McNutt v. Gercke

157 P.2d 347, 62 Ariz. 273, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 187
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1945
DocketCivil No. 4618.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 347 (McNutt v. Gercke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNutt v. Gercke, 157 P.2d 347, 62 Ariz. 273, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 187 (Ark. 1945).

Opinion

UDALL, Superior Judge.

Catherine Hesse at her death on March 20, 1941, at the age of 76 years, left a will bearing date of April 25, 1939>, and a codicil dated October 30, 1940. The codicil merely changed the amount of one specific bequest. These two documents were admitted to probate as her last will and testament on April 15, 1941. Shortly before a year expired Elizabeth McNutt, one of two sisters of decedent, instituted a contest alleging undue influence by persons unknown, and incapacity to make a will.

Upon plaintiff’s (parties will be referred to as they were in the trial court) demand the will contest was tried before a jury, and upon the conclusion of plaintiff’s case the court granted defendants’ motion for an instructed verdict, finding the will to be valid. Thereupon the court entered judgment sustaining the will, from which judgment this appeal was taken.

Some procedural questions are raised: Paragraphs 8 and 9 of the petition to contest attack the validity of specific bequests to the Roman Catholic Church, which are contained in clauses 6, 7, and 8 of the will. The bulk of the estate is purportedly disposed of therein, one being the residuary clause which *276 is most bitterly attacked. The gist of this attack is that an invalid trust is attempted to be created'; that there is no qualified trustee to take; that the beneficiary is not a corporation sole; that there is no separation of the legal and equitable title between purported trustee and beneficiary; that the purported trust violates the rule against perpetuities; that the cy-pres doctrine has no application; that a resulting trust is created in favor of petitioner. Then she alleges that if these provisions of the will are declared invalid that the property would then pass to petitioner and others under the law of descent and distribution as if the decedent had died intestate. \

While the conclusion last stated is doubtless correct, the trial court refused to permit the reading of these paragraphs of her petition to contest, or the corresponding paragraphs of the answer, to the jury and also refused to permit the introduction of any evidence in support of these allegations. The reason given by the court for these rulings was that no question of fact was involved, that it was purely a question of law, and that furthermore none of these matters had to do with the legality or validity of the will; that in this will contest proceeding the court was not concerned with the interpretation or effect of specific provisions of the will. These rulings form the basis of two assignments of error.

Manifestly the ruling of the trial court was correct in all respects, for the reason that our statute (Arizona Code Annotated 1939, Secs. 38-201 to 38-226) governing probate and contest of wills expressly limits the issues that may be raised on a will contest to those involving (1) testator’s competency to make a'will, (2) his freedom at time of execution of the will from duress, menace, fraud or undue influence, (3) due execution and attestation of the will by testator and subscribing witnesses, and (4) any other substantial ground affecting the validity of the will (Sec. 38-210); and expressly *277 requires the court to admit the will to prohate, if satisfied, from proof or facts found by jury, that (1) the will was duly executed; and (2) the testator when he executed the will was of sound mind and not acting under duress, menace, fraud or undue influence (Sec. 38-213). Thus, by the express provisions of those two sections the jurisdiction of the court is limited to determination of “the factum of the instrument’’ — the will.

This is what some authorities term the old common-law issue of devisavit vel non. 1 Bancroft Prob. Practice, Secs. 131, 132, 133, page 239 et seq. Sporn v. Herndon, 190 Okl. 149, 121 Pac. (2d) 602.

The prior holdings of this court have drawn a distinction between the validity of the instrument as a will and how much effect can be given its terms.

In the case of In re Estate of Harris, 38 Ariz. 3, 296 Pac. 267, we pointed out that if the instrument shows animo testandi and complies with all statutory requisites that it should be admitted to probate as a will even though all of its terms are not capable of being enforced. In the later case of In re Estate of Monaghan, 60 Ariz. 346, 137 Pac. (2d) 390, we quoted from 28 R. C. L. 377, which correctly outlines the scope of the functions of the probate court when a will is propounded for probate and sets forth the matters that are not concluded by a decree admitting a will.

The same rule obtains in other jurisdictions having statutes practically identical with ours. In Re Cook’s Estate, 173 Cal. 465, 160 Pac. 553; Mantz v. Gill, 147 Okl. 199, 296 Pac. 441, 445; In re Schmidt’s Estate, 15 Mont. 117, 38 Pac. 547.

A “will contest,” strictly speaking, is any kind of a litigated controversy concerning the eligibility of cm instrument to probate as distinguished from the validity of the contents of the> will. The question of a will or no will valid under the law is the sole issue on a contest proceeding. Legal questions involved in the construction or meaning of a validly executed will *278 are not grounds of contest. For instance, would it not be a travesty on justice to deprive some person of a legacy in a validly executed will by denying it probate merely because there happened to be some invalid provision contained therein.

It would appear that here the plaintiff has mistaken the scope of a will contest. She should raise these questions during probate as an incident to the statutory proceeding to determine heirship, (Secs. 38-1518 et seq., Arizona Code Annotated 1939) then the could would have jurisdiction to construe the will, 3 Bancroft’s Probate Practice 1954, Sec. 1200, or the validity of a clause may even be attacked on a petition for final distribution, as we pointed out in the case of Lowell v. Lowell, 29 Ariz. 138, 240 Pac. 280.

The plaintiff next assigns as error that the court directed a verdict upholding the validity of the will without requiring that all of the subscribing witnesses to the will and codicil who were present in the county be produced by the proponents of the will and examined, or their absence accounted for. The meager record before us shows that this was not required of defendants.

Were this contest an opposition to probate of a will in the first instance, as is provided for under Sec. 38-210, Arizona Code Annotated 1939, the statutory requirement (Sec. 38-212) for the production of the subscribing witnesses or accounting for their absence would apply, for the reason that at that stage of the proceedings there are really two matters before the court: (1) A petition for the probate of the will, which is an ex parte proceeding in rem, with the burden upon the petitioner to prove the material allegations of his petition. (2) A contest of the probate of the will which, while a proceeding in rem,

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Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 347, 62 Ariz. 273, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnutt-v-gercke-ariz-1945.