Woodliff v. Dunlap

65 So. 936, 187 Ala. 255, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 621
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 18, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 So. 936 (Woodliff v. Dunlap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodliff v. Dunlap, 65 So. 936, 187 Ala. 255, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 621 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

In July, 1900, John D. Dunlap made his last will and testament, which is copied in this record, and which the reporter will set out.

Subsequent to the execution of the will two children were born to the said John D. Dunlap and his wife, Myrtie Kidd Dunlap. After the birth of said children—• and they yet live—John D. Dunlap died. His said will was thereupon regularly admitted to probate, and his said widow, Myrtle Kidd Dunlap, named in the will as the sole legatee and devisee thereof, and also, as its executrix without bond, duty qualified as the executrix [257]*257of the will. In the will the said Myrtle Kidd Dunlap, as executrix thereof, is given the unqualified power to sell any or all of the property of the testator “as she may deem best.”

1. Section 6160 of the Code of 1907, which was operative at the time of the execution of this will and at the time of the death of the testator, as it was brought into the Code of 1907 from the Code of 1896, provides as follows:

“Whenever a testator has a child, born after the making of his will, either in his lifetime or after his death, and no provision is made in the will in any way for. such contingency, such birth operates as a revocation of the will, so far as to allow such child to take thet same share of the estate of the testator as if he had died intestate.”

It is conceded that under the terms of said section the two children of John D. Dunlap born after the execution of the will and for whom the will makes no provision, upon the death of their father, took that interest in his estate which they would have taken if there had been no will. In other words, it is conceded that by inheritance they took, immediately upon the death of their father, that interest in his estate which they would have taken if he had died intestate, and that, upon a final settlement of his estate, they are entitled, under our statute of distributions, to have distributed to them that part of his personal estate to which they would have been entitled had he died intestate.

2. The only question about which the parties are in doubt is the question as to whether the birth of the children after the execution of the will had the effect to destroy or in any way. limit the unqualified power of disposition which, in his will, the testator lodged in the hands of his executrix.

[258]*2583. At common law the subsequent marriage and the birth of'issue of a testator operated as an unqualified revocation of his will in toto. The birth of issue alone had no effect upon the will, and such issue was cut out of participating in any property devised by such will. At common law, however, it was well settled that if provision was made in the will for a future wife and child or children, in the event of a subsequent marriage and birth of issue, then such will was not impliedly revoked by a subsequent marriage and birth of issue.

“Upon whatever grounds this rule of revocation may be supposed to stand, it is on all hands allowed to apply (and upon this subject particularly after what was said by Lord Mansfield in Brady v. Cubit, Dougl. 39) only in cases where the wife and children, the new objects of bounty, are wholly unprovided for, and where there is an entire disposition of the whole estate to their exclusion and prejudice. This, however, cannot be said to be the case where the same persons who-, after the making of the will, stand in the relation of wife and children, were specifically contemplated and provided for by the testator, ’ though under a different character and denomination.”—Kenebit v. Schafton and others, 2 East’s Rep. 530; Halloway v. Clarke, 1 Phillemon’s Rep. 339.

4. Under the statutory system prevailing in this state, the lano, regardless of the last will and testament of the husband, makes provision for the widow out of the property which the husband leaves behind him. She has her rights of homestead, of dower, and is provided for in our statutes of distribution. If she is displeased with the provisions of her husband’s will, she may dissent from it and receive that interest in his property, real and personal, which, under our statutes, she would have received had there been no will.—Code 1907, §§ 6168-6171.

[259]*2595. As, however, a testator may lawfully cut out his children from their inheritance, and as the law cannot presume that a testator, in the absence of a declaration in the will to the contrary, has any reason for cutting from its inheritance a child not in existence at the time of the making of a will, and as wills are ambulatory and subject to change at any time by their makers, it was not inappropriate that our Legislature should make the provision which is set forth in the above-quoted section 6160 of the Code of 1907.

While the subjects of descent and distribution are of statutory control, they are, and have always-in this state, been dealt with by our state Legislatures on the basis of equality among blood relations, and in cases of intestacy those natural claims which arise from equal blood relationship have, at all times, been fully recognized and enforced by our statutory system. All sane persons of lawful age may malte wills, but the majority of men do not do so, because they are satisfied with the justice and the equality which have been established by out statutes of distributions. The only reason which could have actuated the Legislature in enacting the statute was the protection of those not in existence when a will is made, but who, upon coming into existence, are the natural objects of the testator’s equal bounty, and who, the Legislature, in the absence of a declaration in the will to the contrary or of a republication of the will after the happening of the event, had a right to presume, would have been, by a codicil or by an entirely new will, provided for by the testator, but for the peculiar opinion which seems to attend nearly all human beings, viz.: That there is always, in the future, ample time within which to make or to alter a will.

The true reason at common law for the implied revocation of a will where there was a subsequent marriage [260]*260and birth, of issue of the testator not provided for by the testator was that the testator executed the will with “a tacit condition annexed to the will when made that it, should not take effect if there should be a total change in the situation of the testator’s family.”—Doe v. Lancashire, 5 Term. Rep. 58.

Our statutory system arms the widow, as we have already stated, with the power of setting at naught, in so far as her rights are concerned, every provision of a will, and the above section 6160 of the Code provides for children born after the execution of a will for whom the will fails to make provision. A will executed and operative upon property in this state, and which makes no provision for the changed relations of the testator, growing out of a subsequent marriage and birth of issue, cannot now be truthfully said to be made with the “tacit condition annexed to the will when made that it should not take effect if there should be a total change in the situation of the testator’s family.” Our statutes themselves make the needed provisions and furnish the protection which, but for the statutes, would not exist. The mischief which section 6160 of the Code was intended to remedy is therefore plain.

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 936, 187 Ala. 255, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodliff-v-dunlap-ala-1914.