In re Will of Brown

85 Va. Cir. 235, 2012 WL 9737561, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149
CourtRoanoke County Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 21, 2012
DocketCase No. CL12-1429
StatusPublished

This text of 85 Va. Cir. 235 (In re Will of Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Roanoke County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Will of Brown, 85 Va. Cir. 235, 2012 WL 9737561, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Clifford R. Weckstein

On this 15th day of August 2012, came Allie B. Kreger, III, Executor of the Estate of Geraldine Lake Brown, deceased. He has appealed the Clerk’s order declining to probate a document as a codicil to the Last Will and Testament of Geraldine Lake Brown, deceased. In accordance with Virginia Code § 64.1-78, the Clerk has entered an order allowing this appeal as a matter of right.

The matter was docketed as a preferred cause for trial and was timely tried. As Va. Code § 64.1-78 provides, the Court heard the matter de novo, as though it had been presented to the Court in the first instance. The Court heard the evidence ore tenus, and the matter was argued. The Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are set forth below in narrative form.

Geraldine Lake Brown, a resident of the City of Roanoke, Virginia, died on June 1, 2012, at the age of 95. Her Last Will and Testament, which was drafted by a lawyer and duly witnessed and proved, was admitted to probate by the Clerk of this Court on June 27, 2012, and Allie B. Kreger, III, qualified as executor of her estate.

In her will, Ms. Brown made a specific bequest of sterling silverware. She left the rest of her property to her cousin, Gerald E. Wizon. (She also named Mr. Wizon as her executor, and his wife as successor executrix. Mr. Kreger was nominated and appointed to serve if neither of the Wizons qualified.)

Gerald E. Wizon was present in person for the hearing in this matter and actively participated in the hearing. He and the executor, Allie B. Kreger, III, are the proponents of the admission to record, as a codicil to Ms. Brown’s will, of a one-page document dated October 17, 2005. That document is [236]*236typewritten, i.e. prepared on a typewriter, whose keys made a mechanical impression on the page, not on a computer. It bears the handwritten signature “Geraldine Lake Brown.” Ms. Brown’s name is typed immediately beneath her signature. No witnesses signed or otherwise attested to this document.

The Court heard the testimony of Allie B. Kreger, III, and of Gerald E. Wizon. Both identified the signature on the document as that of Geraldine Lake Brown. The document was presented to the Clerk together with an envelope postmarked “Roanoke, VA 24014 18 Oct. 2005,” addressed (by typewriter) to Gerald E. Wizon and bearing a return address sticker that contained Ms. Brown’s name and address. Gerald Wizon testified that Ms. Brown discussed her wishes or desires with him, and he asked her to put those desires in a codicil. Ms. Brown mailed this document to him; it was in his possession when she died. The witnesses testified that Ms. Brown, who had worked as a legal secretary for some twenty years, habitually typed “everything,” including her checks.

The purported codicil reads (and, for the most part, looks) like this:

October 17, 2005

If there is anything left after the proceeds of selling the house and its contents and all of my outstanding expenses are paid,
I would like approximately $200,000.00 divided as follows:
[person’s name] 30%
[person’s name] 15%
[person’s name] 15%
[person’s name] 15%
[person’s name] 10%
[person’s name] 5%
[person’s name] 5%
If we are lucky, with no big bumps in the road and still able to keep Vanguard Group, That should cover your expenses for handling my estate. At the present time I am unable to add to Vanguard.
Oakeys’ South Chapel one time viewing. I would like to look a little fancy, not look like a plain Jane, so Pam or Connie would be of help. Funerals are out of reach, go for less than $15,000.00 get a good vault.
Is/ Geraldine Lake Brown Geraldine Lake Brown

[237]*237The Court has redacted the names of the seven persons listed in the October 17 document. Their identities are irrelevant to the question of whether the document can be admitted to probate. The original document is part of the public record in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the City of Roanoke. The seven numbers listed beside those names total ninety-five percent.

Ms. Brown’s will gave her real estate on Valentine Road to her personal representative, with directions that he sell the property “as soon as may be conveniently practicable after my death,” but “at such time and upon such terms and conditions as my personal representative shall deem best.” The proceeds of this sale, the will provided, were to be added to the residuary estate, that is, Mr. Wizon, to whom the entire residuary estate passed under Ms. Brown’s will, selflessly asks the Court to admit to probate a document that would take some $200,000 that would otherwise belong to him and give that money to others. Mr. Wizon wants to do so in order to carry Geraldine Lake Brown’s intentions and wishes, as he understands them.

Virginia Code § 64.1-49 is Virginia’s Statute of Wills. It reads:

No will shall be valid unless it be in writing and signed by the testator, or by some other person in his presence and by his direction, in such manner as to make it manifest that the name is intended as a signature; and moreover, unless it be wholly in the handwriting of the testator, the signature shall be made or the will acknowledged by him in the presence of at least two competent witnesses, present at the same time; and such witnesses shall subscribe the will in the presence of the testator, but no form of attestation shall be necessary. If the will be wholly in the handwriting of the testator that fact shall be proved by at least two disinterested witnesses.

(The word “will” includes codicils and other testamentary dispositions. Va. Code §64.1-45.)

The typewritten document dated October 17, 2005, bears Ms. Brown’s “personal, handwritten signature.” See Shipe v. Hunter, 280 Va. 480, 484, 699 S.E.2d 519, 521 (2010). The signature is “in the handwriting of the testat[rix],” see Va. Code § 64.1-49, as is the interlined word “like.”

Self-evidently, and notwithstanding Ms. Brown’s habitual typing of “everything,” the typewritten portion of that document is not “wholly in the handwriting of [Ms. Brown].” It was not witnessed. Since it fulfills neither of the requirements of Va. Code § 64.1-49, it cannot, as a matter of law, be considered as a codicil or other testamentary instrument. See Berry v. Trible, 271 Va. 289, 301-02, 626 S.E.2d 440, 446-47 (2006); see also Langfitt v. Langfitt, 151 S.E. 715, 717 (W. Va. 1930) (rejecting argument that, since there is evidence from which to infer that the maker typed the [238]*238will himself, the court could find that the will was “therefore wholly written by him within the statute.”)

Mr. Kreger, the executor, suggested that, because Ms. Brown “typed everything,” typing could be considered her handwriting. This Court has not, in its research, discovered any case, anywhere in the United States, in which any court has so held.

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Related

Shipe v. Hunter
699 S.E.2d 519 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2010)
Berry v. Trible
626 S.E.2d 440 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2006)
Chappell v. Perkins
587 S.E.2d 584 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2003)
Gillespie v. Davis
410 S.E.2d 613 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1991)
Langfitt v. Langfitt
151 S.E. 715 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1930)
Massanetta Springs Summer Bible Conference Encampment v. Keezell
171 S.E. 511 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1933)
Farmers Bank v. Kinser
192 S.E. 745 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Va. Cir. 235, 2012 WL 9737561, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-brown-vaccroanokecty-2012.