Thorn v. California Academy of Sciences

192 P. 19, 183 Cal. 512, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 435
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9187.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 192 P. 19 (Thorn v. California Academy of Sciences) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorn v. California Academy of Sciences, 192 P. 19, 183 Cal. 512, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 435 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, C. J.

We have here appeals from orders admitting to probate a certain document as the olographic will of deceased and denying the application of the Mercantile Trust Company, the nominee of the surviving wife, for letters of administration.

The claim of appellants is that the document is not a valid olographic will, for the reason that it is not “entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself,” as required by section 1277 of the Civil Code. It was so dated and signed, and was otherwise in the handwriting of the deceased with the exception of certain words in the following paragraph of the document:

“To this society [California Academy of Sciences] I leave Gragthorn Park
my country place Gragthorn consisting of 241 64/100 acres located about 1% mile below Glenwood and about 9]4 miles from the City of Santa Cruz in Santa Cruz County, State of California in Sec. 6 Town. 10 S. Range 1 West. I paid $3300.00/100 for it in 1883, title U. S. Patent Recorded and I attach a memo, herewith advising the Academy as to what they may do with it. . . . Balance'of my estate and personal property I leave to Academy of Science toward a fund to improve or care for Cragthom Park.”

In this portion of the document the word “Cragthorn” was in two places inserted with a rubber stamp instead of being written by the deceased, being the places where we have italicized the word, and the word “Park” immediately following one of these words was in the handwriting of the decedent. A memorandum attached to the document, admitted to probate as a part thereof read:

“To the Academy:
“Gentlemen: Don’t sell Cragthorn Park at a cheap price as it is susceptible of several propositions and values. . . . Cragthorn has water higher up for the Res or Club House.”

Evidence adduced on the hearing showed that decedent owned property in Santa Cruz County known as Cragthorn *514 Park. The trial court admitted the document to probate as the last will of decedent, with the exception of the stamped words “Cragthorn,” and the written word “Park” following one of the stamped words “Cragthorn.”

Of course, the intent of the deceased is obvious. He was endeavoring to make a valid olographic will, and the manner in which he desired his property to go is clearly specified. Nor can there be a suspicion as to the genuineness of the document. But all this is beside the question. We are confronted here with the question whether in this document there has been that substantial compliance with the mandatory requirements of our statutes relative to the execution of wills that is absolutely essential to the existence of a Valid will. (See Estate of Carpenter, 172 Cal. 268, 269, [L. R. A. 1916E, 498, 156 Pac. 464].) There being no witnesses to the execution of the document here involved, it can be sustained only on the theory that it is an olographic will. By section 1277 of the Civil Code an olographic will is defined as follows: “An olographic will is one that is entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself. It is subject to no other form, and may be made in or out of this state, and need not be witnessed.” [1] This court has uniformly held that.compliance with the requirements of this section is essential to the validity of a' document as an olographic will, viz.; that it be entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself. In holding that a date was essential the court said in Estate of Martin, 58 Cal. 530, 533: “We are not at liberty to hold that the legislature intended any one of these requirements to be of greater or less importance than the others. If we may omit one why not either of the others?” In Estate of Billings, 64 Cal. 427, [1 Pac. 701], where. the date was only partially in the handwriting of the deceased, who had used a letterhead with the year designated in printing, the court said: “It must be entirely written, it must be entirely dated, and it must be entirely signed by him. If it be partly written by him and partly written by another, or printed; if it be partly dated or signed by him and partly by another, it is not a compliance with the statute.” In Estate of Rand, 61 Cal. 468, [44 Am. Rep. 555], the deceased had used a stationer’s blank, with the result that the paper was partly printed and partly in the handwriting of the deceased. The *515 court said: “The paper before us was not entirely written by the hand of the deceased. Portions of it were printed. The legislature has seen fit to prescribe forms requisite to an olographic will, and these forms are made necessary to be observed. It was strenuously urged before us that the portions of the paper which were written by the deceased should be admitted to probate, omitting the printed portions. We are not at liberty to so hold. We should thereby, in effect, .change the statute, and make it read that such portions of an instrument as are in the handwriting of the deceased constitute an olographic will. The instrument, in its entirety, is before us. It was not entirely written by the hand of the deceased.” The views expressed in the decisions "cited have never been departed from. (See Estate of Plumal, 151 Cal. 77, [121 Am. St. Rep. 100, 90 Pac. 192]; Estate of Vance, 174 Cal. 122, [L. R. A. 1917C, 479, 162 Pac. 103].) Estate of Soher, 78 Cal. 477, [21 Pac. 8], is not at all opposed to these views. There an attestation clause in another’s handwriting was properly held not to be a part of the will. [2] In view of the decision in Estate of Dreyfus, 175 Cal. 417, [L. R. A. 1917F, 391, 165 Pac. 941], where it was held that a will made wholly by the deceased by means of a typewriter was not a valid olographic will, it is clear that words stamped with a rubber stamp cannot be held to be “written ... by the hand of the testator himself.” If the words “Cragthorn” stamped with a rubber stamp upon this document, or either of them, constitute a part of the attempted will, it seems obvious that the will is not “entirely written by the hand of the testator himself,” and therefore does not measure up to a mandatory requirement of the statute.

Two contentions are made by learned counsel for respondent in reply to appellant’s position in this behalf. One of these claims is that, assuming these words to constitute a part of the will, they are wholly surplusage, the property referred to thereby being sufficiently identified without them, with the result that they do not in any way add to, alter, contradict, or cloud the meaning or the intent of the deceased and were not necessary to complete the document as an olographic will. It may be conceded that the property is sufficiently identified without the inclusion of these stamped words, and that the meaning of the attempted will is the same without them as *516 with them.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 19, 183 Cal. 512, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorn-v-california-academy-of-sciences-cal-1920.