In Re Will of Winzenrith

55 S.E.2d 897, 133 W. Va. 267, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 17
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1949
Docket10147
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 S.E.2d 897 (In Re Will of Winzenrith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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 Will of Winzenrith, 55 S.E.2d 897, 133 W. Va. 267, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 17 (W. Va. 1949).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

Edgar Winzenrith prosecutes this writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Mercer County, entered on the 30th day of December, 1948, refusing to admit to probate a testamentary paper, dated July 1, 1936, allegedly executed by Nicholis Winzenrith, as his last will and testament, probate of which was refused by the County Court of Mercer County by order dated October 11, 1948.

Before considering the questions raised on this writ, it is necessary to recite what transpired prior to the date when the testamentary paper above mentioned was presented to the County Court of Mercer County for probate as a will. It appears from the record that Nicholis Win-zenrith, a resident of Mercer County, made a will dated July 15, 1932, by which he bequeathed and devised all of his property to his wife, Liza Winzenrith, and named her as executrix of his estate without bond. Nicholis Win-zenrith died April 13, 1945, and his will, of July 15, 1932, was admitted to probate in the County Court of Mercer County, on May 29, 1945. The proceedings under which the said will was probated were ex parte; there was, so far as the record discloses, no contest of said will, either in the county court, or by a suit in equity, which, under *269 the statute, might have been instituted at any time within two years after the final order of probate was entered.

Liza Winzenrith, the devisee under the 1932 will, took possession of the property disposed of thereby, which consisted of Lots Nos. 9 and 10 of Section 16 of the Bee Addition to the City of Princeton, and she occupied this property until her death on April 8, 1948. There was born of the marriage of Nicholis Winzenrith and his wife three children, namely, William Winzenrith and F. L. Winzen-rith; and Edgar Winzenrith, plaintiff in error herein.

The record discloses that on July 1, 1936, by testamentary paper bearing that date, but signed and witnessed on July 31, 1936, Nicholis Winzenrith made a new will by which he revoked all former wills made by him, and devised and bequeathed all of his estate, after payment of debts, to his son Edgar Winzenrith, plaintiff in error, to have and to hold in fee-simple forever; and appointed said Edgar Winzenrith executor of his last will, with directions that he be permitted to qualify as such without bond. This will was witnessed by James Harold Martin and C. B. Martin, both of whom testified in this proceeding.

It appears from the record that the will, dated July 1, 1936, was delivered to Edgar Winzenrith, then a child twelve years of age, who turned it over for safekeeping to one Meuriel Bowden. The will was not re-delivered to Edgar Winzenrith until after the death of his mother in April, 1948, after which date Edgar Winzenrith, on October 11, 1948, presented it to the County Court of Mercer County for probate. It appears that testimony was taken before the county court in respect to the execution of the will, and perhaps on questions pertaining to its probate, but whether there was a contest of the will in the county court is not disclosed by the record, and the testimony so taken is not a part of the record before us. The order refusing probate of the 1936 will was entered on October 11, 1948, and, following the entry of that order, Edgar Winzenrith filed his petition for an appeal to the Circuit *270 Court of Mercer County, which court granted such appeal, and held a hearing thereon, during which the testimony of the two subscribing witnesses, and that of Meu-riel Bowden and Edgar Winzenrith, was taken, bearing on the execution and subsequent possession of the alleged will, and the reasons why it had not sooner been offered for probate. In the circuit court, Cecil Asbury and Clara Anders filed what they term their joint replication and answer to the petition for the appeal aforesaid, in which they alleged that they had furnished services and supplies to Liza Winzenrith during her lifetime, for which she had agreed to compensate them; and, in effect, that they had a creditor’s claim against the estate of Liza Win-zenrith which entitled them to intervene in the proceeding. The court permitted them to file their replication and answer, as well as an amendment thereto, and the petitioner demurred to both the original and amended answers. On December 30, 1948, the circuit court entered its final order in the case, overruling the demurrers to the answers of Asbury and Anders, and, after reciting and taking of evidence, introduced in open court in support of the petition, refused to probate the will dated July I, 1936, and made this order:

“It is therefore, considered by the Court that a contest of the said will exists and that a trial by jury shall be had to determine if this is the true last will of the decedent, to all of which judgment the petitioner, by counsel, excepted.”

We can only surmise the grounds upon which the County Court of Mercer County and the Circuit Court of said county refused to admit to probate, the will of July 1, 1936. But the answers of Asbury and Anders filed in the case set up the probate of the will of Nicholis Winzenrith, dated July 15, 1932, and its regular probate, in an ex parte proceeding; and, stated clearly, that more than two years had elapsed between the date of such probate and the presentation of the 1936 will offered for probate on October II, 1948.

As stated above, we do not have before us the proceed *271 ings before the county court in respect to the 1936 will; but the evidence introduced in the circuit court sufficiently establishes the proper execution of the 1936 will, and we are, therefore, led to assume that the grounds upon which the probate of that will was refused must have been the probate of the 1932 will referred to, and the absence, of any contest of that will, either in the county court, or by a suit in equity within the statutory period permitted by Code, 41-5-11. We are further supported in this view by the arguments of counsel in this case which is largely confined to the question of the legal effect of the probate of the 1932 will.

Sections 1, 2 and 3 of Article 5, Chapter 41 of the Code, covers the duty of a custodian of a will in respect to producing the same; defines the powers of a county clerk with respect thereto; and provides for a procedure to require the production of an existing will; but, so far as we know, there is no statute or rule of law which makes the failure to produce a will within any particular time, after the death of the testator, a ground of attack upon the will itself. In the case at bar, we are not met with a situation where the rights of third parties have intervened, unless it be the claims of persons claiming to be creditors of Liza Winzenrith. The property of which Nicholis Winzenrith died seized is intact, and the title thereto is now vested in either the heirs at law of Liza Winzenrith, or in the plaintiff in error, Edgar Winzenrith. We are not called upon to appraise a situation wherein the rights of innocent purchasers for value and without notice have become involved. We are confronted with the naked question of whether the probate of the 1932 will, which probate has become final, bars the probate of a later will, which, in its very terms, revokes the prior will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.E.2d 897, 133 W. Va. 267, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-winzenrith-wva-1949.