Jacobsen v. Flathe ( 1997 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE
    FILED
    CHRISTOPHER JACOBSEN and            )           September 17, 1997
    JEFFREY JACOBSEN,                   )
    Beneficiaries of the Estate of      )           Cecil W. Crowson
    Edna M. Nissen,                     )          Appellate Court Clerk
    )
    Plaintiffs/Appellees,         )   Williamson Chancery
    )   No. P-94-1236
    VS.                                 )
    )   Appeal No.
    RUTH FLATHE, in her capacity as     )   01A01-9511-CH-00510
    Executrix of the Estate of          )
    Edna M. Nissen and in her           )
    Individual Capacity as a            )
    Beneficiary of the Estate of        )
    Edna M. Nissen,                     )
    )
    Defendant/Appellant.          )
    APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT FOR WILLIAMSON COUNTY
    AT FRANKLIN, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE HENRY DENMARK BELL, JUDGE
    For the Plaintiff/Appellee:                  For the Defendant/Appellant:
    M. Bradley Gilmore                           G. Thomas Nebel
    Christina Norris                             John B. Carlson
    Parker, Lawrence, Cantrell & Dean            Williams & Associates
    Nashville, Tennessee                         Nashville, Tennessee
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    OPINION
    This appeal involves an intrafamily dispute over the meaning of an elderly
    widow’s will. After the will was admitted to probate in the Chancery Court for
    Williamson County, the sons of one of the legatees who had predeceased the
    testator filed a petition for judicial construction asserting that they were entitled
    to receive their mother’s share under the antilapse statute. The trial court granted
    a summary judgment in the sons’ favor. On this appeal, the estate’s personal
    representative, who is also a legatee, asserts that the will should be construed to
    give her the predeceased legatee’s share. We have determined that the trial court
    correctly decided that the gift to the deceased legatee did not lapse and, therefore,
    affirm the summary judgment.
    I.
    Edna M. Nissen was a widowed homemaker who lived in Williamson
    County after her husband’s death in the mid-1970's. At the age of ninety-five, she
    retained a lawyer to prepare her will. The resulting will, which Ms. Nissen
    executed on November 6, 1989, was a conventional two-and-a-half page
    document directing in form language that her estate pay all her lawful debts, the
    expenses of her last illness, and her funeral expenses, as well as any estate or
    inheritance taxes. It lumped all her remaining real and personal property into her
    remainder estate and divided this estate as follows:
    All the rest and residue of the property which I may
    own at the time of my death, including but not limited
    to all my tangible personal property including
    automobiles, clothing, jewelry, and other articles of
    personal use or ornament, and all other property, real
    personal and mixed, of whatever kind and character and
    wheresoever situated, all of which constitute my
    residuary estate, I devise and bequeath as follows:
    (a)    Six-sixteenths (6/16) thereof to be divided
    equally among Patricia Laak, John Flathe, David
    Flathe, Georgia Flathe Wilson, Chris Jacobsen
    and Jeff Jacobsen, per capita.
    -2-
    (b)     Ten-sixteenths (10/16) thereof to be divided two-
    thirds (b) to Ruth Flathe and one-third (a) to
    Mary Jacobsen, per capita.
    The will also named Ruth Flathe, one of Ms. Nissen’s nieces living in Williamson
    County, as the personal representative of her estate.
    Mary Jacobsen, the legatee who received a 16/48 interest in the residuary
    estate, was also Ms. Nissen’s niece. She apparently lived in Wisconsin, as did her
    two sons, Jeffrey and Christopher Jacobsen, each of whom received a one-
    sixteenth interest of the residuary estate. Ms. Jacobsen predeceased Ms. Nissen
    on July 2, 1990.
    Ms. Nissen realized later that her original will had not provided for the
    disposition of her interest in a testamentary trust created by her late husband.1
    Rather than preparing a new will, Ms. Nissen remedied this omission by executing
    a codicil to her will on July 27, 1990. The codicil distributed the corpus of Mr.
    Nissen’s testamentary trust as follows:
    I specifically amend the SECOND paragraph of the
    above referenced Will dated the 6th day of November,
    1989, to exercise the power of appointment granted to
    me under the Will of my late husband William Nissen
    dated October 10, 1975, in favor of the following:
    (a)     Six-sixteenths (6/16) thereof to Patricia Laak,
    John Flathe, David Flathe, Georgia Flathe
    Wilson, Chris Jacobsen and Jeff Jacobsen, to be
    divided equally among them per capita.
    (b)     Ten-sixteenths (10/16) thereof to be distributed
    to Ruth Flathe.
    The codicil also ratified and republished Ms. Nissen’s November 6, 1989 will and
    stated that the will and codicil constituted Ms. Nissen’s last will and testament.
    Ms. Jacobsen was not mentioned in the codicil because she had died three weeks
    earlier.
    1
    Mr. Nissen’s testamentary trust provided that Ms. Nissen should receive the income
    earned on the trust’s corpus during her lifetime and gave Ms. Nissen the power at her death to
    dispose of the corpus of the trust “to such person or persons or [her estate] in such manner and
    proportion as [she] shall appoint by a provision in her last will and testament referring to this
    power and purporting to exercise [it].”
    -3-
    Ms. Nissen outlived the codicil by approximately three-and-a-half years.
    She died of a stroke in February 1994 at the age of ninety-nine. In March 1994,
    Ms. Flathe filed Ms. Jacobsen’s will for probate in the Chancery Court for
    Williamson County. In February 1995, Christopher and Jeffrey Jacobsen, filed
    a petition for construction of Ms. Nissen’s will, asserting that they were entitled
    to their mother’s 10/48 share of the original residuary estate. Ms. Flathe
    answered the petition by contending that Ms. Nissen had cut Ms. Jacobsen out of
    her will and, therefore, that Ms. Jacobsen’s sons were only entitled to their
    specific bequests.
    The Jacobsen brothers eventually brought the dispute to a head by moving
    for a summary judgment. On July 21, 1995, the trial court granted the summary
    judgment after finding that Ms. Nissen’s will and codicil did not contain a latent
    ambiguity requiring the consideration of extrinsic evidence. The trial court held
    as a matter of law that Ms. Nissen’s 1990 codicil did not alter the disposition of
    the residuary estate made in the 1989 will and that the operation of Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 32-3-105 (Supp. 1996) caused Ms. Jacobsen’s 16/48 interest in Ms.
    Nissen’s residuary estate to pass to her sons. Ms. Flathe has appealed this
    decision.
    II.
    This will construction dispute was decided by summary judgment.
    Summary judgments are proper vehicles for deciding cases whose outcome hinges
    on legal issues alone because there are no disputed facts. Byrd v. Hall, 
    847 S.W.2d 208
    , 210 (Tenn. 1993); Bellamy v. Federal Express Corp., 
    749 S.W.2d 31
    ,
    33 (Tenn. 1988); Foley v. St. Thomas Hosp., 
    906 S.W.2d 448
    , 452 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1995). They are accordingly uniquely suited to will construction cases because
    these cases generally involve only legal issues surrounding the proper
    interpretation of the language of the will itself. Presley v. Hanks, 
    782 S.W.2d 482
    ,
    487 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989); Estate of Robison v. Carter, 
    701 S.W.2d 218
    , 220
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985).
    -4-
    In most will construction cases, the testator’s intent is determined by
    referring to the will itself. Wright v. Brandon, 
    863 S.W.2d 400
    , 402 (Tenn. 1993);
    Cowden v. Sovran Bank/Central South, 
    816 S.W.2d 741
    , 744 (Tenn. 1991);
    Daugherty v. Daugherty, 
    784 S.W.2d 650
    , 653 (Tenn. 1990). Sometimes courts
    will consider evidence beyond the four corners of the will when the will contains
    a latent,2 as opposed to patent,3 ambiguity. Stickley v. Carmichael, 
    850 S.W.2d 127
    , 132 (Tenn. 1992); Estate of Burchfiel v. First United Methodist Church, 933
    S.W.2d at 483.
    We need not concern ourselves here with the possible factual disputes
    about circumstances beyond the four corners of the will itself since the present
    dispute involves a patent ambiguity. Thus, like the trial court, we will ignore all
    extraneous evidence4 and focus only on the language of the will itself. The pivotal
    question in this case is whether the Jacobsen brothers have established, as a matter
    of law, that they are entitled to the benefit of the antilapse statute.
    III.
    At common law, the property identified in a will to go to a legatee who
    predeceased the testator went instead to some other person named in the will or
    2
    A latent ambiguity arises from an ambiguous state of external circumstances to which
    the words of the will refer. Estate of Burchfiel v. First United Methodist Church, 
    933 S.W.2d 481
    , 482 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996). It generally involves a question of identifying a person or
    subject mentioned in the will. Coble Sys., Inc. v. Gifford Co., 
    627 S.W.2d 359
    , 362 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. 1981). It stems from an uncertain reference in the document to things outside the will
    susceptible of explanation only by the development of facts elucidating what the testator was
    talking about. See, e.g., Greer v. Anderson, 
    36 Tenn. App. 507
    , 509-16, 
    259 S.W.2d 550
    , 551-53
    (1953).
    3
    A patent ambiguity stems from uncertainty in the language of the will itself, In re Will
    of Bybee (Bybee v. Westrick), 
    896 S.W.2d 792
    , 793 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994); Coble Sys., Inc. v.
    Gifford Co., 627 S.W.2d at 362, and is apparent on the face of the will. See 4 William J. Bowe
    & Douglas H. Parker, Page on the Law of Wills § 32.7 (rev. 3d ed. 1961) (“Page”). It involves
    an ambiguous term, see Union Planters Corp. v. Harwell, 
    578 S.W.2d 87
    , 92 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1978), that cannot be clarified by considering extraneous facts.
    4
    For this reason, we must ignore the self-serving affidavits of Ms. Flathe and the lawyer
    who prepared Ms. Nissen’s will and codicil concerning their versions of Ms. Nissen’s
    testamentary intent. We must likewise ignore the affidavits of the Jacobsen brothers. Ms. Flathe
    cannot create a genuine factual dispute to stave off a summary judgment motion involving a
    patent ambiguity by presenting incompetent affidavits concerning Ms. Nissen’s testamentary
    intent. See Skinner v. Moore, 
    940 S.W.2d 755
    , 758 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).
    -5-
    passed as intestate property. See Dixon v. Cooper, 
    88 Tenn. 177
    , 182, 
    12 S.W. 445
    , 446 (1889). The courts held in these circumstances that the legacy lapsed
    because the deceased legatee no longer had the capacity or willingness to accept
    the gift. Brice v. Horner, 
    38 S.W. 440
    , 442 (Tenn. Ch. App. 1896). As a result
    of the common-law rule, the testamentary gift would not go to the heirs of the
    deceased legatee thereby often frustrating the testator’s chosen distribution of the
    property.
    Tennessee’s antilapse statute was enacted in 1858 to cure the lapsed legacy
    problem by legally substituting related recipients for deceased recipients. David
    R. Foster, Note, Testamentary Gifts of Future Interests: Is There an “Immediate”
    Problem with the Tennessee Antilapse Statute?, 17 Mem. St. U. L. Rev. 263, 265-
    66 (1987). Now codified at Tenn. Code Ann. § 32-3-105, the statute provides:
    Whenever the devisee or legatee or any member of a
    class to which an immediate devise or bequest is made,
    dies before the testator, or is dead at the making of the
    will, leaving issue which survives the testator, the issue
    shall take the estate or interest devised or bequeathed
    which the devisee or legatee or the member of the class,
    as the case may be, would have taken, had that person
    survived the testator, unless a different disposition
    thereof is made or required by the will.
    When a legatee predeceases a testator, the statute saves a testamentary gift by
    substituting the legatee’s heirs for the legatee. See, e.g., Weiss v. Broadway Nat’l
    Bank, 
    204 Tenn. 563
    , 573-74, 
    322 S.W.2d 427
    , 431-32 (1959) (holding that the
    son of a predeceased legatee took his father’s share “just as if [his name] had been
    inserted in the will by the testatrix herself”). The courts give the antilapse statute
    a liberal construction. Brundige v. Alexander, 
    547 S.W.2d 232
    , 234 (Tenn. 1976).
    The antilapse statute, by its own terms, will not govern the distribution of
    a testamentary gift in cases where the testator expressly makes a different
    disposition of property by will. To defeat the operation of the antilapse statute,
    the will must contain plain and clear language indicating that the testator intended
    a different disposition of his or her property should a named beneficiary die first.
    Estate of Renner, 
    895 S.W.2d 180
    , 182 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995); Royston v. Watts,
    -6-
    
    842 S.W.2d 876
    , 879 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992). Where a will does not clearly indicate
    that the person who made it intended to disinherit a predeceased legatee in favor
    of a surviving legatee, the antilapse statute works to save the deceased legatee’s
    gift for his or her heirs. In re Will of Bybee (Bybee v. Westrick), 896 S.W.2d at
    794.
    IV.
    Ms. Flathe advances three arguments to support her assertion that Ms.
    Nissen’s will contains plain and clear language demonstrating her intent that her
    bequest to Ms. Jacobsen would lapse if Ms. Jacobsen predeceased her. These
    arguments hinge on (1) the use of the term “per capita” in Paragraph 2(b) of Ms.
    Nissen’s will, (2) the fact that the Jacobsen brothers were already provided for
    elsewhere in Ms. Nissen’s will, and (3) the fact that the codicil excluded any
    mention of Ms. Jacobsen.
    Each of these arguments requires us construe the terms of Ms. Nissen’s will.
    In doing so, we must be guided by our obligation to see to it that Ms. Nissen’s
    desires and intentions are given effect. Wright v. Brandon, 863 S.W.2d at 402;
    Martin v. Taylor, 
    521 S.W.2d 581
    , 584 (Tenn. 1975); Presley v. Hanks, 782
    S.W.2d at 487. Since we are dealing here with a patent ambiguity, we must derive
    Ms. Nissen’s intent from the four corners of her testamentary writings, Fariss v.
    Bly-Block Co., 
    208 Tenn. 482
    , 487, 
    346 S.W.2d 705
    , 706 (1961), which include
    both her will and the 1990 codicil to her will. Martin v. Taylor, 521 S.W.2d at
    584; Fisher v. Malmo, 
    650 S.W.2d 43
    , 46 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983).
    Because every word used by a testator in a will is presumed to have some
    meaning, Daugherty v. Daugherty, 784 S.W.2d at 653; In re Estate of Jackson,
    
    793 S.W.2d 259
    , 261 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1990), we must, if possible, give effect to
    every provision, clause, term, or word used in the will. Bell v. Shannon, 
    212 Tenn. 28
    , 40, 
    367 S.W.2d 761
    , 766 (1963); Beuchert v. Sigman, 
    652 S.W.2d 347
    ,
    349 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983). We must also give the technical words in the will
    their technical meaning because Ms. Nissen’s will was drafted by a lawyer.
    -7-
    Wright v. Brandon, 863 S.W.2d at 402; Daugherty v. Daugherty, 784 S.W.2d at
    653.
    A.
    THE USE OF THE TERM “PER CAPITA”
    Ms. Flathe first argues that the use of the term “per capita” in conjunction
    with the bequest to Ms. Jacobsen clearly signifies that Ms. Nissen did not intend
    for Ms. Jacobsen’s share of the estate to pass to her heirs if Ms. Jacobsen
    predeceased Ms. Nissen. We disagree. The term “per capita” has no application
    to specific bequests to named legatees. In the context of this particular will, it can
    be given effect only if it is construed to relate to substitutional gifts to substitute
    legatees in the event of the death of the primary legatee.
    The term “per capita” appears twice in Ms. Nissen’s will and once in her
    1990 codicil. It first appears in Paragraph (a) of the residuary clause in
    conjunction with the bequest of six-sixteenths of the residuary estate to six named
    persons. The will directs that this six-sixteenths be divided “equally . . . per
    capita.” This same usage appears in Paragraph (a) of the codicil. The term also
    appears in Paragraph (b) pertaining to the gifts to Ms. Flathe and Ms. Jacobsen.
    Paragraph (b) states: “Ten-sixteenths (10/16) thereof to be divided two-thirds (b)
    to Ruth Flathe and one-third (a) to Mary Jacobsen, per capita.” This usage is not
    repeated in the codicil because the codicil was prepared after Ms. Jacobsen’s
    death.
    The terms “per capita” and “per stirpes” describe the mode of distributing
    an estate rather than the designation of the persons who will share in the estate.
    Wright v. Brandon, 863 S.W.2d at 403; see also In re Estate of Walter (Bolin v.
    Walters), 
    519 N.E.2d 1270
    , 1273 (Ind. Ct. App. 1988); In re Estate of Winslow,
    
    934 P.2d 1001
    , 1006 (Kan. Ct. App. 1997); In re Estate of Renner (Kirchner v.
    Buschling), 
    895 S.W.2d 180
    , 182 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995). They relate to class gifts,5
    5
    A class gift is a gift to a group of persons who are not named, whose number may vary,
    and who have one or more characteristics in common. Jennings v. Jennings, 
    165 Tenn. 295
    , 301,
    (continued...)
    -8-
    and ordinarily have no application to named legatees who are primary takers
    under a will. In re Estate of Walters (Bolin v. Walters), 519 N.E.2d at 1273; In re
    Estate of Winslow, 934 P.2d at 1006; Evans v. Cass, 
    256 N.E.2d 738
    , 743 (Prob.
    Ct. Cuyahoga County 1970).
    Thus, it is technically inappropriate to use either the term “per capita” or the
    term “per stirpes” or a combination of the two terms to describe a specific bequest
    to a named legatee. In circumstances where these terms have been used in
    conjunction with a gift to named legatees who are primary beneficiaries, the courts
    have consistently construed the terms to apply to the substitutional gift to the
    substitute legatees in the event of the death of the primary legatee. In re Estate of
    Luke, 
    184 N.W.2d 42
    , 45 (Iowa 1971); Johnson v. Swann, 
    126 A.2d 603
    , 606 (Md.
    1956); In re Will of Griffin (Lowry v. Doss), 
    411 So. 2d 766
    , 769 (Miss. 1982); St.
    Louis Union Trust Co. v. Greenough, 
    282 S.W.2d 474
    , 478 (Mo. 1955); see also
    3 Restatement of Property § 300, cmt. f (1940).
    Based on these precedents, there are three reasons why the term “per capita”
    cannot, as a matter of law, apply to Ms. Nissen’s bequest of ten-sixteenths of her
    residuary estate to Ms. Flathe and Ms. Jacobsen. First, this gift is not to a class.
    Second, the gift is to persons who are specifically named in the will as primary
    legatees. Third, the will does not divide the ten-sixteenths interest equally
    between Ms. Flathe and Ms. Nissen as the technically correct use of the term “per
    capita” would require.6
    The trial court appears to have concluded, as we have, that the term “per
    capita” cannot apply to Ms. Nissen’s bequest to Ms. Flathe and Ms. Jacobsen.
    5
    (...continued)
    
    54 S.W.2d 961
    , 963 (1932); Page, §§ 35.1, at 488 & 35.4, at 495. A bequest is not to a class if
    (1) it is given to a certain number of named persons, (2) the share each of these persons will
    receive is certain, and (3) these shares do not depend on the number of persons in the class at
    some future time. Page, § 35.2, at 493. For examples of the correct use of “per stirpes” and “per
    capita,” see 4 Tennessee Legal and Business Forms §§ 28:252 & 28:253 (1994).
    6
    As used in a will, the term “per capita” connotes an equal division of the property among
    the legatees, each receiving the same share as the others, without regard to the principle of
    representation. Page, § 36.6, at 556; George W. Thompson, The Law of Wills § 317, at 477 (3d
    ed. 1947).
    -9-
    However, the trial court then disregarded the term as “meaningless surplusage.”
    We find that this was error because the courts must endeavor to give effect to all
    the terms in a will. This goal can be accomplished by holding that the term “per
    capita” as it appears in Paragraph 2(b) of Ms. Nissen’s will applies to the
    substitutional gift to the substitute legatees should either Ms. Flathe or Ms.
    Jacobsen predecease Ms. Nissen. Thus, especially in the absence of any other
    provision in the will dealing with lapsed gifts or predeceased legatees, the term
    “per capita” relates to the manner in which the Jacobsen brothers should divide
    their mother’s 16/48 share of Ms. Nissen’s residuary estate.7
    B.
    THE OTHER BEQUESTS TO THE JACOBSEN BROTHERS
    Ms. Flathe also insists that Ms. Nissen must not have intended for the
    Jacobsen brothers to succeed to their mother’s interest because Ms. Nissen made
    other provisions for them in her will. We find this argument unpersuasive. The
    fact that a testator has made a specific bequest of a portion of her residuary estate
    to an individual does not prevent that individual from succeeding to his or her
    parent’s share of the estate by operation of law. In these circumstances, the
    additional share simply becomes an additional gift to the named individual.
    C.
    THE EFFECT OF THE CODICIL
    Ms. Flathe’s final assertion is that the omission of any mention of Ms.
    Jacobsen in the 1990 codicil is evidence of Ms. Nissen’s desire to exclude the
    Jacobsen brothers from succeeding to their mother’s interest in the residuary
    estate. This argument is equally unpersuasive because it overlooks two important
    7
    The record contains no pleadings or proof that Ms. Jacobsen left any heirs other than
    Jeffrey and Christopher Jacobsen or that she had any other children who were deceased.
    However, the trial court’s memorandum makes an entirely unexplained reference to “any
    deceased children of Ms. Jacobsen.” As far as the present record shows, the interests of the heirs
    of Ms. Jacobsen’s deceased children were not before the trial court. Accordingly, we have not
    addressed the rights of these persons, if they exist.
    -10-
    matters of substance. First, the property dealt with in the codicil was different
    from the property included in the will. Second, the codicil did not change any
    portion of the will and, in fact, expressly reaffirmed the bequests in the will.
    We will not construe a codicil to alter the terms of a will any more than is
    necessary to give effect to the codicil. Rogers v. Rodgers, 53 Tenn. (6 Heisk.)
    489, 499 (1871); American Nat’l Bank & Trust Co. v. Mander, 
    36 Tenn. App. 220
    ,
    226, 
    253 S.W.2d 994
    , 997 (1952). It is evident from the face of the will and the
    codicil that Ms. Nissen prepared the codicil to make a testamentary disposition of
    property she had overlooked when she prepared her will, not to eliminate or
    replace any other testamentary bequest she had already made.
    Ms. Flathe offers no textual basis for construing Ms. Nissen’s will to
    provide that the survivor of Ms. Flathe and Ms. Jacobsen should receive the
    other’s portion of the residuary estate. It is not our role to guess at a testator’s
    intentions based on what the parties suppose the testator might have intended but
    never put in writing. In re Walker, 
    849 S.W.2d 766
    , 768 (Tenn. 1993); Martin v.
    Hale, 
    167 Tenn. 438
    , 442, 
    71 S.W.2d 211
    , 212 (1934). Thus, we decline to infer
    that because Ms. Nissen dealt with the property covered by the codicil in one way,
    she meant to deal with all her other property in the same way. The actual terms
    of the will and codicil merely evince a decision to deal with different property
    differently.
    V.
    We affirm the judgment and remand the case to the trial court for whatever
    other proceedings may be required. We tax the costs of this appeal to Ruth Flathe,
    as personal representative of Ms. Nissen’s estate, and her surety for which
    execution, if necessary, may issue.
    -11-
    ____________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    CONCUR:
    ________________________________
    HENRY F. TODD, P.J., M.S.
    ________________________________
    SAMUEL L. LEWIS, JUDGE
    -12-