Large v. Diercken

243 P. 862, 198 Cal. 103, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 340
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11282.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 243 P. 862 (Large v. Diercken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Large v. Diercken, 243 P. 862, 198 Cal. 103, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 340 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

WASTE, C. J.

On November 6, 1911, Constance Berger, then Constance Diercken, executed a will leaving her entire estate to Claudeus Large, and appointing him sole executor. On May 6, 1913, she married Harry L. Boyle, from whom she was divorced on November 4, 1916. On March 8, 1918, she married Jean Baptiste Berger, who predeceased her on July 15, 1923. Mrs. Berger died January 4, 1924, leaving no issue. Upon her death Claudeus Large offered the will made November 6, 1911, for probate. The heirs at law of Mrs. Berger objected to its admission upon the ground that, it was executed at a time when the decedent was an unmarried woman, and was revoked by her subsequent marriage to Boyle. The proponent and petitioner interposed a demurrer to the opposition, which was sustained without leave to amend. The court thereupon admitted the will to probate, and letters testamentary, without bond, were ordered issued to Claudeus, Large. The heirs of Constance Berger have appealed.

The sole question presented by the appeal is whether the will of Mrs. Berger was finally and completely revoked by her marriage to Boyle in 1911, at which time section 1300 of the Civil Code provided: “A wiU by a woman is revoked by her subsequent marriage, and is not revived by the death of her husband”; or whether it was valid and governed by the section as amended in 1919 and in force at the time of Mrs. Berger’s death in 1924. The amended section provides (Stats. 1919, p. 1239): “If, after making a will, the testatrix marries, and the husband survives the testatrix, the will is revoked, unless provision has been made for him by marriage contract, or unless he is provided for in the will, or in such way mentioned therein as to show an intention not to make such provision; and no other evidence to rebut the presumption of revocation can be received.” The contention of the appellants is that the will was revoked eo instcmti by the marriage to Boyle and could not thereafter *106 be considered as having either a present or a potential existence. Respondent, in reply, takes the position that a will, being ambulatory in character during the life of the maker, is governed by the law in force at the maker’s death, from which it follows, he argues, that under the provision of the statute in force when Mrs. Berger died, the will stood unrevoked and entitled to be admitted to probate. While the question thus presented is a novel one in this state, it has been many times considered in other jurisdictions.

Wills are ambulatory by their nature and create no rights which the court can recognize or enforce until they become operative by the death of the testator. “Acts which remain thus inchoate . . . are in the nature of unexecuted intentions. The author of them may change his mind, or the state may determine that it is inexpedient to allow them to take effect. ’ ’ (Moultrie v. Hunt, 23 N. Y. 394, 399; Goodsell’s Appeal, 55 Conn. 171, 175 [10 Atl. 557].) It is entirely competent for a statute to revoke by its provision a previously executed will. The right of any person to execute a will, as well as the form in which it must be executed, or the manner in which it may be revoked, are matters of statutory regulation. The power of the legislature to limit the class of persons who shall be competent to make a will, or to declare that a change in the personal status of such persons after its execution shall operate as a revocation of the will, or be a sufficient reason for denying it probate, is unquestioned. In order to determine whether a will has been revoked, or whether after its execution there has been such a change in the status or personal relations of the maker as will in law effect its revocation, we have only to determine whether the changed condition is within the conditions named in the statute. (In re Comassi, 107 Cal. 1, 4 [28 L. R. A. 414, 40 Pac. 15].)- When that is shown to be the fact, the law presumes that such a changed condition has been wrought in the life of the testator as to cause bim to destroy or cancel a previous will. (Sanders v. Simcich, 65 Cal. 50, 52 [2 Pac. 741].) Section 1300 of the Civil Code, as enacted in 1872, read: “A will, executed by an unmarried woman, is revoked by her subsequent marriage, and is not revived by the death of her husband.” It was amended in 1905 by substituting the words “executed by a woman” for the words “executed by an unmarried woman,” *107 the code commissioner saying: “The purpose of the amendment is to apply the same rule to wills executed by married and unmarried women with respect to the revocation by subsequent marriage.” By the common law, a married woman had no power to make a will, and the marriage of a woman revoked any will that she had previously made. (In re Comassi, supra.) This rule has been very generally adopted as the common-law rule in the United States and has been re-enacted by statute in many states. (Page on Wills, 1901, sec. 284.) It does not rest alone upon mere presumption, but upon the material change which marriage works in the circumstances and conditions of every woman and the new interests she sustains by the act of taking a husband. (Schouler on Wills, 6th ed., sec. 639; see, also, 4 Kent’s Commentaries, *521.) The state of New York enacted a statute providing that the will of an unmarried woman was revoked by her subsequent marriage. (2 R. S. 64, par. 44.) In an early case involving the question we are now considering, the court of appeals of that state said: “We concur in the conclusion reached by the surrogate that the will was revoked by the subsequent marriage of the testatrix. It was the rule of the common law that the marriage of a woman operated as an absolute revocation of her prior will. (Forse and Hembling’s Case, 4 Co. 61.) The reason of the rule is stated by Lord Chancellor Thurlow in Hodsden v. Lloyd (2- Bro. Ch., 534). He says: ‘It is contrary to the nature of the instrument which must be ambulatory during the life of the testatrix; and as by marriage, she disables herself from making any other will, the instrument ceases to be of that sort, and must be void. ’ The rule that the marriage of a femme sole revoked her will was made a part of the statute law of this State by the Revised Statutes. (2 R. S. 64, sec. 44.) The language of the statute, that the will of an unmarried woman shall be deemed revoked by her subsequent marriage, is the declaration of an absolute rule. The statute does not make the marriage a presumptive revocation which may be rebutted by proof of a contrary intention, but makes it operate eo instanti as a revocation. (4 Kent, 528.) It is claimed by the contestant that the testamentary capacity conferred upon married women by the recent statutes in this state takes away the reason of the rule of the common law, and that upon the *108 maxim cessante rations legis, cessat lex ipse, the rule should be deemed to be abrogated. Upon the same ground it might have been urged at common law that the marriage of a femme sole should only be deemed a revocation or suspension of her prior will during the marriage, and that when the woman’s testamentary capacity was restored by the death of her husband, leaving her surviving, the will should be revived ; but the contrary was well settled.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 862, 198 Cal. 103, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/large-v-diercken-cal-1926.