Shinn v. Phillips

220 N.E.2d 674, 8 Ohio App. 2d 58, 94 Ohio Law. Abs. 153, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 537, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 428
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1964
Docket26787
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 N.E.2d 674 (Shinn v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinn v. Phillips, 220 N.E.2d 674, 8 Ohio App. 2d 58, 94 Ohio Law. Abs. 153, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 537, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 428 (Ohio Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Wasserman, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County sustaining a motion of plaintiffs for summary judgment.

The testator, Dana T. Burns, died on September 28, 1962. During his lifetime he executed two wills, one dated March 15, 1961, to which a codicil was attached dated October 25, 1961, and a second will dated February 15, 1962. The later will contained a provision specifically revoking all prior wills. Upon the testator’s death, his later executed will could not be found, but a carbon copy of his first will, with a typewritten statement attached “The original draft of my last will is in the hands of Attorney Morris Phillips. I have destroyed the will recently drawn by Attorney J. Elmer Narnum.” This paper writing was signed by the testator and dated but was not witnessed. The Probate Court admitted the earlier will, together with the codicil, to probate and refused to probate the later dated will under Section 2107.27, Revised Code, as a lost, spoliated and destroyed will, although the Probate Court did find that the contents of the later will had been proven and that the later will had been duly executed. The testator’s heirs at law filed a will contest in the Court of Common Pleas. The court found, on motion *155 for summary judgment, that the unwitnessed, signed paper writing was not effective to revive the testator’s earlier will and that the testator, therefore, died intestate.

The defendants-appellants appealed and set forth the following assignments of error:

“1. Plaintiff-Appellees’ Motion for Summary Judgment should have been denied.
“2. Order of the Court is contrary to law and against the manifest weight and without sufficiency of evidence.”

In a sense the defendants say that the Court of Common Pleas erred in finding that the earlier will was not revived and erred in granting the motion for summary judgment.

Section 2107.33, Revised Code, in part, provides:

“A will shall be revoked by the testator by tearing, canceling, obliterating, or destroying such will with the intention of revoking it, or by some person in such testator’s presence, or by such testator’s express written direction, or by some other written will or codicil, executed as prescribed by Sections 2107.01 to 2107.62, inclusive, Revised Code, or by some other writing which is signed, attested, and subscribed in the manner provided by such sections. * * *”

Section 2107.38, Revised Code, provides:

“If a testator executes a second will, the destruction, cancellation or revocation of the second will shall not revive the first will unless the terms of such revocation show that it was such testator’s intention to revive and give effect to his first will or unless, after such destruction, cancellation, or revocation, such testator republishes his first will.”

Section 2107.38, Revised Code, was founded upon Statute I Victoria, Chapter 26, Sec. 22, which provides as follows:

“* * * No will or codicil, or any part thereof, which shall be in any manner revoked, shall be revived otherwise than by the re-execution thereof, or by a codicil executed in manner hereinbefore required and showing an intention to revive the same. * *

Commenting upon the Statute of Victoria, Thompson on Wills, 3rd Edition, page 279, Section 180, states:

“In states where the common-law rule and ecclesiastical rules permitting oral republication have been abolished by *156 tbe enactment of statutes involving tbe general principles of tbe statute of frauds or the Statute of Victoria, the courts have very generally held that the republication of a revoked will can be accomplished only by an instrument executed with the same formalities as required for the execution of a new will. * *

95 Corpus Juris (2d), 93, Wills, Section 301 (b) states:

“* * * In the absence of a republication after revocation, revival can be accomplished only by an intention to that effect expressed at the time of the destruction or other revocation of the subsequent will and it has been held that such intent to revive must be expressed by a written instrument duly executed and attested as required for a will. * *

57 American Jurisprudence, 426, Wills, Section 623, states as follows:

“* * * An intention to revive an earlier will, within the meaning of the rule followed in some jurisdictions that the revocation of a later will shall not revive an earlier will unless it appears by the terms of such revocation that it was the testator’s intention to revive and give effect to the earlier will has been held to be sufficiently evidenced by an instrument reading ‘I will my first will to be in effect this date, executed and attested, as required by the statute in relation to wills.’

55 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 642, Wills, Section 212, states:

“* * * The earlier English cases held that wills passing either realty or personalty, after having been revoked, could be revived or republished by parol. Confusion resulted from these cases and the rule was changed by an English statute which provided that no will or codicil which had been revoked in any manner should be revived otherwise than by a re-execution or by a properly executed codicil. An Ohio statute, enacted 2 years after the English legislation, although worded somewhat differently, has been said by the Supreme Court to have been in effect an adoption of the English act. Accordingly, once a will has been revoked in Ohio it does not regain its potential to become the last will of the testator unless there have been later acts which, in fact, conform to the formalities required for the execution of wills.”

Further, in 55 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 647, Wills, Section 217, the following is stated:

*157 “* * * The intention of tbe testator to revive the earlier will must be gathered from an instrument executed as a will.

See also Page on Wills, Bowe-Parker Revision, Vol. 2, page 445, Section 21.56, where, in part, it is stated:

“ * * * Republication is equivalent to re-execution or recognition by a subsequent codicil, and is not a second publication in the limited sense. Unless the first will is duly executed again after the second will is revoked, the first will is not effective.”

Also, in the same volume, at page 573, Section 23.1, it is stated:

“Republication is only accomplished by a complete re-execution of the will, in which all of the statutory formalities of original execution are complied with, or by the making of a subsequent properly executed codicil to the earlier will. * *

The New York Statute which is similar to that of Ohio is Section 41 of the Decedent Estate Law which provides as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.E.2d 674, 8 Ohio App. 2d 58, 94 Ohio Law. Abs. 153, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 537, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinn-v-phillips-ohioctapp-1964.