Montague v. Street

231 N.W. 728, 59 N.D. 618, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 181
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 728 (Montague v. Street) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montague v. Street, 231 N.W. 728, 59 N.D. 618, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 181 (N.D. 1930).

Opinions

*621 Buee, J.

The petitioners presented to the county court of Stark county a certain instrument, alleging it to be the holographic will of one Mary J. McG-illivray Street. The county court admitted the instrument to probate as such will, and from the order and decree of the county court the respondents appealed to the district court. This court made findings of fact and conclusions of law affirming the decree of the county court, denied a motion for judgment notwithstanding the findings or for a new trial, and entered judgment in favor of the petitioners. Frim this order and judgment of the district court the respondents appeal.

The instrument involved in this case was the subject of a prior suit. In McGillivray v. First Nat. Bank, 56 N. D. 152, 217 N. W. 150, we held that the instrument presented did not create a trust of property for the benefit of the persons named therein. We did say:

“All of the expressions and directions bearing upon the disposition of the property in the instant ease are appropriate to a testamentary disposition, rather than to a trust, and when all are considered together it seems to us that the conclusion is inescapable, that the deceased really intended the disposition as a testamentary one and doubtless believed that she had done all that was necessary to give effect to her testamentary intention. Whether or not she had made a valid will is a matter that we cannot properly decide in this case, and we therefore express no opinion upon it.”

The interested parties then commenced this action to have the instrument declared to be a will.

The specifications of error all center around two propositions:

First, that the instrument is not executed in accordance with the requirements of the statute so as to entitle it to be termed a will; and

Second, the testimony fails to show the alleged testatrix intended such instrument should operate as a will.

The following is a correct copy of the instrument in dispute:

*622 “Money in Bank to be disposed of Ií. E. Montague. 10,000
Maria Wheat. 10,000
Willetta McGlashan . 3,000
Marian McGlashan. 3,000
William Wheat . 2,000
Charles' Wheat. 2,000
Ered Wheat. 2,000
Watson Wheat... 2,000
Florence Griffith . 2,000
Mary Jane Griffith . 1,500
Richard Griffith June. 1,000
Norman Montague . 3,000
Richard Montague . 2,000
Hamilton Montague . 2,000
Mary Currier . 1,000
Donald Montague . and Donald the Ranch. 2,000
“Mary J. McGillivray Street “Oct. 1923.”

On the death of Mary J. McGillivray Street this instrument was found in her safety deposit box in the possession of the First National Bank of Dickinson, North Dakota, enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed as follows:

“For R. H. Johnson and Claud Montague”

The record shows that Mrs. Street was a resident of the city of Dickinson, county of Stark, and died on the 22d day of July 1924. For some time previous to her death she had been accustomed to spending some time in southern California and on May 10, 1915, she executed what appeared to be a will written in longhand and apparently signed in the presence of two witnesses. This instrument made numerous bequests and appears to be a complete disposition of all property which she owned.

It is the claim of the petitioners however that this instrument in *623 dispute, termed a holographic will, is a later instrument intended for a will, executed as such and therefore must be admitted to probate as her will. It is admitted the whole of the instrument is in the handwriting of Mrs. Street, but the appellants say the instrument is not executed in compliance with the requirements of our statute, was not intended for a will, and therefore, cannot be considered as a will.

It is to be remembered we are not construing the document for the purpose of determining the intent of the alleged testator as expressed by more or less ambiguous statements in a will. It is not a question of the construction of a will. It is a question whether such instrument is a will, or a mere memorandum, or a document which Mary McGfil-livray Street may have thought to be a will. Much reliance is placed upon statements which it is said Mrs. Street made before and after the drafting of this memorandum. Testimony was offered by the niece, Mrs. McGlashan, to the effect that Mrs. Street told her “how to make a holographic will, that she herself had everything fixed,” and there was testimony by II. E. Montague to the effect that Mrs. McGfil-livray told him he would find in the safety deposit box the disposition ■of her property or money. This was offered to show that in 1923 she stated that she had made a will. Prior to her marriage to Mr. Street in 1922 she had made a will, but this was revoked by her marriage. The marriage of a woman revokes a previous will made by her. See § 5658 Comp. Laws. Consequently there was this attempt to ■show that she must have made a will after the marriage — the theory being that this memorandum was her will. Just why it is assumed ■she knew that her marriage to Mr. Street revoked the previous will is not shown.

The general rule regarding the admission of declarations made by the alleged testator covers two classes of cases — those which are part ■of the res gesta;, such as the declaration to a witness that a certain instrument is his will and that he desires the witness to sign as a witness ; and declarations made before or after the execution of the instrument, though not connected with its execution, when it is necessary to show the condition of the testator’s mind at the time of the execution. Most of the cases arise upon an attempt to show that the testator said he had not executed the instrument and the rule is applied because such declarations, purely hearsay in their nature and which are not *624 against tbe interest of the testator, cannot be used to vary or change the instrument presented. But the principle is the same in the case where it is attempted to bolster a document by such declarations as is done in the case at bar. To permit the use of these declarations to establish the instrument as a will is in fact saying that without these declarations the document is not a will. To thus permit the reformation of a document would be to do violence to the statute of wills. As shown by 5 Wigmore, Ev. 2d ed. 4-08, the application of this rule to wills excludes “the fact that the draftsman made a mistake, i. e., it prevents the testator’s oral or written instructions, or other expressions of intent to overthrow or replace the words of the will.

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 728, 59 N.D. 618, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montague-v-street-nd-1930.