In Re Witham's Estate

87 P.2d 651, 160 Or. 686
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 P.2d 651 (In Re Witham'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 Witham's Estate, 87 P.2d 651, 160 Or. 686 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

*687 BAILEY, J.

This case is here on appeal from a decree or order of the circuit court for Benton county rejecting the claim of the contestant, George E. Witham, that the last will and testament of Elvin Witham, deceased, should be construed as incorporating in the said will by reference a deed executed, but not delivered, by the decedent, wherein George E. Witham is named as the grantee.

Elvin Witham died testate January 26, 1935, and on February 6 of that year his last will was admitted to probate in common form, and Martha B. Witham, widow of the decedent, was appointed executrix. The last will of the decedent, after providing that all his just debts and funeral expenses be paid, contained the following two paragraphs:

“Second: I do give, devise and bequeath unto my children, Charles E. Witham and George E. Witham, the sum of one dollar ($1.00) each. I make no larger devises or bequests to my said sons for the reason that I have heretofore transferred and conveyed to each of my said sons certain parcels of my real property which I consider their fair proportion of my estate.
“Third: All of the rest, residue and remainder of my property, real, personal and mixed and wheresoever situate, I do give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Martha B. Witham.”

George E. Witham and his brother, Charles E. Witham, sons of the decedent and Martha B. Witham, on February 6, 1936, one year from the date the will was admitted to probate, filed a petition in the county court for Benton county, in which petition the execution of the will by the decedent and the admitting of the will to probate are alleged. It is further set forth therein that on July 6, 1932, Elvin Witham and Martha B. Witham made, executed and acknowledged two war *688 ranty deeds, one naming Charles E. Witham as grantee and the other naming George E. Witham grantee, which deeds purported to convey to the said grantees an aggregate of 304.91 acres of land described by metes and bounds in the petition; that “thereafter and prior to the time the said decedent Elvin Witham purported to make, publish and declare said last will and testament, the said Elvin Witham did and performed certain acts, the exact nature of which are unknown to this petitioner, but well known to said . Martha B. Witham, whereby the said Elvin Witham purported to deliver the said deeds, executed and acknowledged as aforesaid to the said Martha B. Witham, to be delivered to your petitioners upon the death of the said Elvin Witham ; that at all times thereafter and at the time he purported to make, publish and declare said last will and testament, and until the time of his death, the said Elvin Witham believed that he had sufficiently executed and delivered said deeds.” It is next alleged in the petition that the said Elvin Witham “had not sufficiently delivered the said deeds, and the same were never delivered prior to the death of the said Elvin Witham.”

The petition then mentions and sets forth in haee verba the second paragraph of the decedent’s will, hereinabove quoted, and further avers that the recital in said provision of the will concerning the prior conveyance of certain parcels of real property to his sons had reference to the attempted conveyance by deeds of the property described in the petition; and that at the time of making the said will Elvin Witham believed that the said deeds had been sufficiently made, executed and delivered to transfer to the petitioners the property described in the petition “and but for said belief [he] would not have purported to make, publish and declare such last will and testament.”

*689 The value of the estate including the real property-described in the petition is set forth as $75,000, and the value of the real property sought to be conveyed by the two deeds is placed at $50,000. The concluding part of the petition states that the testator did not intend to disinherit the petitioners but that if the said purported will “be admitted to probate, your petitioners will be disinherited and will receive nothing from said estate except the sum of $1.00 each.” The original prayer of the petition, which was not amended or changed until after the conclusion of the trial, some three years later, asked “that the order admitting to probate said pretended will be set aside and revoked; that the letters testamentary heretofore issued to the said Martha B. Witham be revoked; that said Elvin Witham be decreed to have died intestate . . . ”

Prior to the filing of this petition to revoke the will of Elvin Witham, deceased, Martha B. Witham as plaintiff instituted a suit in the circuit court for Benton county against George E. Witham, his wife and certain other individuals as defendants to have set aside and canceled a purported deed from Elvin Witham and Martha B. Witham, his wife, to said George E. Witham, and to have the title to said property quieted in the plaintiff as against all the defendants. In the complaint it was alleged that Elvin Witham died on the date hereinabove mentioned and that at the time of his death he was the owner of certain real property, the description of which identifies it as the property later described in the said petition. The complaint in that suit further alleged that the plaintiff was the widow of Elvin Witham, deceased; that the last will of said decedent had been admitted to probate; that the said widow had been appointed executrix thereof; and that all the property belonging to the said decedent *690 except the sum of $1.00 each bequeathed to Charles E. Witham and George E. Witham had been devised and bequeathed to the widow of the decedent. It was further alleged that by virtue of a certain deed dated July 6, 1932, and recorded in the deed records of Benton county, Oregon, the defendant George E. Witham was unjustly claiming title in fee simple to the premises described in said deed, which premises appear from the deed itself to be the west one-half of the real property of which Elvin Witham died seised; “that said deed was never delivered by Elvin Witham to George E. Witham, or at all, that by reason that the said deed was never delivered it is null and void.”

After setting forth that the defendants claimed some estate or interest in the said property adverse to the estate of Elvin Witham, deceased, and adverse to the plaintiff the prayer was that the deed be canceled, that plaintiff be adjudged to be the owner in fee simple of the property described in the complaint, and that the defendants be forever enjoined and barred from asserting any claim in and to the said property, and for further relief.

On December 26, 1935, George E. Witham and his wife filed an amended answer to the complaint in the said suit, in which the defendant George Witham claimed to be the owner of the west one-half of the premises therein described, by virtue of the deed referred to in the complaint, which is the identical deed sought in the proceedings before us to have incorporated in and made a part of the last will and testament of Elvin Witham, deceased. As a further defense in the suit to quiet title, George Witham alleged a family agreement and settlement between Elvin Witham and his wife, Martha B. Witham, whereby Martha B. *691

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Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 651, 160 Or. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-withams-estate-or-1938.