Irwin v. Jacques

71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 395
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1905
DocketNo. 8543
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 395 (Irwin v. Jacques) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. Jacques, 71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 395 (Ohio 1905).

Opinion

Price, J.

We are not required in this case to ascertain the intention of the testator in making the will before us, nor to construe its provisions, but to determine whether it was executed according to law. The undisputed testimony shows, and counsel for the parties agree, that it was the intention of Henry Irwin to make the marginal clause found on the sixth or last page, a part of that instrument. As appears from the intended facsimile in our statement of the case, the body of .the alleged will was written on the. horizontal lines of the pages,, but leaving, at least on the sixth or last page, a consid-. [402]*402erable blank space to the left of the ends of the lines. The signatures of the testator and the witnesses follow beloyr the attestation clause and are under the body of the instrument, and at its end, as if no marginal clause had been inserted. This marginal clause commences on the left edge of the page running lengthwise therewith from near the bottom to near the top thereof. The lower end of the clause is an inch or more below and to the left of the names of the witnesses, and about three inches below and to the left of the signature of the testator. Between the lower end of the clause and the names of the witnesses there is a blank space of about one inch, and between it and the attestation clause the blank space is about one inch and a half in width. Between the subscribing and attestation clauses on the horizontal lines there- is a blank space of four lines.

We think we have sufficiently described the location and relative situation of this clause which constitutes the ground of the contest. Its history otherwise is very brief and may be summed up in a few words. The will as originally prepared by the scrivener occupied and yet occupies six pages of foolscap or legal cap paper, on the last of which are the signatures of the testator and the witnesses. It was read over to the testator and he expressed his satisfaction with its provisions so far as they had been written, but refused to sign until another provision should be inserted. He desired to prevent attack on his will and litigation that might follow at the instance of dissatisfied heirs, legatees or devisees, and to this end requested that there be inserted a provision that, would impose something of a penalty upon any person who would controvert [403]*403the disposition he was making of the property. The marginal clause referred to was written in the space and in the manner just described, and it reads: “My will is that any child or heir not taken with this my last will and testament shall be disinherited, cut out, and shall have not one doll of my estate. ”

- With this in, the will was read to the testator and he expressed his satisfaction and signed it at the place before stated. The party or parties contesting the will alleged in the petition and contended at the trial, that the will was void because it was not signed at the end thereof.

On this subject our statute — section 5916,.Bevised Statutes — provides: “every last will and testament (except nuncupative wills hereinafter provided for), shall be in writing, and may be hand written or typewritten, and such will shall be signed at the end thereof by the party making the same, or by some other person in his presence and by his express direction, and shall be attested,” etc.

We have seen that the testator intended the clause written on the margin, to be a part of his will, and that he declined to sign, until it or its equivalent was inserted somewhere in the instrument, but he did not direct where it should be inserted. If the language so written has no legal signification and has no effect on the other provisions of the will, it might be treated as mere unimportant surplusage as in Baker v. Baker et al., 51 Ohio St., 217. In that case the testator, after having signed the instrument, disposing of his property and appointing his sister-in-law as the executrix, which was duly witnessed, wrote under the attestation clause the words — “my sister-in-law is not required to give bond when probated”— and signed his name thereto, which was not attested.

[404]*404It was' held that these words could not affect the construction of the will — were not dispositive in character and that the will was signed at the end thereof.

But if the clause is of a dispositive character, and may, in certain events, change the course of some or all of his property, its location in the instrument is of essential importance in deciding whether the will is signed at its end. Although the language of the marginal clause is crude and is the expression of an illiterate man, yet its meaning is not doubtful when coupled with the directions of the. testator which led to its insertion. According to the undisputed destimony he was determined that his estate should be settled in peace, and according to his will, and that if any “child or heir” should not “take” with his will he should be cut off without one dollar of his estate. Clearly the clause has a dispositive character, and this seems to be admitted by counsel for plaintiff in error. In Bradford v. Bradford et al., 19 Ohio St., 546, it is held that: “A condition in a will whereby the testator excludes any one of his heirs who ‘goes to law to break his will’ — from any part or share of his estate, is valid and binding; and effect will be given to it, as well in respect to bequests of personalty as to devises of real estate.”

■ However, they urge that, while this is true, the beneficiaries under the will have all united to uphold it, and that this appears by their joint answer in this case, wherein they allege that the paper produced as the last will and testament of Henry Irwin, is his valid last will and testament. Therefore, it is argued, the marginal clause can never have any chance for operation, and is no longer of consequence, in the settlement of the estate. ' But it must be borne in [405]*405mind that the will was executed without any knowledge of what the “child or heir” might subsequently decide to do, and hence the intense desire to provide for the contingency. The will became operative when admitted to probate. The testator died leaving the instrument just as he had made it, containing within its scope this dispositive clause, and no pleading could be filed in a case contesting the will, that would change its dispositive character. It must be judged as it stood when inserted in the will, and as it was probated with the balance of the instrument.

We therefore recur to the question, was the will signed at its end, as required by statute?

The trial court submitted the question to the jury in a very. concise instruction, which covered the whole law of the case. It is this: “If you find from the evidence that the matter written upon the margin of the page upon which the testator’s signature appears, was written before the will was signed by him, and that the testator intended such written matter on the margin to be a part of his will, then I say to you, such will was not signed at the end, as required by statute, and your verdict should be for the plaintiff, and that the paper writing produced is not the last will and testament of Henry Irwin. ’ ’

This brief charge implied that the matter written in the margin is of a dispositive character, which was the decision of a question of law for the consideration of the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-jacques-ohio-1905.