LeRoy F. Alvis, Jr. v. Rian Alvis ( 2024 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                                NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                            This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    January 9, 2024
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Samuel A. Christensen                  petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals               Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2023AP366                                                       Cir. Ct. No. 2022IN55
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT III
    IN RE THE ESTATE OF ALMA E. ALVIS:
    LEROY F. ALVIS, JR.,
    APPELLANT,
    V.
    RIAN ALVIS,
    RESPONDENT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Marathon County:
    LAMONT K. JACOBSON, Judge. Affirmed.
    Before Stark, P.J., Hruz and Gill, JJ.
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    No. 2023AP366
    ¶1       PER CURIAM. This              appeal       involves      the     circuit     court’s
    interpretation of the joint will of LeRoy F. Alvis, Sr., and Alma E. Alvis and the
    court’s interpretation of the anti-lapse statute, WIS. STAT. § 854.06 (2021-22).1
    The court determined that under the joint will, and by operation of the anti-lapse
    statute, Rian Alvis is entitled to her deceased father’s share of Alma’s estate.
    LeRoy F. Alvis, Jr., (“Robbie”)2 appeals from the court’s order, arguing that the
    anti-lapse statute does not apply because: (1) the joint will creates a class of
    beneficiaries that is limited to Alma and LeRoy’s children, and the members of
    that class are contingent beneficiaries under the joint will; and (2) the joint will is
    not a revocable governing instrument. We reject these arguments and affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2       Alma and LeRoy were husband and wife and had five children. On
    October 15, 1991, Alma and LeRoy signed a handwritten document entitled “Last
    Will and testimony of LeRoy F. Alvis Sr. and Alma E. Alvis” (hereinafter, “the
    joint will”). The joint will stated that on the death of either spouse, his or her
    entire estate would pass to the surviving spouse. The joint will further provided
    that if the spouses “die[d] together,” their home should be sold at fair market value
    and “divided to all 5 children”; their cars, tractor, and “big tool[s]” should be “sold
    at fair market value [and] divided”; their insurance, bonds, IRAs, and CDs should
    1
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise
    noted.
    The individuals involved in this appeal share the last name “Alvis.” To avoid confusion,
    after the first reference to each individual, we will refer to that individual by his or her first name.
    2
    Consistent with the parties’ briefs, we refer to LeRoy F. Alvis, Jr., as “Robbie.” We
    refer to LeRoy F. Alvis, Sr., as “LeRoy.”
    2
    No. 2023AP366
    be “divided”; and, with respect to their “household items” and “other items,” “the
    5 kids can take what each wants, if it can be settled with our Executor[’]s
    approval, [other]wise sold [and] then divided.”
    ¶3     Danny Alvis, one of Alma and LeRoy’s five children, died in
    April 2011. Alma and LeRoy took no action to change or update the joint will
    following Danny’s death. LeRoy subsequently died in September 2011, and Alma
    died in June 2013. Probate proceedings, however, were not commenced until
    March 16, 2022.         On that date, Robbie filed an application for informal
    administration of Alma’s estate. The application listed Rian, Danny’s daughter, as
    an “additional interested person[]” but asserted that she was “not a beneficiary”
    under the joint will.     The four surviving Alvis children signed “Waiver and
    Consent” forms consenting to the admission of the joint will to probate.
    ¶4     On April 13, 2022, Rian filed a demand for formal proceedings for
    the administration of Alma’s estate. Following a proof of will hearing, the joint
    will was admitted to probate.        The parties then filed briefs regarding the
    interpretation of the joint will. Specifically, the parties’ briefs addressed whether
    Rian was entitled to Danny’s share of Alma’s estate. The parties agreed there
    were no disputed issues of fact.
    ¶5     In a written decision, the circuit court concluded that upon the
    surviving spouse’s death, the joint will provided for an outright transfer of that
    spouse’s estate to five specific individuals—namely, Alma and LeRoy’s five
    children. The court reasoned, however, that the joint will “says nothing about
    what to do when one of [the five children] has already died.” According to the
    court, this “gap left in the will is what the anti-lapse statute was intended to fill.
    And according to that statute, Rian Alvis is entitled to her father’s share of the
    3
    No. 2023AP366
    estate.” The court therefore ordered that Rian “qualifies as a beneficiary under the
    [joint] will in place of her father, Danny Alvis.” Robbie now appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶6      This appeal requires us to interpret both the joint will and the
    anti-lapse statute and to apply their provisions to an undisputed set of facts. “The
    construction of a will is a question of law we review without deference to the
    [circuit] court.” Firehammer v. Marchant, 
    224 Wis. 2d 673
    , 676, 
    591 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App. 1999). Similarly, “[t]he interpretation and application of a statute to
    an undisputed set of facts are questions of law that we review independently.”
    McNeil v. Hansen, 
    2007 WI 56
    , ¶7, 
    300 Wis. 2d 358
    , 
    731 N.W.2d 273
    .
    ¶7      “The rights under a will of a beneficiary who predeceases the
    testator are governed by [WIS. STAT. §] 854.06”—commonly known as the
    anti-lapse statute. WIS. STAT. § 853.27. As relevant here, the anti-lapse statute
    applies to “revocable provisions in a governing instrument executed by the
    decedent that provide for an outright transfer upon the death of the decedent
    to … issue of a grandparent.”3 Sec. 854.06(2)(a). If a transferee under such a
    provision “does not survive the decedent but has issue who do survive, the issue of
    the transferee take the transfer per stirpes, as provided in [WIS. STAT.
    3
    The parties do not dispute that the joint will provides for a transfer upon the surviving
    spouse’s death to the “issue of a grandparent.” See WIS. STAT. § 854.06(2)(a). The term “issue”
    means “children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and lineal descendants of more remote
    degrees.” WIS. STAT. § 851.13. The joint will provides for a transfer of the surviving spouse’s
    property to Alma and LeRoy’s five children, who are the great-grandchildren of Alma’s and
    LeRoy’s grandparents.
    4
    No. 2023AP366
    §] 854.04(1).”4 Sec. 854.06(3). The anti-lapse statute does not apply, however,
    if: (1) “[t]he governing instrument provides that a transfer to a predeceased
    beneficiary lapses”; (2) “[t]he governing instrument designates one or more
    persons, classes, or groups of people as contingent transferees, in which case those
    transferees take in preference to” the deceased beneficiary’s issue; or (3) “the
    person who executed the governing instrument had an intent contrary to” the
    anti-lapse statute. Sec. 854.06(4).
    ¶8      This court previously interpreted and applied the anti-lapse statute in
    Firehammer.5 There, the testator’s will split the residue of his estate into seven
    shares, with each of his two daughters receiving one share. Firehammer, 224
    Wis. 2d at 675. The will further provided that if any beneficiary died within five
    months after the testator, that beneficiary’s interest should be disposed of as
    though the beneficiary had predeceased the testator. Id. One of the testator’s
    daughters died within five months after his death, and the personal representative
    disbursed her share of the estate to her son, pursuant to the anti-lapse statute. Id.
    The testator’s surviving daughter challenged the distribution, arguing that the
    anti-lapse statute did not apply and the deceased daughter’s share should have
    been divided among the six surviving beneficiaries. Id. at 675-76.
    4
    When a statute or governing instrument calls for property to be distributed to a
    designated person’s issue “per stirpes,” “the property is divided into equal shares for the
    designated person’s surviving children and for the designated person’s deceased children who left
    surviving issue.” WIS. STAT. § 854.04(1)(a).
    5
    The Firehammer court interpreted a previous version of the anti-lapse statute, WIS.
    STAT. § 853.27 (1995-96). See Firehammer v. Marchant, 
    224 Wis. 2d 673
    , 675, 
    591 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App. 1999). The court acknowledged that the probate code had recently been revised
    and that the revisions “were not in effect at the time of this case.” 
    Id.
     at 675 n.1 (citing 1997 Wis.
    Act 188). Nevertheless, the court stated that “the result would be the same under the new
    anti-lapse statute, [WIS. STAT.] § 854.06.” Firehammer, 224 Wis. 2d at 675 n.1.
    5
    No. 2023AP366
    ¶9     On appeal, we concluded there was “no ambiguity” in the will’s
    provision stating that the interest of any beneficiary who died within five months
    after the testator should be disposed of as though the beneficiary had predeceased
    the testator. Id. at 677. We then observed that, under the anti-lapse statute, “if a
    relative is a beneficiary under the will, predeceases the testator[,] and has issue
    who survive the testator,” then those issue are entitled to the deceased
    beneficiary’s share, unless the will indicates a contrary intent. Id. In other words,
    “if a beneficiary predeceases the testator, the anti-lapse statute works to give the
    [beneficiary’s] share to the issue, not to the surviving beneficiaries, unless a
    contrary intent is clearly established.” Id. at 678. We further observed that the
    testator was presumed to know the law and, therefore, “knew about the anti-lapse
    statute.” Id. at 677. Despite that knowledge, the testator’s will did not contain
    any “provision for a predeceased beneficiary.” Id. We reasoned that, if the
    testator “had intended that a deceased beneficiary’s share be returned to the
    residue to be split six ways, he would have said so.” Id. at 678. Because he did
    not, we concluded that the anti-lapse statute controlled, and the deceased
    daughter’s share of the testator’s estate was properly distributed to her son. Id.
    ¶10    We agree with Rian and the circuit court that Firehammer is directly
    on point. In this case, the joint will provided that following the deaths of both
    Alma and LeRoy, their property would be divided between their five children.
    The joint will did not address what would happen to any child’s share if that child
    predeceased the surviving spouse. Alma and LeRoy are presumed to have known
    about the anti-lapse statute. See id. at 677. If they had intended a deceased child’s
    share to be returned to the residue to be split four ways between the remaining
    children, they could have included a provision to that effect in the joint will;
    however, they did not do so. See id. at 678. In addition, they failed to amend the
    6
    No. 2023AP366
    joint will following Danny’s death in 2011. “[T]he anti-lapse statute controls
    unless a contrary intent is clearly expressed by the testator,” see id., and the joint
    will contains no such expression of a contrary intent. Accordingly, the circuit
    court properly determined that Rian was entitled to receive Danny’s share of
    Alma’s estate.
    ¶11    Robbie argues that the circuit court’s decision is erroneous because
    the joint will “created a ‘class’ of beneficiaries” that included only Alma and
    LeRoy’s five children, and the joint will “makes no reference to grandchildren or
    any heirship rights beyond the class of ‘children’ (or ‘kids’).” Because the joint
    will “does not use words like ‘right of representation’ or ‘per stirpes,’” Robbie
    asserts that it “limits the class to ‘children’ (or ‘kids’) who were five in number at
    the time the [j]oint [w]ill was done,” such that “[w]hen one child subsequently
    died, the class of children to ‘divide’ [the estate between] became four.” In other
    words, Robbie argues that in the event that any of the five children predeceased
    the surviving spouse, the remaining children were “contingent beneficiaries” with
    respect to the deceased child’s share of the estate. Robbie therefore asserts that
    the anti-lapse statute does not apply.
    ¶12    As an initial matter, we agree with the circuit court that the joint will
    provided for an “outright transfer” of five shares of the estate to five specific
    people—namely, Alma and LeRoy’s five children—rather than creating a “class”
    of beneficiaries. As the court noted, “The will defined the beneficiaries in a
    collective way, referring to ‘all 5 children’ and ‘[t]he 5 kids’ rather than naming
    all five in each instance, but there is no doubt that the will identified five
    individual persons as beneficiaries.”
    7
    No. 2023AP366
    ¶13    Regardless, Rian correctly notes that the term “[p]rovision in a
    governing instrument” in the anti-lapse statute includes “[a] share in a class gift
    only if a member of the class dies after the execution of the instrument.” See WIS.
    STAT. § 854.06(1)(a)2. Here, it is undisputed that Danny died after Alma and
    LeRoy executed the joint will. As such, even if the joint will is construed as
    creating a class gift to the five children, the anti-lapse statute applies unless one of
    the exceptions in § 854.06(4) bars its operation.
    ¶14    As relevant here, WIS. STAT. § 854.06(4)(a)2. provides that the
    anti-lapse statute does not apply if “[t]he governing instrument designates one or
    more persons, classes, or groups of people as contingent transferees, in which case
    those transferees take in preference to” the deceased beneficiary’s issue. Robbie
    contends that this exception applies because the joint will “designates the class of
    children as the contingent beneficiaries” in the event that any of the five children
    predeceases Alma and/or LeRoy.
    ¶15    In essence, Robbie asserts that any time a will includes a class gift,
    the mere creation of the class is sufficient to designate the surviving class
    members as contingent transferees in the event that one of the class members
    predeceases the testator.     Robbie cites no legal authority in support of this
    proposition, however, and we conclude that it is contrary to the plain language of
    WIS. STAT. § 854.06(4)(a)2.         That subdivision applies when a governing
    instrument “designates” one or more persons, classes, or groups as contingent
    transferees. The word “designate” means “to indicate and set apart for a specific
    purpose, office, or duty.”         Designate, MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY,
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/designate (last visited Jan. 5, 2024).
    8
    No. 2023AP366
    ¶16    Here, the joint will merely provides that following the deaths of
    Alma and LeRoy, their estate is to be divided between their five children. The
    joint will contains no provision stating how any child’s share should be distributed
    in the event that he or she predeceases Alma and/or LeRoy. The joint will does
    not, for instance, state that the share of any child who predeceases the surviving
    spouse shall be divided between the couple’s remaining children. Under these
    circumstances, the joint will does not “indicate and set apart” the remaining
    children as contingent transferees.
    ¶17    Robbie also asserts that the five children are contingent transferees
    for purposes of WIS. STAT. § 854.06(4)(a)2. because the joint will “bequeathed
    everything to the surviving spouse as primary beneficiary,” and “then in the event
    the primary beneficiary predeceases, the contingent beneficiary is the
    ‘5 children.’” We agree with the circuit court, however, that this “is simply the
    nature of a joint will.” What matters, for purposes of § 854.06(4)(a)2., is not that
    the joint will granted the five children shares of the estate following the surviving
    spouse’s death; the salient fact is that the joint will did not designate any persons,
    classes, or groups of people as contingent transferees in the event that one or more
    of the five children predeceased the surviving spouse. As Rian correctly notes,
    nothing in the joint will “addresses a contingency related to any of the five
    children such as the death of one or more [of the children] prior to the death of the
    second spouse to die.”
    ¶18    Alternatively, Robbie argues that the anti-lapse statute does not
    apply because the joint will is not a revocable governing instrument. As noted
    above, the anti-lapse statute applies only to “revocable provisions in a governing
    instrument.” WIS. STAT. § 854.06(2). Citing Chayka v. Santini, 
    47 Wis. 2d 102
    ,
    
    176 N.W.2d 561
     (1970), and La Crosse Trust Co. v. Storandt, 
    54 Wis. 2d 296
    ,
    9
    No. 2023AP366
    
    195 N.W.2d 485
     (1972), Robbie asserts that joint wills “become ‘irrevocable’
    upon the first spouse’s death.”
    ¶19    In Chayka, our supreme court held that when two parties contract to
    make a joint will, their contract “becomes partially executed upon the death of one
    of the parties to the agreement and the acceptance by the survivor of properties
    devised or bequeathed under the will and pursuant to the agreement to make such
    joint will,” and at that point, “the contract becomes irrevocable, the survivor
    having received the consideration promised.” Chayka, 
    47 Wis. 2d at 106
    . Citing
    Chayka, our supreme court subsequently stated in La Crosse Trust Co. that “[a]
    joint will is a contract which becomes irrevocable at the time one party dies.” See
    La Crosse Trust Co., 
    54 Wis. 2d at 301
    .
    ¶20    As the Chayka court acknowledged, however, the probate code was
    amended in 1969. Chayka, 
    47 Wis. 2d at
    105 n.1. The new probate code—and,
    specifically, WIS. STAT. § 853.13, which went into effect on April 1, 1971—
    “alter[ed] the principle that an inference of a contract arises from the fact of a joint
    will.” Chayka, 
    47 Wis. 2d at
    105 n.1. In its current form, § 853.13 provides:
    (1) A contract to make a will or devise, not to revoke a will
    or devise or to die intestate may be established only by any
    of the following:
    (a) Provisions of a will stating the material provisions
    of the contract.
    (b) An express reference in a will to a contract and
    extrinsic evidence proving the terms of the contract.
    (c) A valid written contract, including a marital
    property agreement under [WIS. STAT. §] 766.58(3)(e).
    (d) Clear and convincing extrinsic evidence.
    10
    No. 2023AP366
    (2) The execution of a joint will or mutual wills does not
    create a presumption of a contract not to revoke the will or
    wills.
    ¶21    Applying WIS. STAT. § 853.13 to the undisputed facts of the instant
    case, there are no provisions in the joint will stating the material provisions of a
    contract not to revoke the joint will, see § 853.13(1)(a); the joint will does not
    expressly reference the existence of a separate contract not to revoke the joint will,
    see § 853.13(1)(b); no valid written contract not to revoke the joint will has been
    produced, see § 853.13(1)(c); and Robbie has not presented clear and convincing
    extrinsic evidence of a contract not to revoke the joint will, see § 853.13(1)(d).
    The execution of the joint will, in and of itself, does not create a presumption of a
    contract not to revoke the joint will. See § 853.13(2). Under these circumstances,
    we reject Robbie’s argument that the joint will is irrevocable and that, as a result,
    the anti-lapse statute cannot apply.      Furthermore, we note that by failing to
    respond to Rian’s argument regarding § 853.13, Robbie has conceded that the joint
    will is not irrevocable under that statute. See Charolais Breeding Ranches, Ltd.
    v. FPC Sec. Corp., 
    90 Wis. 2d 97
    , 109, 
    279 N.W.2d 493
     (Ct. App. 1979)
    (unrefuted arguments may be deemed conceded).
    ¶22    In summary, we conclude the circuit court properly determined that
    the anti-lapse statute applies to the joint will and that, pursuant to the anti-lapse
    statute, Rian is entitled to Danny’s share of Alma’s estate. We therefore affirm.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This    opinion   will   not     be   published.      See      WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2023AP000366

Filed Date: 1/9/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024