Williams v. Lane

18 S.E.2d 481, 193 Ga. 306, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1942
Docket13966.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 18 S.E.2d 481 (Williams v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Lane, 18 S.E.2d 481, 193 Ga. 306, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 378 (Ga. 1942).

Opinions

Duckworth, Justice.

A decision in this case depends upon the answer to two questions: (1) Did the testatrix legally marry after the execution of her will? (2) Does the will contain a provision made in contemplation of such an event?

The second verdict granting Sam Williams a total divorce from Margaret Williams, rendered on May 26, 1921, removed his disabilities on account of his previous marriage to Margaret, and thus enabled him to legally marry Ida Copelin. The ceremonial marriage of Ida Copelin, the testatrix, to Sam Williams, on May 26, 1921, was duly performed, and constituted a marriage of the testatrix. While there is evidence showing that these parties had lived together as husband and wife over a long period of time, holding themselves out to the public as such, and that during such time Ida had two children, the propounders, of whom Sam Williams was the father, and this and similar evidence might be sufficient to raise a legal presumption that there had been a common-law marriage of these parties (Miller v. Grice, 165 Ga. 191, 140 S. E. 350), yet any such legal presumption is rebutted by the uncontradicted evidence that before Sam and Ida ever met each other Sam was legally married to Margaret Williams, who came to Macon with him as his wife from South Carolina or Augusta, and that his marriage to Margaret was not dissolved until May 26, 1921. This evidence shows that Sam Williams, throughout the time he was living with Ida before their ceremonial marriage in 1921, had a living wife and was legally incompetent to contract marriage with Ida Copelin. The evidence demanded a finding that testatrix and Sam Williams were never husband and wife by virtue of a common-law marriage, but that they became husband and wife by the ceremonial marriage on May 26, 1921, after the execution, on September 16, 1920, of the document offered as the will of Ida Copelin.

It is declared in the Code, § 113-408: “In all cases, the marriage of the testator or the birth of a child to him, subsequently to the making of a will in which no provision is made in contemplation of such an event, shall be a revocation of the will.” It was held in Ellis v. Darden, 86 Ga. 368 (12 S. E. 652, 11 L. R. A. 51), that the rule just stated, with reference to a testator, is *310 equally applicable to a testatrix. Since it is ruled in division 1 of this opinion that the testatrix was married subsequently to the •making of the will, her marriage constituted a revocation of the will, unless there can be found in the will a provision made in contemplation of such an event. In Ellis v. Darden, supra, the testratrix executed a will in which her property was given to a sister, and later on the same day she was married. It was held that the marriage revoked the will. A further rule laid down in headnote 2 of that decision forbids the use of extrinsic evidence to show that the will contains a provision made in contemplation of such an event, and requires that the will alone must be looked to for such provision; and unless it is found in the will itself, the subsequent marriage automatically revokes the will under the statute. In Sutton v. Hancock, 115 Ga. 857 (42 S. E. 214), it was held that the will there involved was revoked by the subsequent birth of a child to testator. That will bequeathed to the testator’s wife all of his estate, and contained a recital that the testator knew full well that his wife would protect his name by the prompt payment of his debts, and that she would take every care of his children and do what was just and right by each of them. After giving a history of the law as it now stands, showing that under the common law neither the subsequent marriage alone nor the subsequent birth of a child would revoke the will, but that both of these events combined would have that effect; that this common-law rule was of force in Georgia until by the act of 1834 (Cobb’s Digest, 347) it was provided that the subsequent marriage or birth of a child for whom the will made no provision would revoke the will; and that this statute was amended by the Code of 1863, § 2445, which has remained the law in this State to this date, it was said: “The Code changed this law so as to omit altogether the requirement that the testator should make at all events a positive provision for the child to be born, and it did not even require that the testator should have had in mind the child that would be born. The requirement of the Code is that provision shall be made in contemplation of the event." The law is clear and explicit. The will must show that the testatrix had in contemplation the event, that is her future marriage; and the will must contain a provision made in contemplation of such event. It is not required that this provision in the will must be of a beneficial *311 interest in the estate of the testatrix, but it is sufficient if the will refers to the event and provides for the same either by making a beneficial provision or expressing the intention or desire of the testatrix that such future husband have no beneficial interest in her estate. The essential basic requirement is that the will must show that such an event was contemplated by the testatrix and was in her mind at the very time when she executed her will. The law is satisfied if it unmistakably appears from the will itself that the testatrix Avhile in the act of executing the will was under the moral influence that such an event would exert upon her in making a disposition of her property. The rule excluding extrinsic evidence to show that the testatrix contemplated such an event is a salutary one. It insures that the testatrix alone shall be heard on a question so vitally affecting her desire in disposing of her property as relates to the person who later becomes her husband or child.

It is true that in Chandler v. Chandler, 147 Ga. 561 (94 S. E. 995), it was held that the will there involved was not revoked by the subsequent birth of a child. That will directed that all of testator’s property be used for the maintenance of his wife and all of his minor children left at his death, subject to the condition that the lands named be cultivated for the support of his wife and the education of his minor children until his youngest child should become of age, and then sold and divided between his wife and children. It was held that the provisions of the will for the testator’s children included the child born subsequently to the execution of the will; that the children were referred to as a class and the subsequently born child was a member of that class. A provision in a will giving an unborn child a beneficial interest in the estate obviously is made in contemplation of the future birth of a child, but a provision giving a beneficial interest in the estate to a named person whom the testator subsequently marries does not show or even intimate that such provision was made in contemplation of the marriage. Thus it is seen that in those cases involving the subsequent birth of a child, any provision in the will which refers to the unborn child is manifestly made in contemplation of its birth; whereas cases involving a future marriage require specific language in the- will that shows that testator inserted such provision in contemplation of marriage. A testator *312

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.E.2d 481, 193 Ga. 306, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-lane-ga-1942.