Saier v. Saier

115 N.W.2d 279, 366 Mich. 515, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 529
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1962
DocketDocket 73, Calendar 48,925
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 115 N.W.2d 279 (Saier v. Saier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saier v. Saier, 115 N.W.2d 279, 366 Mich. 515, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 529 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Black, J.

Jessie E. Saier’s will named her son, defendant Herbert E. Saier, as one of several beneficiaries. The will, ultimately admitted to probate after attempted contest by another son, Harry E. Saier (see In re Saier Estate, 342 Mich 587), * included a fairly typical penalty against contest reading as follows:

“11. Should any one or more of my children or anyone claiming under them or either of them or should any beneficiary in this my last will and testament contest or attempt to contest the admission to probate of this my last will and testament, the person or persons so contesting or attempting to contest shall receive no portion of my estate, and the share or portion that would have otherwise passed to such *518 contestant or contestants shall pass to the other residuary legatees or devisees in this my last will and testament not so contesting or attempting to contest.”

Plaintiffs’ bill was filed in the Ingham circuit, by the 2 coexecutors of the will and 2 other beneficiaries named therein, to bar defendant Herbert E. Saier from benefit under the will. The bill assigned that defendant Herbert E. Saier had contested or attempted to contest such will in violation of foregoing clause 11 thereof.

Showing was made by plaintiffs of that which they claim amounted to a contest or attempted contest within meaning of said clause 11. The showing was offered in support of their general allegation that defendant Herbert E. Saier was the real contestant even though his brother Harry E. Saier was the statutory contestant. Following the taking of considerable testimony, the chancellor prepared and filed a terse opinion and order concluding as follows:

“The court further finds that the material facts charged in the bill of complaint are true and that defendant, Herbert E. Saier, did contest or attempt to contest the admission to probate of the last will and testament of Jessie E. Saier, now deceased, and that in accordance with paragraph 11 of said will said defendant Herbert E. Saier, having so contested or attempted to contest shall receive no portion of said estate and that the portion of said estate which would have passed to defendant, Herbert E. Saier, but for his aforesaid acts, shall be divided and distributed as follows:
“(a) 1/3 to defendant, Josephine M. Saier;
“(b) 1/6 to Ruth Mary Keast, now Ruth IL Medendorp;
“(c) 1/6 to Dorothy Irene Shaft;
“(d) 1/3 to Edward H. Saier.
*519 “It appearing that all other portions of said will are clear and unambiguous and the construction thereof not in question,
“It is ordered that the distribution of said estate be made in accordance with the will and with this decree.”

Defendant Herbert E. Saier appeals. Shortly after submission of such appeal we entered an order requesting that the chancellor prepare and submit a supplemental opinion. Such order, dated January 29, 1962, reads:

“Upon consideration of the briefs and appendices of the parties, and the opinion of the circuit judge dated August 2, 1960, it is ordered that the original record be remanded to the Ingham county circuit court for preparation, by the trial chancellor, and filing as a part of such record, of a supplemental opinion disclosing in comprehensive detail such finding of facts and inferences as formed the basis of the chancellor’s conclusion that defendant Herbert E. Saier contested or attempted to contest within the meaning of paragraph 11 of Mrs. Saier’s will. When such supplemental opinion is filed the county clerk will return the supplemented record to this Court, whereupon decision of defendant Herbert E. Saier’s appeal will be made without further argument or preparation of briefs.”

Under date of February 26th the chancellor prepared and filed his supplemental opinion. The opinion discloses fully the nature of plaintiffs’ proofs and the conclusions reached by the chancellor therefrom (see appendix), and it points up a decisive question of law which turns upon a conceded and pivotal fact, that is, appellant at no time undertook, by statutory notice of contest or other proceeding brought by him, to contest his mother’s, will.

The stated and agreed question is whether appellant did, as charged, contest or attempt to contest *520 his mother’s will within meaning and purpose of ■clause 11 thereof. We hold that he did not, and stress that the question is usual in that its answer depends upon the intent of the maker of a testament.

In the first place all authorities agree that, even in those jurisdictions where conditions against contest are held-valid, * such conditions are punitive and construable strictly. See annotation, “What constitutes contest or attempt to defeat will within provision thereof forfeiting share of contesting beneficiary,” 49 ALR2d 198, 203, 204; also 3 Page on Wills (Lifetime ed), § 1306, pp 819, 820.

In the second place this will, manifestly drawn by a lawyer of skill, includes no words of broad or nontechnical nature from which one might fairly conclude that the testatrix intended to forfeit the legacy of a beneficiary who, though not an actual contestant, might openly sympathize with, act as a witness for, or otherwise assist and abet the contest of an actual contestant. In a word, we look upon the expression “contest or attempt to contest” as having been employed as lawyers usually employ it and so advise their clients, that is, as referring to a contest or attempt at contest by an actual litigant contestant who, by notice of contest in probate court or equitable proceeding, attempts to nullify or defeat what the testator has declared to be his will.

As the annotator writes (49 ALR2d 204), “Forfeiture provisions in a will are to be strictly construed, and forfeiture avoided if possible, and only where the acts of the parties come strictly within the express terms of the punitive clause of the will may a breach thereof be declaredPage goes on to say (3 Page on Wills, supra, pp 821, 822):

*521

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 N.W.2d 279, 366 Mich. 515, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saier-v-saier-mich-1962.