Mahaffay v. Smith

254 P. 875, 79 Mont. 10
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1927
DocketNo. 6,065
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 254 P. 875 (Mahaffay v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahaffay v. Smith, 254 P. 875, 79 Mont. 10 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

Charles W. Mahaffay and Mary W. Mahaffay became husband and wife on April 30, 1921, and that relation continued until the death of the latter on April 18, 1924. During all of this time both were residents of this state.

On November 27, 1923, at Helena in this state, Mary "W. Mahaffay executed her last will and testament, naming the defendant A. L. Smith as the executor thereof. The other defendants are devisees under the will. Charles W. Mahaffay was not named therein. •

After the death of Mary W. Mahaffay, her will was duly admitted to probate. The defendant Smith was appointed as executor, duly qualified as such and is now acting in that capacity. In the course of and in connection with these probate proceedings, the plaintiff instituted an action in the district court in the matter of said estate to determine heirship by filing a complaint, which was thereafter amended, setting up his claimed rights in the premises. In effect the averments of this complaint are that Mary W. Mahaffay died testate; that her will had been admitted to probate; that at the time of her death she owned certain real and personal property; that at the time of the making of her will Charles W. Mahaffay was her husband and had never assented in writing [15]*15to the making thereof, and was therefore entitled to one-half of her estate.

Separate answers were filed on behalf of the defendants, in which the relationship of husband and wife between Charles W. Mahaffay and Mary W. Mahaffay at the time of the execution of the aforesaid will was admitted; and it was also admitted that Charles W. Mahaffay was not named therein, and that no property was devised or bequeathed to him thereby. Affirmatively it was set up that the plaintiff had consented in writing to said last will and testament; also, that all the estate of Mary W. Mahaffay, deceased, both real and personal, was her separate and independent estate, acquired before her marriage to Charles W. Mahaffay by inheritance from her father and from her former husband; and that plaintiff had never contributed to or aided in the creation or acquisition of any portion of said estate. Replies were filed putting in issue all the allegations of the answers.

The case came on for trial before the court without a jury on July 12, 1926. Thereafter the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law and ordered judgment in favor of plaintiff for an undivided one-third of the estate of Mary W. Mahaffay, deceased. Judgment was entered in accordance with such findings and conclusions, and from this judgment the defendants have appealed.

Section 6975, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “A married woman may make a will in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were sole, except that such will shall not, without the written consent of her husband, operate to deprive him of more than two-thirds of her real estate, or of more than two-thirds of her personal estate.”

On behalf of the defendants it is contended on this appeal: (1) That Charles W. Mahaffay consented in writing to the operation of the will of Mary W. Mahaffay; (2) that section 6975, supra, has ceased to be operative; (3) that said section 6975 does not assume to speak with reference to the separate property of married women; (4) that said section 6975 is un[16]*16constitutional as being in violation of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that it denies to married women within this state the equal protection of the law. We shall consider these contentions in. the order above named.

1. The claim that plaintiff gave his written consent that his wife’s will should operate to deprive him of more than two-thirds of 'her real estate or more than two-thirds of her personal estate is based upon two documents signed by him. The first is a letter written by him to Mary W. Mahaffay about the month of October, 1922, when she was in a sanitarium at Salt Lake, in which he adverted to the fact that their marriage had not been a success for the reason that their tastes and inclinations led them in different paths, and suggested that under the conditions existing she should secure a divorce. The only reference to property in this letter is one to the effect that each should retain the tokens received from the other in memory of the sentiment which prompted their gift. The second writing referred to is a paragraph contained in an answer filed to a complaint in divorce proceedings instituted by Mary W. Mahaffay against the plaintiff, in which he alleged that she was possessed of a considerable amount of property in her own right, which allegation was made in resistance of her effort to obtain alimony from him in the divorce proceeding. The divorce case was never determined and was pending at the time of Mary W. Mahaffay’s death.

Section 6975, supra, does not state what form this written consent must take, and under the facts in this case we do not feel called upon to pass upon that point. A painstaking scrutiny of the two instruments upon which counsel rely to establish such written consent fails to show in either any statement which can be construed, either directly or inferentially, as a consent to the making of a will by Mary W. Mahaffay that would operate to deprive her husband of any portion of her estate.

[17]*172. Section 6974, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “Every person over the age of eighteen years, of sound mind, may, by last will, dispose of all of his estate, real and personal, and such estate not disposed of by will is succeeded to as provided in sections 7071 to 7092 of this Code, being chargeable in both eases with the payment of all the decedent’s debts, as provided in the Code of Civil Procedure.”

Counsel for defendants state in their brief: “In view of the emancipating statutes enacted in Montana in relation to married women it is submitted that the restrictive provisions of section 6975 must give way to the broad and general provisions of section 6974.”

We preface our consideration of counsel’s argument on this matter with the observation that we are committed to the doctrine that the right to make a will is purely statutory and subject to the complete control of the legislature. As stated by Mr. Chief Justice Brantly in In re Noyes’ Estate, 40 Mont. 178, 105 Pac. 1013: “The right to make a testamentary disposition of property is not an inherent right; nor is it a right guaranteed by the fundamental laW. Its exercise to any extent depends entirely upon the consent of the legislature, as expressed in the statute enacted on the subject. It can withhold or grant the right, and, if it grants it, it may make its exercise subject to such regulations and requirements as it pleases.”

It is argued that by the amendment of the statutes concerning married women (Comp. Stats. 1887 p. 1046), the provisions of which have been carried forward through the various compilations of our laws and other statutes subsequently enacted, a married woman in this state has been fully emancipated from all disabilities which attached to her at common law, as evidenced by the facts that she is obligated to support her husband only if he is unable to do so out of his own property or by his labor (sec. 5784, Rev. Codes 1921); that neither husband nor wife has any interest in the property of the other except ¿s above noted (sec. 5785); that [18]

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Bluebook (online)
254 P. 875, 79 Mont. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahaffay-v-smith-mont-1927.