Washington v. Drake

35 N.W.2d 417, 150 Neb. 568, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 164
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1948
DocketNo. 32477
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 35 N.W.2d 417 (Washington v. Drake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. Drake, 35 N.W.2d 417, 150 Neb. 568, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 164 (Neb. 1948).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This action was originally instituted in the county court of Red Willow County, Nebraska, by petition of Carrie I. Washington to have probated what she claimed was the last will and testament of Frank Elmer Drake, deceased. This full name was not used in the will, the petition for probate, and the objections. Therein he was referred to as Elmer Drake. Minnie M. Drake and Marjorie Drake Olson, widow and daughter respectively of Frank Elmer Drake, were contestants and objectors to the probate of the alleged will. Probate was denied by the judgment of the county court. From the judgment of the county court Carrie I. Washington appealed to the district court. On the appeal by her petition she was denominated proponent and plaintiff and Minnie M. Drake and Marjorie Drake Olson were denominated contestants and defendants. The parties will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendants.

A trial was had to a jury in the district court on issues joined. The jury returned a verdict denying probate of the alleged will. Judgment was entered on the verdict. Plaintiff filed motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, which motion was overruled. From the judgment and the order overruling the motion plaintiff has appealed.

Certain factual background concerning which there is no dispute is substantially the following: Frank Elmer Drake, the deceased, and Minnie M. Drake, defendant, were married in 1905 and remained husband and wife until June 4, 1947, when Frank Elmer Drake died as the result of injuries sustained on June 1, 1947. The defendant Marjorie Drake Olson is their daughter and only child. Carrie I. Washington is a sister of the de[571]*571ceased as is also one Olive M. Berkeybile. The mother of the deceased lived until 1941. In 1934 the plaintiff, Olive M. Berkeybile, and the mother of deceased lived in or in the vicinity of Manhattan, Kansas. In 1934 the deceased, who then and at all times thereafter lived at McCook, Nebraska, made a will in duplicate, that is two identical copies were 'made and both were fully executed in due form of law. One was retained by the deceased and the other sent to the plaintiff. The one which was retained by deceased apparently was never seen by anyone except the- deceased after it was taken by deceased from the office of the scrivener on the day it was executed.. At least there is no evidence that anyone saw it thereafter. Information never came to either of the defendants that deceased had ever made a will until after his death.

The duplicate appears to have been mailed to plaintiff on June 20, 1934. In what has been identified as an accompanying letter deceased stated that the retained copy was in his safe in his store in McCook, Nebraska. In the letter, referring to the will, it is stated: “Tom knoes where it is.” The existence of the will was known to the two sisters of the deceased, his mother, and the husband of plaintiff. Apparently the first information that defendants had of the existence of the will came through Charles E. McCarl, an attorney at McCook, Nebraska.

After the execution of the will it was apparently discussed or at least , mentioned among deceased, the plaintiff, the sister, the mother, and the husband of plaintiff but never after February 1943. There is no evidence of the whereabouts or existence of the retained copy of the will after that date.

It may be well to state here that no question is raised either as to the authenticity of the copy of the will offered for probate or as to the fact that at the time of its execution there were two copies, one of which was retained by the deceased.

[572]*572By the terms of the will provision was made for payment of debts and funeral expenses and in it was designated place of burial which was Manhattan, Kansas. Provision was made that the widow should receive substantially what she would receive in case of intestacy. A bequest of $500 was made to one Thomas Rowland. Marjorie Drake Olson was specifically excluded from participation. The plaintiff herein was made the legatee and devisee of the rest, residue, and remainder of the estate.

By petition dated July 25, 1947, the plaintiff offered for probate in the county court of Red Willow County, Nebraska, the instrument in her hands as the last will and testament of Frank Elmer Drake. Prior thereto the defendant Minnie M. Drake had been appointed and had qualified as administratrix of the estate as an intestate estate.

To the petition objections were filed by the defendant Minnie M. Drake. The objections were dated August 30, 1947. The defendant Marjorie Drake Olson filed objections dated October 15, 1947. The objections of the two defendants are in terms and substance substantially the same.

Substantially it was alleged in the objections that the instrument offered for probate was not the last will and testament of Frank Elmer Drake; that the instrument offered was a copy of a purported last will and testament; that diligent search had been made for the copy retained by deceased and it could not be found; that conditions had changed since the time of the execution of the will in duplicate and that it was the belief of the defendants that the will had been destroyed by deceased with intent to revoke the same; and that subsequent to the time of the execution of the purported will and up to the time of his death deceased manifested by acts and declarations that he had no last will and testament.

For answer and reply to the objections plaintiff denied [573]*573the destruction and revocation asserted by defendants and reasserted her contention that the instrument offered for probate was the last will arid testament of Frank Elmer Drake.

It was on a trial of the issues thus made that the county court denied probate of the instrument.

These were the issues presented by appropriate pleadings to the • district court on appeal where as pointed out probate was denied by verdict of a jury.

The theory on which the case was presented both by plaintiff and defendants was that here was a will made in duplicate , with the one retained by the testator not found or accounted for, therefore there was a presumption that the will had been destroyed by the maker with intention to revoke and the burden was on the proponent to overcome the presumption by evidence tending to a contrary conclusion.

The theory thus adopted by the parties is well stated in 68 C. J., Wills, § 759, p. 994, as follows: “Where one copy of a will executed in duplicate or triplicate, or the like, is shown to have been retained by the testator, the other or others having been intrusted to, or deposited with, another person, or other persons, the failure to find the testator’s copy, after his death, raises a presumption of its destruction by him with the intention of revoking the will, although such presumption may be overcome by evidence tending to a contrary conclusion.”

In 1 Underhill on the Law of Wills, § 261, p. 356, it is stated: “If the testator has retained one copy, placing another in the hands of another person; and if the copy, which it is shown he had never parted with, cannot be found upon his death, or if, when it is found, it is torn or canceled, the presumption is that the will is wholly revoked, even though a duplicate is produced intact.” See, also, Bates’s Estate, 286 Pa. 583, 134 A. 513, 48 A. L. R. 294; In re Estate of Crosby, 126 Neb. 509, 253 N. W. 652; In re Estate of Kane, 109 Neb. 449, 191 N. W. 680.

[574]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.W.2d 417, 150 Neb. 568, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-drake-neb-1948.