriage of said deceased to said Andrew Shepherd on the 3rd day of September, 1919.

The statute provides that

“A will made by any person shall be deemed revoked by his or her subsequent marriage.” Section 18-301, O. C. L. A., Yol. 2, p. 527.

It is contended by the proponent of said will, who is the appellant, that it was not the intention of the legis *631 lature that a will providing for the contingency of marriage would be revoked by a subsequent marriage.

The will tendered for probate in this proceeding contained the following provision:

“In the event of my marriage again before my death, I give and bequeathe to said husband the land, that is to say, the one-half portion of said 60 acres now owned by me and located in Marion County, Oregon, on which the dwelling is now located. ’ ’

No particular person is named in said will as decedent’s intended husband. While it is true that two weeks after the execution of said will, the testatrix married Andrew Shepherd, it cannot be said that there was an express provision in said will that in the event the testatrix should marry Andrew Shepherd, then in that case one-half of said 60 acres of land would be devised to him.

In support of appellant’s contention, as above stated, she cites the above quoted section of the statute and three cases, viz: Brush v. Wilkins, 4 N. Y. Chan. Rep. 506; Ford v. Greenawalt, 292 Ill. 121, 126 N. E. 555 and Gillmann v. Dressler, 300 Ill. 175, 133 N. E. 180.

Brush v. Wilkins, supra, is not based upon any statute, but upon a construction and application of the “English law as settled at the time of our revolution, or by those general principles of reason and justice, which have a uniform and universal application. ’ ’

The case of Ford v. Greenawalt, supra, is one wherein the will in suit provided that in case the contemplated marriage of the testator with Ruth Inseho should take place and she should survive him, she should have a legacy of $200 and an annuity of $200 per annum so long as she should remain his widow. “The legacy and annuity Avas made a charge upon his farm, which was *632 devised to Ms son, John A. Ford, to pay the annuity, and the provisions made for the benefit of the widow were to be taken in lieu of dower.”

The distinction between Ford v. Greenawalt and the case at bar is that in the case at bar no one is named as an intended spouse of the testatrix while in the FordGreenawalt case, as stated, Enth Inscho was named and designated as the intended bride of the testator in a contemplated marriage.

The later case of Gillmann v. Dressler, supra, is very similar to the case at bar, the only distinction being that in the case at bar the testatrix married Andrew Shepherd after the lapse of two weeks from the time the will in suit was executed, while in the Gillmann-Dressler ease a period of nearly three and one-half years elapsed after the execution of Gillmann’s will before he married Marian Woodman.

In both cases, that is the case at bar and the Gillmann-Dressler case, there was no devise to the person who later became the spouse of decedent; there was no statement that the decedent contemplated marriage with that person, but only a general provision that in case of a subsequent marriage on decedent’s part, the other contracting party, who would then be the spouse of decedent, was to receive certain devises or bequests.

We quote from the prevailing opinion in Gillmann v. Dressler, supra:

“The construction of the statute given in the Ford case is, that the legislature did not intend that the act should apply to a case where the will showed upon its face that it was to remain the will of the testator under the changed conditions by reason of the devise to a praticnlar person conditioned upon the marriage of such person. To hold that such a *633 rule should apply to a case where a devise is made simply upon the happening of an event which the will does not show to have been considered as certain to happen but which is viewed merely as one of the possibilities of his life, would be to extend the rule beyond that laid down in the Greenawalt case and to nullify section 10 of chapter 39 of our statutes. The reasons for the decision in that case are set forth therein, and it is clear that the present case does not come within such reasoning. As was held by the court in Wood v. Corbin, 296 Ill. 129, the rule should not be extended to those cases clearly coming within the intention of the legislature requiring the revocation of the will.” Gillmann v. Dressler, supra.
Section 10 of Chapter 39 of the Illinois statutes provided “that marriage shall be deemed a revocation of a prior will.” Gillmann v. Dressler, Ibid, at page 176.

Appellant also invokes the principle that where possible, the court should carry out and be controlled by the expressed intention of the testatrix.

In support of that principle appellant cites: Wheeler v. Wheeler, 1 R. I. 364; Miller v. Phillips, 9 R. I. 141; Stewart v. Mulholland, 88 Ky. 38, 10 S. W. 125, and Succession of Carbajal, 154 La. 1060, 98 So. 666.

In Wheeler v. Wheeler, supra, the supreme court of Rhode Island gave consideration to the statute providing that—

“no devise, etc. shall be revocable otherwise than by marriage of the testator subsequent to the date thereof, or by some other will and codicil in writing, or other writing declaring the same, or by burning, cancelling, etc.” Ibid pp. 372, 373.

In the Wheeler case, the facts and circumstances that impelled the court to hold that Wheeler intended *634 that his will should stand notwithstanding his marriage, are set forth in the opinion thus:

‘ ‘ First.

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Bluebook (online)
194 P.2d 425, 183 Or. 629, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shepherds-estate-or-1948.