Court Opinion

ID: 5038074
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-01 06:19:31.26406+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:18:28.295288
License: Public Domain

CULLEN, Commissioner.
The proponents of an alleged will of Addie Owens, deceased, are appealing from a judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court which affirmed an order of the county court denying probate. The issue was whether the will was executed in conformity with statutory formalities. The circuit court submitted that issue to a jury, which found the will to be valid, but on motion for. judgment n. o. v. the court set aside the verdict and entered judgment declaring that the will was not valid.
The evidence heard on the trial was not designated as a part of the record on appeal. However, the trial judge, in a written opinion sustaining the motion for judgment n. o. v., made a detailed statement of the facts of the case, and there is no dispute here about that statement. We quote the essential facts from the trial judge’s opinion:
“Mrs. Owens was an elderly widow who resided in her home on South Upper Street, in Lexington. For many years, Mrs. Owens had been addicted to the use of narcotics which she received legally by prescription from her physician. Over the course of years, the decedent became a friend of her physician’s office assistant, Mrs. Rebecca Ross. At Mrs. Owens’ request, Mrs. Ross contacted her son, Paul, who is an attorney, for the purpose of assisting her in the preparation of a will.
“Paul Ross contacted Mrs. Owens, but she was so wary of anyone knowing about her intentions that she refused to give him the information necessary to prepare a will. Instead, Paul Ross left with Mrs. Owens a typewritten skeleton or form that she was to use in writing her own will. This skeleton was typed on two pages of legal sized paper (8½ x 13).
“On September 14, 1965, Paul Ross and his father returned to Mrs. Owens’ home for the purpose of witnessing a will. Mrs. Owens had several sheets of paper, but Paul Ross saw only a single page which contained a place for Mrs. Owens’ signature and a typewritten attestation clause. The paper was then duly executed.
“Mrs. Owens subsequently broke her hip, which resulted in her becoming an invalid. In late August or early September, 1967, Mrs. Owens employed Mrs. Nora Yarber as a companion. The two women did not know each other before this time. Mrs. Yarber received $12.50 per week, plus room and board. During October, Mrs. Owens told Mrs. Yarber that she was providing for Mrs. Yarber in her will. On one occasion Mrs. Yarber saw Mrs. Owens sign her name to a sheet of paper which the decedent identified as being a part of her will although Mrs. Yarber never saw any of the contents.
*698“In early November, 1967, Mrs. Owens was admitted to the hospital. While there, Mrs. Owens told Mrs. Yarber to go to a desk in her house where she would find her will. Mrs. Yarber found a sealed envelope in the desk which she delivered to a neighbor, Mrs. Faye Teater, for safekeeping. Shortly before Mrs. Owens died, Mrs. Teater delivered the sealed envelope to Paul Ross.
“When Ross opened the envelope to examine the contents, he found a total of eight pages. Some of the pages were folded together, others were not, so as to form three separate sets of papers. Ross did not know the order in which the sets were found when he removed them from the envelope. For convenience, the Court will refer to them as Set A, Set B and Set C, without intending to indicate their sequence within the envelope.
“Set A consisted of the two typewritten pages which Paul Ross had prepared as a will outline or skeleton for Mrs. Owens in August, 1965. These two pages were folded together separately from the others.
“Set B consisted of the page which was signed by Mrs. Owens on September 14, 1965, and witnessed by Paul Ross and his father. This page was a sheet of plain white paper approximately 8½ inches by 11 inches. Mrs. Owens’ signature appears on a typewritten line approximately 3¾ inches from the top. Beneath the signature is a typewritten attestation clause which recites :
‘Signed and acknowledged by Addie Owens to be her last will and testament
The original typewritten date in the attestation clause was ‘10 day of March 1959.’ With a ballpoint pen Mrs. Owens had inserted the numerals ‘62’ in the year. However, all the date had been blocked out with a blue ballpoint pen, and Mrs. Owens had written the date ‘14 September 1965’, also with a blue ballpoint pen. Mrs. Owens’ signature and that of Paul Ross and his father were all written in black ink with a fountain pen. According to Paul Ross, this attestation page (Set B) was folded in half vertically from top to bottom and folded roughly into thirds by two horizontal folds. As thus folded, it measured roughly 5 inches by 3¾ inches.
“Set C consisted of five sheets of ruled, loose leaf, notebook paper which measured approximately 8 inches by 10½ inches. According to Ross, the five sheets of Set C had been folded together by first making a horizontal fold into halves and then again horizontally into quarters. As thus folded, Set C measured 8 inches by 3¾ inches.
“The five pages are entirely in the handwriting of Addie Owens. The first page is not numbered but it is apparent that it prer cedes the others. The other pages are numbered at the top 2, 3, 4 and 5. The first page commences with the date ‘September 14, 1965’ and is followed by an introductory paragraph which recites that it is the decedent’s will. This is followed by paragraphs numbered 2, 3, 4 and 5. On page two appears paragraphs numbered 6 and 7. Paragraphs numbered 8 and 9 appear on page three and a paragraph numbered 10 appears on page 4. The paragraphs on page five are unnumbered.
“The five pages of Set C are unusual in a number of ways. The first page contains no dispositive clauses at all but repeats some of the clauses contained in the will form furnished by Paul Ross (Set A). Yet, page two commences with a testimon-ium clause which is also dated September 14, 1965. Immediately beneath the testi-monium clause, paragraph 6 provided that Rebecca Ross, Faye Teater and Nora Yar-ber are to make her funeral arrangements. Since Addie Owens did not know Mrs. Yarber until August or September of 1967, it is obvious that the remainder of the five pages was written long after September 14, 1965. The next pages contain a number of specific bequests. It should be noted that on page three, she divides her accounts in *699the Second National Bank among Rebecca Ross, Faye Teater and Nora Yarber. On page five, she bequeaths her jewelry to Rebecca Ross and her home to Nora Yarber.
“On page one, all but the last two lines are filled by writing. Page two is signed by Mrs. Owens at the bottom, her signature being separated by seven lines from the last writing on the page. Pages three and four are also signed at the bottom by the decedent and the signatures are separated from the writing above by only a single line. However, page five is not signed and ten blank lines separate the last writing from the bottom of the page.
“One further feature of the pages in question must be disposed of. On the attestation page (Set B) the typewritten numbers ‘666’ appear immediately above the decedent’s signature at the top of the page. Paul Ross testified that it was his recollection that he also prepared this page on his typewriter. In order to make a line on this typewriter, he stated that it was necessary to use the upper case of the 6 key. He accounted for the ‘666’ by his failure to shift to the upper case. Therefore, the ‘666’ at the top of the attestation page has no significance from the point of view of pagination.
“On page two, Mrs. Owens wrote:
‘this will is all rite as I have written this will with my own hands’ ”
It is our opinion that the trial judge correctly held that the purported will was not executed in conformity with the statutory requirements, particularly the requirement of KRS 446.060 that the signature be “subscribed at the end or close of the writing.”
This court has said that the purpose of the requirement that the testator’s signature be at the end or close of the will is “to indicate that his testamentary dispositions had been fully and completely expressed.” Lucas v. Brown, 187 Ky. 502, 219 S.W. 796. Page says that the purpose of such a requirement is “to do away with the necessity of inquiring into the actual intention of the testator in writing his name in the body of the will, and to avoid inquiry as to whether the instrument in question is intended as a preliminary draft or as a final and complete instrument.” 2 Bowe-Parker, Page on Wills, Section 1953, pages 153, 154. The Pennsylvania court has said that the purpose is “to indicate that it was the completed expression of the intention of the testatrix.” In re Fisher’s Estate, 283 Pa. 282, 129 A. 90.
It appears clear that the statute admits of no substitute for the proper placing of the signature as evidence of the completion of the testator’s testamentary expression. The fact that the intention of the testator of making a completed testamentary disposition may be clear from other evidence, such as oral declarations or the placing of the signature on the outside of a sealed envelope containing the testamentary papers, is of no avail. Miller’s Ex’r v. Shannon, Ky., 299 S.W.2d 105; Hall v. Edds, Ky., 305 S.W.2d 317. Accordingly, the statement of Mrs. Owens, to Mrs. Yarber, that her will was in a desk in her house (where Mrs. Yarber found the envelope containing the purported will), cannot supply a deficiency in compliance with the statutory requirement as to the position of the signature.
The controlling question is whether the signature of Mrs. Owens was in fact at the end or close of the will. Her intent that it be there supplies nothing if the signature never in fact was there. The question has to do with actual presence at the time of execution. See Annotation, 38 A.L.R.2d 477 at 481.
There is no direct evidence in the record before us that the sheet bearing the signature ever was placed at the end or close of the will. The sheet was in the same envelope with the pages bearing dispositive provisions but it was folded separately, was on a different kind of paper, and gave indication, by a series of changed dates noted *700upon it (the last of which clearly preceded the writing of some of the dispositive provisions), that the testatrix several times had changed her mind about her testamentary dispositions.
The only basis on which it could be maintained that the sheet bearing the signature was in fact at the end or close of the will would be that the fact could be inferred from the mere presence of the sheet in the envelope, the inference being justified on the ground that logically there would be no reason for the testatrix to have put the signature sheet in the envelope unless she intended it to evidence a completion of her testamentary expression. One fallacy in that proposition is that it rests on inferred intent rather than the statutory required direct evidence of intent from actual position of the signature. Furthermore, we think that it is equally as probable that the signature sheet was placed or left in the envelope simply as one of Mrs. Owens’ working papers, the same as the two-page outline prepared for her by Paul Ross. (Mrs. Owens’ statement to Mrs. Yarber that her will was in the desk is no evidence that the signature sheet was ever made a part of the will, any more than was the two-page outline.) With two equal probabilities, neither one can rise to the force of an inference; both become mere possibilities.
Obviously, the signature in question was not written at the time the rest of the purported will was written. Nor was it affixed or appended to a final testamentary document on the last date entered on the sheet, because some of the dispositive provisions were written after that date. Therefore, in order for there to be a valid will, the signature sheet would have to have been affixed or appended at the end or close of the testamentary document at some unidentified time.1 It is our opinion that an inference that such affixing or appending was done would require a much stronger basis than would be required in a case where the separated or disconnected signature obviously was written simultaneously with the testamentary dispositions.
Our conclusion that the will did not meet the statutory requirements is supported by the authorities from other jurisdictions annotated in 38 A.L.R.2d at pages 477 et seq.
The judgment is affirmed.
MILLIKEN, C. J., and NEIKIRK, OSBORNE, PALMORE, REED and STEIN-FELD, JJ., concur.
EDWARD P. HILL, Jr., J., dissents.

. We assume for the purposes of this opinion, but do not decide, that such affixing or appending would be acceptable as substantial compliance with the statute.