Palmer v. White

784 P.2d 449, 100 Or. App. 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 28, 1989
Docket50-87-09812; CA A50884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 784 P.2d 449 (Palmer v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. White, 784 P.2d 449, 100 Or. App. 36 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*38 GRABER, P. J.

Defendant is the personal representative of testatrix’ estate. He appeals a judgment that declared that plaintiffs “partial disclaimers” are valid and that the disclaimed property passes to her immediately, and free from trust, under Article VII of the will. We affirm.

The facts are not in dispute. Testatrix had two children, a son and plaintiff. The son predeceased testatrix without issue. After testatrix died, the court admitted her will to probate and, in accordance with it, appointed defendant personal representative.

Articles I through V and IX through XII of the will concern general matters and specific bequests. Article VI devises the residue of the estate in trust to defendant as trustee. Under paragraphs (a) through (c) of Article VI, the trustee is to pay several named beneficiaries the aggregate sum of $4,800 per year for ten years from the date of testatrix’ death. Article VI(d) directs the trustee to pay plaintiff $200 per month during the same period. Article VI (f) directs that, ten years after testatrix’ death, the trustee shall distribute the principal and accumulated income of the trust to several named beneficiaries, with 45 percent going to plaintiff. 1 Article VII provides:

“If under any contingency not herein provided for either under my estate or under any trust created in this instrument, there remains property for which there is no named or described beneficiary, either as to principal or income, such property shall be distributed forthwith: one-half to those persons then living who would be entitled to receive my spouse’s intestate personal property and one-half to those persons then living who would be entitled to receive my intestate personal property as determined by the laws of the State of my domicile in force at that time.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Plaintiff is the only person living who would be entitled to receive intestate personal property. Article VIII forbids the beneficiaries from anticipating or disposing of interests in the trust or its income before the established times for distribution, but it also states: “The limitations herein shall not restrict the exercise of * * * the right to disclaim.”

*39 Plaintiff timely executed and delivered to defendant two documents, which disclaim

“[a]ny and all interests, whether present or future, in and to the property that is described and included in Article VI, [paragraphs (d) and (f),] of the Last Will of [testatrix] dated November 14,1986.”

Each disclaimer states that it is without prejudice to any other right or interest that plaintiff may have under the will. Each further provides:

“This Partial Disclaimer shall be null, void and of no force and effect whatsoever just as if it had never been executed by me and delivered to the personal representative of the estate of [testatrix] if it shall be determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the effect of this disclaimer is other than to entitle me to receive the above disclaimed property outright and free of trust and free of the provision in the will postponing distribution of the trust principal and accumulated income until ten years following the date of the decedent’s death.”

Plaintiff filed this declaratory judgment action, asking the court to determine that the effect of the disclaimers is to entitle her “to a distribution of 45% of the residue of the estate at the time of closing.” Both parties moved for summary judgment. The court granted plaintiffs motion and entered a judgment in her favor, from which defendant appeals. 2

Defendant first assigns error to the trial court’s holding that “[pjlaintiff s partial disclaimers are valid and enforceable.” He makes two arguments: The disclaimers are “null and void by their own terms”; and they fail to comply with the requirements of the Uniform Disclaimer of Transfers by Will, Intestacy or Appointment Act, ORS 112.650 to ORS 112.667 (the act). Neither contention is well taken.

First, defendant asserts, plaintiff “has disclaimed her interest in the property itself, not her right to succession of it”; therefore, she cannot take the property through Article *40 VII of the will, even though the disclaimers refer only to Article VI. If plaintiff has no right to take the property under any provision of the will, defendant concludes, she expressed her intention that the disclaimers have no effect. Second, says defendant, the disclaimers are equivocal, because plaintiff rescinded them if their effect were not what she intends it to be. For that reason, “the disclaimant is not disclaiming” within the meaning of the act.

Defendant’s is an overly technical reading of both the act and the disclaimers. The act contains only one provision, ORS 112.652, pertaining to the contents of a disclaimer:

“A person * * * may disclaim in whole or in part the right of succession to any property or interest therein, including a future interest, by delivering a written disclaimer under ORS 112.650 to 112.667. A disclaimer may be of a fractional share or of any limited interest or estate. The instrument shall describe the property or interest disclaimed, declare the disclaimer and extent thereof, and be signed by the disclaimant.”

The phrase “right of succession” describes what a person may disclaim, but the statute does not require that the instrument contain those specific words to be effective. Moreover, ORS 112.652 permits the disclaimer of “any limited interest or estate” and the retention of other interests. Plaintiff limited her disclaimers to the interests that would pass to her under Article VI(d) and (f) of the will. The inclusion of a condition that would rescind the disclaimers if a court found that they had an unintended effect does not render them invalid. See ORS 112.660(1)(c); Wilmington Trust Company v. Carpenter, 315 A2d 625, 627, 630 (Del Ch), aff’d 328 A2d 141 (Del 1974). ORS 112.652 allows a person to “declare the * * * extent” of the disclaimer, and that is what plaintiff did. The disclaimers here meet all of the statutory criteria and are effective to disclaim only the described interests under Article VI(d) and (f). See In re Estate of Burmeister, 225 Kan 807, 810, 594 P2d 226 (1979). Plaintiffs motive in choosing to disclaim does not affect the validity of her disclaimers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
784 P.2d 449, 100 Or. App. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-white-orctapp-1989.