In re Will of Nash

361 N.E.2d 558, 50 Ohio Misc. 4, 3 Ohio Op. 3d 347, 1976 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53
CourtPreble County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 30, 1976
DocketNo. 24740
StatusPublished

This text of 361 N.E.2d 558 (In re Will of Nash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Preble County Court of Common Pleas 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 Nash, 361 N.E.2d 558, 50 Ohio Misc. 4, 3 Ohio Op. 3d 347, 1976 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Ziegel, J.

Lucille B. Nash died on November 6, 1975, leaving as her closest next of kin a group of cousins, one of whom on November 17, 1975, filed an application for letters of administration, averring that there was not to his knowledge any last Will and Testament. On December 1, 1975, Ronald W. Dwire was appointed Administrator. Dwire proceeded apace with the administration of the estate, filing his inventory and appraisement on December 30, 1975, which showed a gross estate of both real and personal property of almost $94,000.

According to testimony taken in the present proceedings, a couple of weeks later Dwire and one Paul Hans, a [6]*6tenant farmer for decedent, while preparing. decedent’s household goods. for sale, found a paper writing which attracted their attention as a possible will of Lucille B. Nash. Dwire sent it to his attorney, and on February 3, 1976, via appropriate application, presented.it for probate and record as decedent’s last will and testament. After service of summons on necessary parties, on February 24, 1976 this application to probate came on for hearing. Thurston F. Bittle, an attorney at law, and Zelpha L. Fritz, his secretary, the subscribing witnesses on said paper writing, whose signatures thereon were not in any way disturbed, each testified as to the due and proper execution of this alleged will, and also testified that the document did not contain- the black ink deletions now apparent at the time decedent signed the document and that each of them signed as witnesses.

Based on the physical appearance of the paper writing this court concluded that there was a presumption that testatrix had revoked the will in the manner provided in R. C. 2107.33, and accordingly found that the paper writing before the court was not entitled to admission to probate. An interlocutory order was entered, the matter set for further hearing, and additional notices served as provided in R. C. 2107.181. After a couple of continuances were granted, hearing was had on May 11, 1976, on which the matter now pends.

A detailed description of the paper writing captioned “Last Will and Testament of Lucille B. Nash” is appropriate. This writing is obviously professionally drawn. At the time it was presented for probate it contained eight separate black ink deletions, apparently made with a wide-pointed felt marking pen. These deletions are such that only by bending the paper so that light strikes it at just the right angle can the typing be seen under the black. Item 3 is completely black out, but dimly under the blacking can be seen: “I give and bequeath to William L. Mann, the sum of $2,500.” Item 4 is a residuary clause, and the only name appearing therein is blacked out, “Noble D. Mann, or his issue,” being dimly seen under the black. Item 5 appoints and empowers an executor and an alternative [7]*7executor. Here, the names of' Noble D. Mann ahd James-L. Mann aré covered with black ink. The last' blacking completely covers: the signature of Lucille B. Nash, although it too is vaguely legible under the blacking. Neither Item 1, which pro forma directs payment of debts, etc., nor Item 2 which makes a couple of small charitable bequests have been disturbed. Likewise, neither the standard attestation clause nor the signatures of the witnesses are disturbed.

An unusual facet of this case is that the applicant for probate, Ronald W. Dwire, desires that probate be denied, since he and others in his class will benefit only by an intestacy. Consistent with his personal point of view if not with the demand of his application, Dwire’s counsel has filed herein a “Memorandum in Support of Interlocutory Decree Denying Admission of Will to Probate.” On the other hand, William L. Mann, who is not a relative of Lucille B. Nash, and who appeared at the instant hearing with counsel pursuant to required notice issued under R. C. 2107.181, for obvious reasons desires that the paper writing in question be admitted to probate sans blackouts, since he personally is named in blacked out Item 3, and he is also the only issue of his father, Noble D. Mann, the name blacked out in Item 4.

This case proceeds under the provisions of R. C. 2107.11 et seq., as those sections were in force prior to August 29, 1975 (Section 3, Amended Substitute Senate Bill No. 145, since decedent died before January 1, 1976). The application is one to admit an original will to probate and record, not a proceeding to establish and admit to probate a lost, spoliated, or destroyed will under the provisions of R. C. 2107.26 et seq. R. C. 2107.14 provides that “[t]he Probate Court shall cause at least two of the witnesses to a will, and other witnesses whom a person interested in having such will admitted to probate may desire to appear, to come, before the court.” R. C. 2107.18 provided that:

“The Probate Court shall admit a will to- probate if it appears that such will was made by one of lawful age and attested and executed according to the law in force at the time of execution in the state where executed, or ác-[8]*8cording to the law in force in this state at the time of death * * * and if it appears that the testator at the time of executing such will was of sound mind and memory, and not under restraint.”

It is to he noted that R. C. 2107.14, in addition to the witnesses to the purported will, authorizes the Probate Court in this type of proceedings to receive only the testimony of such other persons as may be presented by one interested in having the will admitted to probate. The one being expressed, the other is excluded, and accordingly it follows under this statute that the court may not receive any testimony offered by a person who is interested in having the document denied admission to probate as decedent’s last will. At the May 11th hearing, Ronald W. Dwire, who, as indicated above, desires that probate be denied, presented his own testimony and that of others, which was received subject to subsequent ruling on the objections thereto. If the language of the statute is to be construed strictly, this testimony should not now be considered.

R. C. 2107.18, by its positive language, takes all discretion away from the Probate Court and mandates the admission of a will to probate if the court finds that certain designated, specific facts exist. In the case at bar, there is no question that at the time “such will was made” testatrix was “of lawful age”; and that such will was executed “according to the law in force in this state at the time of death” (R. C. 2107.03). It also “appears,” this word indicating that weight of the evidence is not significant, that the testatrix “at the time of executing such will was of sound mind and memory, and not under restraint.” R. C. 2107.18 does not require, as does R. C. 2107.27, dealing with the probate of a lost, spoliated, or destroyed will, that the court find that the will sought to be proved has been “unrevoked at the death of the testator * * *.” Accordingly, it would appear that at the first hearing held on February 24, 1976, as to the admission of the paper writing in question to probate the court should have ordered its admission, and left those persons who claim it has been revoked by the various black-out deletions to their. will contest íedy, under which circumstances the present hearing [9]*9under R. C., 2107.181 after the entering of an interlocutory order denying probate would have been unnecessary.

The foregoing describes the position taken here by William L. Mann. In support of his position he submits the leading case of

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Related

In Re Will of Elvin
66 N.E.2d 629 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1946)
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Bluebook (online)
361 N.E.2d 558, 50 Ohio Misc. 4, 3 Ohio Op. 3d 347, 1976 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-nash-ohctcomplpreble-1976.