Turner v. Theiss

38 S.E.2d 369, 129 W. Va. 23, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 36
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1946
Docket9781
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 S.E.2d 369 (Turner v. Theiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Theiss, 38 S.E.2d 369, 129 W. Va. 23, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 36 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Lovins, Judge :

Appellant, Wetzel County Hospital Association, one of the defendants below, appeals from a decree of the Circuit Court of Wetzel County, ordering the specific enforcement of a testamentary agreement, allegedly made *24 by M. H. Willis, and his wife, Anita Willis.

M. H. Willis, a lawyer of New Martinsville, West Virginia, and former judge of the second and fourth judicial circuits of this State, died April 17, 1938. At the time of his death, he possessed an estate appraised at approximately nineteen thousand dollars, which, by his wjll dated February 5, 1938, was directed to be disposed of as follows:

“Second. Should my beloved wife, Anita, survive me, I give, devise and bequeath all my Estate, real and personal, to my said beloved wife, Anita, in fee simple and absolutely.”

The third item of his will provided that in the event his wife, Anita, should not survive him or in the event it would be impossible to determine whether he or his wife died first, his estate should be disposed of as follows: (a) One-half undivided interest therein should go to Willis Gormley, or to the issue of Willis Gormley, in the event he should not survive testator; (b) one-fourth undivided interest should go to Emma Frances Whitney, or in the event Emma Frances Whitney should not survive testator, the said one-fourth undivided interest should go to Ruth Turner or the heirs of Ruth Turner; and (c) one-fourth undivided interest should go to Ruth Turner, or, in the event Ruth Turner should not survive testator, to the heirs of Ruth Turner.

At the same time Judge Willis executed his will, his wife, Anita Willis, executed a will identical in context except for the inversion of the respective names of M. H. Willis and Anita Willis, and necessary corrections for gender.

Subsequent to the death of M. H. Willis, Anita Willis caused the probate of her husband’s will and accepted all the benefits thereof. On March 3, 1939, Mrs. Willis made another will, which provided for substantially the same disposition of her entire estate, as set forth in her will of February 5,1938, except: (1) She inserted a proviso leaving the one-half undivided interest intended for Willis Gormley to Emma Frances Whitney and Ruth *25 Turner in the event Willis Gormley should not survive her or leave issue surviving her; (2) she provided for the removal of the body of their child from West Union, West Virginia, to the Willis family burial plot in New Martinsville, West Virginia; and (3) she named Paul J. Shiben in the stead of her deceased husband as executor of her will.

In the spring of 1943 at a time when Mrs. Willis was intermittently confined to her bed by reason of a cancerous condition, which subsequently caused her death, she expressed a desire to change her will, and requested her physician to write a letter to Paul J. Shiben, an attorney, and scrivener of her two wills mentioned above, and obtain advice as to the best method of effecting these changes. Shiben replied, advising that she could execute a different will, either in the legal “form” of her present will, or in holographic form. Acting on this advice, Mrs. Willis executed a holographic will on April 12, 1943. The will dated April 12,1943, changed the disposition of her estate as made in the other two wills, bequeathed nominal sums only to Ruth Turner and Cammie Lemon, mother of Willis Gormley, as well as similar sums to be paid to specific charities and friends; and the residue and bulk of her estate was therein bequeathed and devised to the Wetzel County Hospital Association, appellant herein.

On June 7, 1943, Mrs. Willis died, leaving an estate appraised slightly in excess of twenty-nine thousand dollars, which consisted principally of the property she received as beneficiary of her husband’s will, but considerably augmented by increases in appraised values. Immediately thereafter the holographic will of April 12, 1943, was probated and defendant, J. 0. Theiss, was duly appointed executor thereof.

Shortly thereafter this suit in chancery was instituted by Ruth Turner and Willis Gormley, the only surviving beneficiaries of the wills of M. H. Willis and Anita Willis, dated February 5, 1938, and naming as parties defen *26 dant the executor and the various beneficiaries of the will of April 12, 1943. The bill alleges that the wills of February 5, 1938, were mutual and reciprocal and were made pursuant to a testamentary agreement, entered into between M. H. Willis and Anita Willis, and providing for the final disposition of their combined estates. The bill further alleges the irrevocability of the wills after the death of M. H. Willis, and, therefore, prays that the entire estate of Anita Willis be impressed with a trust in favor of plaintiffs. After extensive hearings, the trial court sustained the contentions of plaintiffs and entered a final decree containing such provisions and requirements as it deemed necessary to effectuate the granting of the prayers of the bill, and assessed the costs of the suit against the estate. It is from this decree that Wet-zel County Hospital Association appeals.

Appellant assigns twelve points of error, but the issues raised thereby may be summarized: (1) Was there, in fact, a valid testamentary agreement made between M. H. Willis and Anita Willis, pursuant to which they executed their respective wills of February 5, 1938; and (2) if so, was the agreement obligatory and binding upon Anita Willis after the death of M. H. Willis and her acceptance of benefits under his will?

From a practical standpoint, the answer to the first of these questions is controlling. A negative answer thereto necessarily precludes consideration of the second question, for wills, unaffected by other circumstances, are ambulatory and subject to revocation or change by the maker at any time. If an affirmative answer is made to the first question, it follows that acceptance by Anita Willis of the benefits conferred by her husband’s will calls for an affirmative answer to the second question. In the latter instance the decision must rest, not on a question involving wills, but on well settled principles of the law of contracts. “A contract to make a will is controlled by the same rules and principles and enforecable as other contracts.” Jefferson v. Simpson, 83 W. Va. 274, 98 *27 S. E. 212; Davidson v. Davidson, 72 W. Va. 747, 79 S. E. 998. See Tearney v. Marmiom, 103 W. Va. 394, 397, 137 S. E. 543. As a necessary corollary to this doctrine, a will actually made pursuant to a valid contract between two persons to execute wills containing reciprocal provisions, becomes binding and irrevocable when the survivor accepts benefits under the will of the first testator to die. Underwood v. Myer, 107 W. Va. 57, 146 S. E. 896; Chitwood v. Collins, 122 W. Va. 267, 8 S. E. 2d 830; Thompson on Wills, Second Edition, pages 200, 201. Therefore, we will hereafter discuss in some detail evidence relating to the controlling question whether a valid testamentary agreement was actually entered into between M. H. Willis and Anita Willis.

The trial court has resolved the first question in favor of the plaintiffs and found that a valid testamentary agreement did, in fact, exist.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E.2d 369, 129 W. Va. 23, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-theiss-wva-1946.