Twilley v. Durkee

211 P. 668, 72 Colo. 444, 1922 Colo. LEXIS 576
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 4, 1922
DocketNo. 10,172
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 211 P. 668 (Twilley v. Durkee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twilley v. Durkee, 211 P. 668, 72 Colo. 444, 1922 Colo. LEXIS 576 (Colo. 1922).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

[446]*446Cora E. H. Twilley, as the executrix, and a legatee, and William Shaw Twilley, her son, a minor, by his guardian ad litem, as a legatee, in what purports to be the last will and testament of Rose M. Durkee, deceased, filed such instrument in the county court of El Paso County, Colorado, and asked to have it admitted to probate. In due course Charles C. Durkee claiming to be, as he was and is, the son and sole ’ surviving heir at law of decedent, appeared as contestant and filed his caveat wherein his objections to the probate are alleged to be that at the time the instrument was executed the testatrix did not have the mental capacity, or sound and disposing mind and memory, to make a will; insane delusions; that the proposed will, though signed by her, was not her will; that her signature was procured as the result of the undue influence over her possessed and exercised by one of the proponents and her husband, and that any testamentary disposition of her property which testatrix, if she was then of sound mind and memory, and exercising her own free will, would have made, would be essentially different from the one presented for probate.

On the hearing of the contest before a jury the county court directed the jury to return a verdict, which it did, that the will proposed was the last will of testatrix, on which verdict the county court by its judgment admitted it to probate.

Seasonably, and as provided by our statute/ contestant perfected his appeal from this judgment to the district court of El Paso County. The hearing there was de novo, as our statute provides, upon the same issues tendered in the county court, and at the close of the proponents’ evidence, which affirmatively showed that testatrix did not sign, in the presence of attesting witnesses, the will which expressly revoked former wills, the district court, without receiving evidence as to the other objections, ordered the jury to return a verdict in contestant’s favor, and upon such returned verdict judgment was rendered declaring the will invalid and denying probate. It is to the district [447]*447court’s judgment, that William Shaw Twilley, Jr., a legatee, and one of the proponents' under the will, by P. M. Kistler, his guardian ad litem, is prosecuting this writ of error, the executrix, the other proponent, not joining in this writ.

The will was signed by testatrix out of the presence of the three witnesses who attested it. She presented this instrument to these three witnesses, declaring it to be her last will, having previously signed it, and asked them to attest it, which they did in her presence and in the presence of each other. Containing, as it did, an express declaration of revocation of “all prior wills made by me”, the district court was of the opinion that, as to its execution, the governing statute, section 7072 R. S. 1908, made it invalid, as the result of defective execution as just stated. If this statute is applicable, the will is invalid, for thereby signing by a testator in the presence of two or more witnesses is imperative where the proposed later will expressly revokes a former will. This statute reads:

“7072. Revocation of Wills. Sec. 33. No will shall be revoked otherwise than by the subsequent marriage of the testator, or by burning, tearing or obliterating the said will, by the testator himself or in his presence, by his direction and consent, or by some other will or codicil in writing, declaring the same, signed by the testator in the presence of two or more witnesses, and by them attested in his presence, and no words spoken shall revoke or annul any will in writing, executed as aforesaid in due form of law.”

The only question upon this review is one of law whose resolution depends upon the construction and applicability of the foregoing section, in connection, possibly, with the preceding section 7071 which does not require the signing by a testator in the presence of the witnesses of a will, which contains no revoking clause, and by which only property is devised or bequeathed. Freeman v. Hart, 61 Colo. 455, 466, 158 Pac. 305.

In his opening brief counsel for plaintiff in error thus [448]*448states the question for decision:

“Does Section 7072, prescribing certain formalities for the execution of a revoking will or codicil, apply to a last will and testament which has for its general scheme and primary purpose the testamentary disposition of the testator’s property; or, is that section limited in its application to such wills and codicils as have for their sole purpose the complete revocation of some former will?”

The question might be concretely, as well as more accurately, stated thus: “Did the failure of the testatrix to sign the will in the presence of two or more witnesses make it invalid, even though she orally declared to them that it was her last will and testament before they attested it in her presence?”

Before the English Statute of Wills, the right of testamentary disposition did not extend to real, but Only to personal, estate and, as to the latter, to a limited extent only. 1 Redfield on Wills, (4th ed.), p. 3. The will of personal property might be oral or written, and revocation could be either by the spoken word or by some writing. By the Statute of Wills real property was made the subject of a devise, but ’only by a written will. As the statute was silent as to the method of revocation, the courts held that written wills devising real property might be revoked by an oral declaration. Such ruling, unquestionably sound, the language of the statute considered, resulted, as is well known, in many fraudulent transactions and was the source of numerous perjuries. Appeals to the English Parliament to suppress and cure these evils resulted in the Statute of Frauds and Perjuries passed in 1677, which, with more or less modifications, has been carried into the laws of most of the states of our Union. Section 6 of that statute provides the formalities required for the revocation of wills. By its terms, as originally passed, no devise in writing of lands, nor any clause thereof, was revocable otherwise than by some other will or codicil in writing, “or other writing” declaring the same, or by burning, cancelling, tearing or obliterating; [449]*449but all devises of lands once made remained and continued in force until burned, cancelled, etc., or unless the same was revoked by some other will or codicil in writing, “or other writing” of the devisor, which must be signed by him in the presence of three witnesses declaring the same. It will be observed that our section 7072 is strikingly similar to the original English section, but one very important difference, which, in our judgment is controlling in the present case, is the omission in our statute of the words “or other writing”, which was in the original English section. By the English section a former will might be revoked by a writing which is not a will, while under our section 7072, no former will can be revoked by a writing, unless the revoking writing is itself a will.

In borrowing this section most of our states have retained the words “or other writing” so that, in such states, a will may still be revoked not only by “some other will or codicil in writing”, but also by some “other writing” not a will or codicil.

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 668, 72 Colo. 444, 1922 Colo. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twilley-v-durkee-colo-1922.