Partridge v. Willey

9 Mich. App. 245
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1967
DocketDocket No. 1,978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Mich. App. 245 (Partridge v. Willey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Partridge v. Willey, 9 Mich. App. 245 (Mich. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

Baum, J.

This is a will contest. Wanda Partridge, the proponent of the will, is the daughter of the testatrix, Hazel Willey. Among the contestants are certain grandchildren of the testatrix. They are the offspring of the testatrix’s son, Fay Henry Willey, Jr., who died in her lifetime. His wife is also a contestant. The remaining contestants are the trustees, named in the will of the husband of testatrix, and the executor of the estate of Fay Henry Willey, Jr. The testatrix’s husband also predeceased her. His will gave the testatrix a general power of appointment over the corpus of a trust created out of his estate. She was the income beneficiary of this trust during her lifetime. Pursuant to its terms, this power of appointment could be exercised by Hazel Willey in her last will.

The contestants argue that testatrix did not intend by her will to exercise the power of appointment. They also claim that Wanda Partridge, the chief beneficiary of the will, unduly influenced the testatrix.

The contestants failed below. On appeal they raise two broad issues. First, they contend that the trial judge erred in withholding from the jury [249]*249the question of whether the testatrix intended by her will to exercise the power of appointment. Second, they insist that the trial judge erred in instructing the jury with respect to their claim of undue influence.

The appellants’ first claim of error is untenable. The will contains the following provision:

“I, Hazel M. Willey * * * for the purpose of making disposition upon my death of my entire estate, real, personal and mixed, and any estate which I may have power to dispose of * * * do hereby * * * declare this to be my last will and testament.” (Emphasis added.)

After making certain specific bequests and devises, the will goes on to say:

“I give, devise and bequeath the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of whatsoever nature and wheresoever situate to which I may be entitled or which I may own and any estate which I may have the poioer to dispose of at my death to my daughter, Wanda.” (Emphasis added.)

• On their face, these two clauses are clear and unambiguous. They manifest an intention to exercise all the dispositive power which the testatrix had. Patently, they extend to and exercise the power of appointment left to her by her late husband.

The evidence in this case did not develop any latent ambiguity concerning the meaning of these clauses. Counsel for appellant on oral argument conceded that these clauses were neither patently nor latently ambiguous.

The authorities are overwhelming that when there is no patent or latent ambiguity in the provisions of a will, the intention to be ascribed to the testator is that intention demonstrated in th§ will’s plain language.

[250]*250The rule was announced as follows in Goembel v. Bonine (1953), 336 Mich 73, 76:

“ 'Interpretation of a will ends by consulting the document if its terms are clear and unambiguous, but if they are not, the uncertain words and phrases used are weighed and interpreted in the light of pertinent surrounding facts and circumstances which may tend to indicate what the testator had in mind at the time he used them.’ ”

In In re Farwell's Estate (1943), 306 Mich 208, 215, we find this expression:

“If there is no * * * ambiguity the plain terms of the will must stand.”1

The plain language of Hazel Willey’s last will demonstrates unequivocally an intention to exercise whatever power of appointment she may have had. Under such circumstances there is no question for the jury.

We turn now to the undue influence issue. Hazel Willey had three children. Two were daughters, Wanda and Geraldine. Her third child was a son, Pay Willey, Jr. Geraldine died, quite young, in Hazel Willey’s lifetime. She had never married and had no children. The other daughter, Wanda, married and had three children. Wanda and her husband owned and operated a small ice cream parlor and country store in Brighton. They lived with their children in a home which was only a few feet from Hazel Willey’s home. Being in such close proximity, Wanda and her family had an unusually close relationship with the testatrix. Wanda and her family cared for Hazel Willey in her last illness. Wanda’s oldest child, Nancy, was particu[251]*251larly helpful in connection with her grandmother’s outpatient treatment at a hospital in Ann Arbor. As Hazel Willey became debilitated from cancer, Wanda took over the management of her business and affairs. For this purpose Wanda had a general power of attorney from her mother.

Hazel Willey’s son married and had four children. He and his family lived approximately 50 miles from the testatrix, but they visited her frequently. The relationship between testatrix and Fay and his family was very good. Her relationship with her son’s family continued to be good after his death.

Fay Willey, Jr., during his lifetime worked in a business which his father had started and developed. This family business was eventually absorbed by the Ex-Cell-0 Corporation. After his father’s death, Fay remained an executive employee of the Ex-Cell-0 Corporation. He appears to have prospered, and upon his death he left an estate of over $300,000 to his widow and children. He died unexpectedly of a stroke during Hazel’s lifetime. His death occurred about 6 weeks before his mother signed the will in question. His mother’s death followed his by only four months.

In 1950 Hazel Willey’s husband, by will, left approximately one half his estate for Hazel in the trust described earlier, with a general, testamentary power to her to dispose of the corpus. The rest of his estate was divided equally among his children, either outright, or in trust for their benefit. Upon the death of Geraldine in 1956, her share was divided equally between Wanda and Fay, Jr. The will of the elder Fay Willey provided that if his wife failed to exercise her power of appointment, the corpus of her trust was to go equally to his children. Thus the senior Fay Willey’s plan for [252]*252disposing of his estate called for equal treatment of his children.

Hazel Willey did not follow such a plan in her will. Her will left her home to Nancy Partridge, one of Wanda’s three daughters. Wanda’s remaining children were not mentioned in the will. The will left 25 shares of Ex-Cell-0 common stock or the cash equivalent to each of the four children of Pay, Jr. All the rest and residue of her estate was given to Wanda. The stock which was bequeathed to the four children of testatrix’s deceased son was worth approximately $1,000. The home which testatrix devised to Nancy Partridge was worth something less than $25,000. The property bequeathed to Wanda under the residuary clause had a value of over $415,000.

In December of 1964, when she executed the will, Hazel Willey was of sound mind, but was bedridden with cancer in a terminal stage. She was about 65 years old at the time. She died some 3 months after signing the will.

The lawyer who drafted the will was engaged by Wanda Partridge. Before doing so, she had telephoned a lawyer, in Detroit, for such purpose. He had handled her mother’s affairs in the past. She called the Detroit lawyer at her mother’s request.

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Related

In Re Willey Estate
156 N.W.2d 631 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mich. App. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partridge-v-willey-michctapp-1967.