Wallize v. Wallize

55 Pa. 242, 1867 Pa. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 20, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 Pa. 242 (Wallize v. Wallize) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallize v. Wallize, 55 Pa. 242, 1867 Pa. LEXIS 174 (Pa. 1867).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, May 20th 1867, by

Read, J.

— This was an issue devisavit vel non, directed by the Register’s Court, upon an appeal from the register of wills of the county of Northumberland, admitting to probate a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of John Wallize, late of Lewis township, deceased, in which, by direction of the court, John Wallize, the appellant, was plaintiff, and the devisees of the testator defendants. There are omitted from the devisees named as defendants the six grandchildren of the decedent, the heirs of his daughter Abby Gray, deceased, and named in the third clause of the will.

John Wallize, a vigorous old man of eighty years of age, on the 28th October 1861, walked from his house to that of James D. Barr, Esq., and back, a distance of over eight miles. At this visit Mr. Barr, at his request, drew a will for him, which he executed in Barr’s presence, and in that of two witnesses, Michael Reader and George Kisner, who proved the same before the register in the usual form on the 14th December 1863. There were therefore three witnesses to its execution, the writer of it, and the two called upon to witness it. In support of the will, therefore, was the original probate, and opposed to it was the evidence of George Kisner, one of the subscribing witnesses. He testified that he went with the decedent to Barr, who told Barr he wanted to make another will. “I had,” said he, “the will in my pocket and gave it to Barr. He asked Wallize how he wanted the will made ? Wallize said just like the first, except put Sam out. Esq. Barr went at it and wrote it. The old will was made in Wallize’s house some years. I was a witness to the old will. The old man took old will away. He did not say he had destroyed it. John Wallize and Katy Speck are children of John Wallize. Esq. Barr did not read will over after it was finished; I heard first will read. Old Wallize went out and got Michael Reader for a witness. Reader came in; Wallize said-to Barr, Read it over. Barr said he had read it enough. The parts of second will in which names of children were mentioned were not read over. Wallize said, Make it like first will, but said nothing about his children. When Barr came to Katy Speck’s share, Esq. Barr said how about the $100 ? Fie said, Never mind, make it even.’ Katy Speck had two girls and a boy.” On cross-examination he said: “ I took the new will home from Esq. Barr. I was in the house all the time Esq. Barr was writing the will.” “The will was finished before Wallize went for Reader.” “I said before that Wallize told Barr in English what to write. Barr read some part of it to Wallize as he wrote it. Reader was there when Barr said he would not read it; that he had read it enough.”

[246]*246There is no evidence that John Wallize’s name was in the first will.

On the part of the defence James D. Barr was examined and testified: “I wrote it (the will) my handwrite. Kisner and Wallize came to my house together. Wallize asked me to write another will. I went to my office and wrote it. After I wrote it Wallize went out and called Mr. Reader in as a witness. It was signed then by Wallize and the witnesses. He directed me in writing it. I wrote it as he directed; I read as I went along (part of it) sentences as I wrote. After it was done writing I read it all to Mr. Wallize. He asked if the will would be good if he would not give John and Katy anything ? Told him I thought it would. Then we closed ; will just as we have it. I think the will is precisely as he dictated it to me. I read it to him just as I had written it. Mr. Reader asked me to read the will. Told him I had read it often enough, I thought. I said this in hearing of John Wallize. He sat at the table. I had read it over to Mr. Wallize at least twice, is the reason why I refused to read it again. He wanted to make some change in his will, put in other executors, and leave his daughter Catharine out. Wanted to know if will would be good if he left her out. New will was not copied from the old one at all. Don’t recollect of knowing anything of old will that day; doing anything with it. I had written him a will before. Kisner sat back at corner, while I was writing will, on opposite side of room. Wallize sat close to me at the table. Kisner went out of the office at least once while I was writing to get a drink. The old man at time I wrote will told me John had treated him badly. He said ‘I won’t give him a d>-d cent.’ The old man often complained of John’s bad treatment to him. It must have been during ten years before.”

Michael Reader, the other subscribing witness, corroborates Barr: “Am witness to the will; he came to me to sign it as a witness. To go over to Esq. Barr’s; when I came there paper was lying there, and he said I should sign it as a witness to the will. I signed it, but did not hear it read. The old man acknowledged it to be his will. It seems to me Esq. Barr told him it was not necessary to read it; that he had read it to him (the old man) before. The old man at this time stood alongside of me, and Barr at the table. Old man made no reply.”

There was also evidence showing John was on bad terms with his father for some years, and that old Wallize said John had all the property he was going to give him, and that he had said he never would give John anything, and said John had abused him ; and a daughter of Samuel heard her grandfather say his son John should not have anything; heard him say so three or four days before he died; heard him say so frequently during the nine years he lived with her father.

[247]*247He also complained of his grandson John Speck; he had abused him very much about a cultivator, and had had a lawsuit about it which cost him' $100, and said I will cut him short for it some day.

The rebutting testimony was a feeble attempt to discredit Barr.

The will itself shows the improbability of Kisner’s statements, and the probate by himself and Reader of the will is in the face of his testimony on the trial, whilst it is clear that the disposition of the testator as evidenced by his declarations was to exclude his son John, and at least some of his daughter Catharine’s family from all benefits under his will.

The narrative of Mr. Barr is clear and consistent, and if believed, as it should be, shows unquestionably that there was no omission of any devise or legacy to any one by him by his inadvertence, oversight or intention.

It will be perceived that we have a different view of this case from that of the learned judge in the court below, but we are now called upon to say whether there was any error in his charge in point of law.

“ In view then, gentlemen,” says the learned judge, “ of all the facts, does the paper produced as the will of old Mr. Wallize, contain the disposition he made of his property ?

“ Are the names of any of his children who he intended should have part of his property omitted, and was the omission the inadvertence, oversight or intention of Esq. Barr ? If this is not his will the disposition he made of his property as communicated to Esq. Barr, then it ought to be set aside.”

In this we think there was manifest error, for if such were the law, then a man’s will would not be a written instrument signed by him at the end, but the vague, disjointed recollection of a bystander after a lapse of years.

The only case cited in the argument bearing directly upon the question was the case of Comstock v. Hadlyme Ecclesiastical Society, 8 Conn. R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. 242, 1867 Pa. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallize-v-wallize-pa-1867.