Ward-Allen v. Gaskins

989 A.2d 185, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 79
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 2010
DocketNo. 08-PR-1246
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 989 A.2d 185 (Ward-Allen v. Gaskins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward-Allen v. Gaskins, 989 A.2d 185, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 79 (D.C. 2010).

Opinion

FISHER, Associate Judge:

Sustaining objections to a codicil executed by Anna Creech in 1995, the Superior Court admitted her 1992 will to probate. We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Facts

On August 13, 1992, Anna Creech executed a will (“1992 will”) which contained eighteen items. Several of those items bequeathed various possessions to specific persons. For example, in Item VI, Ms. Creech left her china closet to her nephew, Cleveland Mitchell. In Item XIII, Ms. Creech bequeathed “the entire residue of my estate, whether real, personal or mixed, of every kind, nature and description whatsoever ... to all of my nieces and nephews who survive me.” In addition, in Item XIV, Ms. Creech nominated Mr. Mitchell as her personal representative, and named one of her nieces, appellee Lettie Gaskins, as his alternate.

On August 11, 1995, Ms. Creech executed a codicil (“1995 codicil”) to the 1992 will, explicitly revoking Items VI, XIII, and XIV. She now bequeathed her china closet to Special T. Allen instead of Mr. Mitchell; she devised her real property (her home at 131 U Street, N.E.), to Bettye Ward Garner and Bobbie Jean Ward-Alien as tenants in common; and, although she again nominated Mr. Mitchell as her personal representative, she named Ms. Ward-Alien as the alternate instead of Ms. Gas-kins.1 Ms. Creech ratified, confirmed, and republished her 1992 will “in all respects except as altered or modified by this First Codicil thereto.”

Anna Creech died on December 15, 2001, at the age of 94. Nearly five years later, on November 7, 2006, Ms. Ward-Alien filed a petition for standard probate in which she sought appointment as Ms. Creech’s personal representative. Ms. Ward-Alien attached the 1992 will and a copy of the 1995 codicil to her petition. In June 2008, two of Ms. Creech’s nieces, Lettie Gaskins and Jessie Marie Davis, filed objections to admission of the 1995 codicil and to Ms. Ward-Alien’s petition for standard probate. They based their objections on the fact that Ms. Ward-Alien filed a copy of the 1995 codicil, instead of the original, with the register of wills.

[187]*187After a hearing in August 2008, the trial judge sustained appellees’ objections to probating a copy of the 1995 codicil because there was too “much uncertainty about what became of the original” and Ms. Ward-Alien did not meet her burden to “prove what happened to it.” He then denied Ms. Ward-Alien’s petition for standard probate and admitted the 1992 will to probate. The court also appointed Ms. Gaskins as personal representative, Mr. Mitchell having previously renounced the appointment. Ms. Ward-Alien filed a notice of appeal; Ms. Gaskins is the only appellee to have filed a brief in this court.

II. Analysis

A. Revocation and Revival

In the District of Columbia, a testator may revoke a will or codicil in two ways.2 He may expressly revoke the instrument (or a part thereof) by executing “a later will, codicil, or other writing declaring the revocation.” D.C.Code § 18-109(a)(1) (2001). Alternatively, revocation may be accomplished by “burning, tearing, cancelling, or obliterating the will or codicil, or the part thereof, with the intention of revoking it, by the testator himself, or by a person in his presence and by his express direction and consent.” D.C.Code § 18-109(a)(2). Both of these forms of revocation are at issue in this case.

There is no dispute that in her 1995 codicil, Ms. Creech explicitly “revoke[dj” critical items from the 1992 will. “[I]n place of said Item[s],” she, among other changes, appointed a new alternate personal representative and disposed of her home differently. These revocations became effective upon execution of the 1995 codicil. D.C.Code § 18-109(a) (a will may be revoked in part); In re Burleson, 738 A.2d 1199, 1205 (D.C.1999) (“[W]e now hold that under D.C.Code § 18-109, a pri- or will may be revoked upon the execution of a subsequent will ....”) (emphasis in original).

Even if it were true, as the trial court seems to have concluded, that Ms. Creech revoked the 1995 codicil by destroying it (more on that later), the court erred by admitting the 1992 will to probate in its entirety. D.C.Code § 18-109(b) provides that: “A will or codicil, or a part thereof, after it is revoked, may not be revived otherwise than by its re-execution, or by a codicil executed as provided in the case of wills, and then only to the extent to which an intention to revive is shown.” As we explained in Burleson, “under D.C.Code § 18-109, a prior will [once revoked] ... may not be revived unless [it] has been re-executed or a codicil [is] executed in accordance with other statutory provisions.” In re Burleson, 738 A.2d at 1205. In other words, revocation of the codicil would not reinstate Items VI, XIII, and XIV of the earlier will. Id. at 1205-06 (“[E]ven if we were to assume, from the fact that the original 1994 will was not found at the time of his death, that Burle-son intended to revoke his 1994 will, ... this would not change the fact that the 1993 will was rendered void upon execution of the 1994 will containing a revocation clause.”); In re Smith, 77 F.Supp. 217, 219 (D.D.C.1948) (“The revocation of the second will does not reinstate the earlier will.”).

Here, as in Burleson, it is undisputed that the codicil had been properly executed, and no evidence was “presented suggesting that the deceased had revived the [earlier] will by re-executing [it] or execut[188]*188ing a[new] codicil.” In re Burleson, 738 A.2d at 1206. Thus, Items VI, XIII, and XIV of Ms. Creech’s 1992 will have not been revived and may not be admitted to probate.

B. The Missing Codicil

As we have mentioned, D.C.Code § 18-109(a)(2) allows a will or codicil to be revoked by “burning, tearing, cancelling, or obliterating ... with the intention of revoking it.” The District of Columbia therefore recognizes an evidentiary presumption that applies if the original of a will or codicil cannot be found at the time of its maker’s death:

“If a will or codicil, known to have been in existence during testator’s lifetime, and in his custody, or where he had ready access to it, can not be found at his death, a presumption arises that such will was destroyed by testator in his lifetime with the intention of revoking it; and in the absence of rebutting evidence this presumption is sufficient to justify a finding that the will was revoked.”

Webb v. Lohnes, 69 App. D.C. 318, 321,

Related

In Re Estate of Creech
989 A.2d 185 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
989 A.2d 185, 2010 D.C. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-allen-v-gaskins-dc-2010.