Madison Bank & Trust Co. v. Beat

130 N.W.2d 739, 25 Wis. 2d 315, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 573
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 130 N.W.2d 739 (Madison Bank & Trust Co. v. Beat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison Bank & Trust Co. v. Beat, 130 N.W.2d 739, 25 Wis. 2d 315, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 573 (Wis. 1964).

Opinion

*319 Wilkie, J.

Two issues are presented by the contest over the postnuptial agreement:

First: Is the postnuptial agreement valid ?

Second: May the widow elect under sec. 233.12, Stats., to take her share as provided by law rather than by the post-nuptial agreement ?

Validity of Postnuptial Agreement.

Postnuptial agreements are permitted in Wisconsin. 1 Nevertheless, the trial court found this agreement to be “void and of no legal effect” specifically finding:

“8. That the said petitioner, Helen Docken Beat, was persuaded by the decedent to sign the marital agreement dated March 9, 1959, without knowledge or effect of its terms.
“9. That the decedent Roy Beat attempted to prevent his wife Helen Docken Beat, petitioner herein, from sharing in his estate in an unfair and imposing manner, without proper disclosure to her of her rights.
“10. That the said decedent in his relationship to the said petitioner as her husband overreached his said wife and persuaded her to sign the said marital agreement by duress and coercion.
“11. That the said decedent, Roy Beat, was guilty of such imposition and overreaching in obtaining the signature of petitioner Helen Docken Beat to the said marital agreement as to constitute actionable fraud sufficient to void the said marital agreement.”

*320 These findings will not be upset unless they are against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. 2

What then are the facts surrounding the signing of the agreement? The evidence is substantially undisputed. In 1957 Roy Beat, about seventy-one years old at the time and who had been a widower for many years, met Helen Docken, about fifty-two years of age, who had been widowed since 1955. She had inherited a farm worth $30,000, and $10,000 in insurance when her husband died. She managed the farm and made many improvements to it. Both had grown children and, in addition, Mrs. Docken had a minor daughter, Nyla, living with her.

Mrs. Docken had been working as a waitress at the Post Cafe in Mt. Horeb since 1955 and it was while so employed she first became acquainted with Mr. Beat. The two dined together on a number of occasions. There was talk of marriage late in 1958, and they were married in Dubuque, Iowa, on March 4, 1959. They returned to Wisconsin immediately. The new Mrs. Beat stayed at her farm and Beat returned to his apartment to live.

Shortly after this, Nyla came down with pneumonia and was hospitalized. The newlyweds did not see each other again until around 6 p. m. on March 9th, when Beat met his wife at the hospital where she was visiting Nyla. He insisted that she had to come with him to sign “that paper.” He then took her to the Madison Club for that purpose. There, by prearrangement, they met Beat’s attorney (Mr. Arthur May). Mrs. Beat had not met him before. The three had a drink or two before eating.

After dinner, the attorney produced the agreement which he had dictated that day at Beat’s request and in his presence. According to Mrs. Beat, this was the first time the subject of the release had even been broached. After reading the docu *321 ment, she was asked if that was the agreement she wanted drawn up and if there was anything she did not understand. The attorney stated that if she did not have any questions she should sign it. She was told that the agreement would sever all her rights in Beat’s property, but the rights she would have in absence of the agreement were not elaborated. The club manager witnessed the signing. There was a dispute as to whether the signing took place in one room or another. She was given a copy of the document which she still had at the time of Beat’s death.

Mrs. Beat returned to the hospital and they did not meet again until March 17th, when they went to Florida for a month. Mrs. Beat and her daughter then moved into Beat’s apartment. Nyla lived there until she graduated from high school. At no time did Mrs. Beat question or object to the signing of the agreement or to its provisions.

We must measure this evidence and other evidence in the record against the standards to be used in ruling on the validity of a postnuptial agreement. Each case must be decided on its own facts. 3

Although there is nothing inherently suspicious or bad about a postnuptial agreement, these agreements will be regarded with rigid scrutiny. 4 Yet the widow, in asserting fraud, has the burden of proving it. 5 In meeting this burden she may be aided by a presumption of fraud that arises in those instances where she is not adequately provided for by the terms of the agreement and where there has not been a full and fair disclosure to her of the husband’s worth. 6

*322 Since Mrs. Beat received nothing from her husband’s estate under the agreement, a presumption of fraud arises unless there was a full and fair disclosure to her of Mr. Beat’s worth. At the time she signed the agreement there was no recitation to her of the nature and value of his property. Mrs. Beat admitted that she was previously aware of his ownership of an interest in a thriving hardware store in Mt. Horeb and in an apartment in that village. She denied any previous knowledge as to his farm, or farm personalty, but these holdings were obvious to anyone who, like Mrs. Beat, had lived for years in the Mt. Horeb area, and whose farm, in fact, was located in the same township of that of Mr. Beat. His substantial interests in the local bank and in the Wisco Hardware Company were well known in the community but there is no evidence that she knew about them. She knew of his manner of living and of his winter trips to Florida.

Under all the circumstances there was a failure on Mr. Beat’s part to disclose the extent of his property and a presumption of fraud arises. Therefore, we must look to all the evidence to determine not only whether this presumption is rebutted but also whether the trial court’s findings that Mrs. Beat was persuaded by decedent to sign “without knowledge or effect of its terms” (Finding 8), that “the decedent . . . attempted to prevent [her] . . . from sharing in his estate in an unfair and imposing manner, without proper disclosure to her of her rights” (Finding 9), that the decedent “overreached his said wife and persuaded her to sign ... by duress and coercion” (Finding 10), and that the overreaching was such “as to constitute actionable fraud” (Finding 11), are all against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.

Mrs. Beat was not an ignorant person. The skilful managing of her farm attests to her business acumen. 7 Having

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.W.2d 739, 25 Wis. 2d 315, 1964 Wisc. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-bank-trust-co-v-beat-wis-1964.