Jeffreys v. International Trust Co.

48 P.2d 1019, 97 Colo. 188
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketNo. 13,336.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 48 P.2d 1019 (Jeffreys v. International Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffreys v. International Trust Co., 48 P.2d 1019, 97 Colo. 188 (Colo. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice

Butler delivered the opinion of the court.

The International Trust Company, as executor of the last will and testament of Elizabeth M. Burnham, deceased, presented the will to the county court of Denver for probate. Helen Frances Jeffreys and other relatives of the deceased filed caveats. A jury found for the proponent, and the court ordered the will admitted to probate. The caveators appealed to the district court, where another jury found for the proponent, and the court ordered the will admitted to probate.

1. The first objection is that the testatrix lacked testamentary capacity. The objection cannot be sustained. We need not review the evidence. It was conflicting. Two juries, each consisting of twelve members, found that the testatrix had testamentary capacity, and two judges approved the findings. In our opinion, the findings are amply supported by the evidence.

2. The will, omitting the formal parts, is as follows : “I make the International Trust Company of Denver my Executor. I leave my entire estate after payment of my just debts to the Denver Foundation for the benefit of needy Denver people.”

'(a) After attacking the will for want of testamentary capacity on the part of the testatrix, the caveat states: *190 ‘ ‘ That said pretended will is void and of no effect, in that the same attempts to dispose of the entire estate of the decedent for charitable purposes, and there is neither a trustee named therein in whom title to the estate may vest, nor is anyone empowered to carry out the charity attempted, nor any plan or means of carrying out ¡the charitable trust contained in said pretended will, and the attempted charitable bequest is void for indefiniteness and uncertainty. ’ ’

It is suggested that the court had no power to refuse probate on those grounds, and therefore that the' decree admitting the will to probate should be affirmed without passing upon the question presented to us. We are not in accord with that view.

In various text books and in judicial opinions we find statements to the effect that in proceedings to probate a will a court is without power to construe the will or detérmine the validity or invalidity of its provisions; that “if the will be properly executed and proved, it must be admitted to probate, although it contain not a single provision capable of execution, or valid under the Jaw.” See 1 Woerner’s American Law of Administration (2d Ed.), p. 530, §228; Remsen on Preparation and Contest of Wills, p. 372. The statutes of the several states vary greatly, and each decision should be considered in connection with the pertinent statute. Take for an illustration the case usually cited as “Matter of Davis,”' 182 N. Y. 468, 75 N. E. 530, a case sometimes cited to support the statement referred to above. The only ground relied upon in that ease to defeat the probate of the will was that the sole devisee, legatee and executrix named therein had died before the testatrix. The New York statute provides: “If it appears to the surrogate that the will was duly executed; and that the testator, at the time of executing it, was in all respects competent to make a will, and not under restraint; it must be admitted to probate * * *.” That statute bears some resemblance to section -5204, Compiled Laws of Colorado (amended by S. L, 1923, *191 p. 710, c. 194, §3). But in our statute we have certain all-important provisions that are not found in the New York statute. Section 5211, Compiled Laws, provides:

“On or before the day set for the hearing of the probate of such will, or the day to which such hearing may be continued, any person served with citation, as provided by law, or appearing at such probate, desiring to contest said will, or object to the validity or legality of all or any portion of the contents thereof, shall file in the county court a caveat or objections, in writing, which objections shall be subject to demurrer for insufficiency or motion to make more specific, definite or certain, and to amendment and answer as. a complaint and answer in civil cases, and shall be divided into two classes, to-wit:
“First — All such objections as may raise the issue as to whether the writing in question be the last will of the testator or testatrix or not, which issue shall first be tried by a jury, unless waived, according to the practice in civil actions.
‘ ‘ Second — All such objections to the legality of the contents of such will which then exist and could then be raised and determined in any other action, which class of objections shall, if such instrument be found to be a will, be heard and determined by the court, before such will be formally admitted to probate, and if, upon the hearing of such second class of objections, the court shall determine that any portion of the contents of such will is void, the court shall admit such will to probate, in so far as it shall be found to be valid and binding, and it shall be executed only in so far as its contents may be held to be valid and binding; and any portion of such estate not conveyed by such will because of the invalidity of any portion of its contents shall be held to be intestate property, to be administered as such, by the executor or administrator with will annexed, appointed to execute such will. If the entire contents of such will he held void, such estate shall he administered as in other cases of intestacy.” (Italics are ours.)

*192 Section 5213, Id., provides: “In all actions wherein the execution or contents of any last will may he brought in question, the record of the probate of such will, or an exemplified copy of such record, shall be conclusive proof of the execution and also of the legality and validity of the contents thereof, in so far as the same were determined at the probate, both as against the persons summoned and appearing at the probate thereof and as against all other persons * * *.”

It may be noted, also, that there is an important difference between the will involved in the New York case and the will before us, in this, that the will before the New York court contained a provision expressly revoking all former wills made by the testatrix, whereas the will before us has no such provision. That provision being valid and effectual, the New York will, of course, was entitled to probate.

Whatever may be the law in other jurisdictions where there are no such provisions as we have in sections 5211 and 5213, supra, the court, in proceedings to probate a will in this state, has power to pass upon all objections made in the caveat to the legality of the contents of the will, and is required to do so; and if a portion of the contents of the will is void and the rest valid and binding, the will must be admitted to probate only as to the part that is valid and binding; and if the entire contents of the will are held to be void, the will must be denied probate and the estate must be administered “as in other cases of intestacy.” Such is the effect of sections 5211 and 5213, supra.

In Frazier v. Frazier, 83 Colo. 188, 263 Pac. 413, it was sought to probate a will. A caveat was filed. The trial court found testamentary capacity and sufficient attestation.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 1019, 97 Colo. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffreys-v-international-trust-co-colo-1935.