Citation Numbers: 130 A. 112, 103 Conn. 213, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 123
Judges: Wheeler, Beach, Curtis, Keeler, Mai, Tbie
Filed Date: 7/30/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The husband and two of the children of the testatrix would construe the language of the third clause of the will of Mrs. Stearns, "I hereby give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my personal estate," as devising and bequeathing all the residue and remainder of the real and personal estate of the testatrix. The husband and the two children of the testatrix contend that the term used in the third clause of the will is equivocal or ambiguous as to the property disposed of therein, and *Page 219
that the intent of the testatrix, the ascertainment of which is the primary end of all construction of every will, can only be known by resort to extrinsic evidence, and that the extrinsic evidence offered was admissible to show the purpose of the testatrix in making her will, to be to carry out an arrangement made with her husband that they make mutual wills of a certain character, and that pursuant to that purpose, they instructed a scrivener to make such wills, and both the testatrix and her husband understood that the will of the testatrix and that of the husband as drafted by the scrivener and executed by them, had conveyed to the other all the residue of their respective estates after the cash legacies to their children. This claim is based upon the rule of construction of wills as expressed in Wigram's fifth proposition: "For the purpose of determining the object of a testator's bounty, or the subject of disposition, or the quantity of interest intended to be given by his will, a court may inquire into every material fact relating to the person who claims to be interested under the will, and to the property which is claimed as the subject of disposition, and to the circumstances of the testator, and of his family and affairs, for the purpose of enabling the court to identify the person or thing intended by the testator, or to determine the quantity of interest he has given by his will." Wigram on Wills (5th Ed.) p. 56. Quoting and approving this proposition in Thompson v. Betts,
Extrinsic evidence can show, between different meanings of this term, the meaning the testatrix intended, but her intention to give something more than the quantity of property that might be embraced in the term under any of its meanings cannot be shown, for that would be to make a will for the testatrix other than the one she did make. If personal estate as used *Page 221 in this clause has the meaning of personal property of every kind, the equivocation or ambiguity in the use of this term is resolved. The clause would then disclose a clear purpose and a definite meaning which evidence of extrinsic facts indicating a different purpose or intention on the part of the testatrix would not be admitted to contradict, vary or control. The extrinsic evidence admissible under Wigram's fifth proposition is received "in order to aid a doubtful interpretation, and not so as to materially qualify or contradict the instrument or interpolate a testamentary gift which its own tenor did not justify." 1 Schouler on Wills (5th Ed.) § 588. Counsel inveigh against a rule excluding the evidence offered as one which would carry us back to the "stiff and superstitious formalism," to use the language of Wigmore (2d Ed., Vol. 5, § 2461), from which the law had slowly emerged into a condition of "flexible rationalism." We find no occasion to trace through our own decisions the completeness with which we have accepted and applied Wigram's fifth proposition. We admit parol evidence of the meaning of the testator in the use of some term or word in a will when the meaning is equivocal or ambiguous. That is a very different proposition from that which would substitute in place of the term or word another term or word not used by the testator, or add to a term or a clause an omission.
In re Curtis-Castle Arbitration,
There is another and a controlling reason why this evidence was inadmissible. The utmost the offer discloses is the purpose and intention of the testatrix to devise and bequeath all the residue and remainder of her estate to her husband, and her instruction, through her husband acting as her agent, to the scrivener to so draft the will, and that he failed to draft the will in this particular in accordance with his instructions. The rule is, we believe, universal, that parol evidence of intent cannot be admitted to supply a possible defect or omission in a will occurring through mistake or inadvertence whether of the testatrix or the scrivener. This was declared to be the law of this jurisdiction nearly one hundred years ago and it has remained our law ever since. Avery v. Chappell,
The final question is whether, under General Statutes, § 5055, the husband is barred of the share which he would have taken under the statute had he made and filed his election so to take. The part of § 5055, applicable reads as follows: "Where the husband has by will devised or bequeathed a portion of his property to his surviving wife, or where the wife by will has devised or bequeathed a portion of her property to her surviving husband, such provision shall be taken to be in lieu of the share herein provided for, unless the contrary shall be expressly stated in the will, or shall clearly appear therein; but in any such case the party shall have his or her election whether to accept the provision of such will or take such statutory share, and such election shall be made in writing signed by the party entitled to make the same, and lodged with the Court of Probate before which such estate is in settlement, within two months after the expiration of the time limited for the exhibition of claims against said estate; and if not so made such person shall be taken to have accepted the provisions of the will, and shall be barred of said statutory share." The statute is too plain to require construction. The will did give to the husband a portion of the estate of the testatrix. The husband made no election in writing as to whether he would accept or reject the provisions of the will in lieu of his statutory share as husband of the testatrix. The terms of this statute are explicit, and however unfortunate the result, the facts of record bring the case exactly within the statute and require us to hold that the husband "shall be taken to have accepted *Page 226 the provisions of the will, and shall be barred of said statutory share."
We answer questions one, two and three in the negative, and questions four, five and eight in the affirmative. Other questions, in view of these answers, do not require answer.
The Superior Court is advised to render judgment in accordance with the answers given to the foregoing questions.
No costs will be taxed in favor of any party in this court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Estate of Lippincott , 173 Pa. 368 ( 1896 )
Mahoney v. Mahoney , 98 Conn. 525 ( 1923 )
Hanvy v. Moore , 1913 Ga. LEXIS 225 ( 1913 )
Southington Bank & Trust Co. v. American Baptist Home ... , 96 Conn. 107 ( 1921 )
Day v. Webler , 93 Conn. 308 ( 1919 )
Estate of Rubinow v. Commissioner , 75 T.C. 486 ( 1980 )
DelVecchio v. DelVecchio , 146 Conn. 188 ( 1959 )
Mitchell v. Reeves , 123 Conn. 549 ( 1938 )
Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Thayer , 105 Conn. 57 ( 1926 )
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Leavenworth v. Shea, No. Cv94-0120331 S (Nov. 8, 1996) , 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 9276 ( 1996 )
Hartt v. Hartt , 75 Wyo. 305 ( 1956 )
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Holcomb v. Newton , 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1863 ( 1950 )
In Re the Estate Thurman , 13 Utah 2d 156 ( 1962 )
Perkins v. Corkey , 147 Conn. 248 ( 1960 )
Connecticut Junior Republic v. Sharon Hospital , 188 Conn. 1 ( 1982 )
Korie Sterling Saylor v. Jonathan Fred Saylor, as personal ... , 2014 Ala. LEXIS 191 ( 2014 )
Lewis v. Shannon , 121 Conn. 594 ( 1936 )
Trowbridge v. Trowbridge , 127 Conn. 469 ( 1941 )
Travelers Bank & Trust Co. v. Birge , 136 Conn. 21 ( 1949 )
Morehouse v. Bridgeport-City Trust Co. , 137 Conn. 209 ( 1950 )
Lewis's Appeal From Probate Estate of Eno , 3 Conn. Supp. 444 ( 1936 )
City Nat'l Bank of S. Norwalk v. Broadley , 6 Conn. Supp. 58 ( 1938 )