For
the wealthy holograph wills can replace carefully crafted wills leaving estate
plans in turmoil. Readers who watched the original version of the T.V. series, Dallas, may remember the tumult when
patriarch Jock Ewing died and a holograph codicil turned up that completely
altered the hundreds of pages of trusts in the will he had previously signed.
Family conflict erupted.
Holograph
wills are generally good business for lawyers as interpretation is often
needed. What was clear to the maker of the will is not always clear to those who
read it after death.
In
Sycamore Road by John Grisham a
holograph will by a white businessman, Seth Hubbard, gave the bulk of his
multi-million estate to an African American housekeeper.
(I am a little surprised some have thought Grisham showed a lack of originality
in Rouge Lawyer with Sebastian Rudd
having a strong resemblance to Connelly’s character, Mickey Haller. When
Connelly used a holograph will I have yet to see a complaint that he was too
close to Grisham’s use of such a will.)
In
The Wrong Side of Goodbye there is a
clever additional twist with regard to the holograph will. In the package
mailed to Harry that contains the will there is the heavy distinctive
gold pen used to write and sign the will. The pen was made from gold mined by
Vance’s great-grandfather and has been handed down in the family from
generation to generation.
The
pen will make it easier to establish the holograph will is genuinely written
and signed by Vance. In proving the writing and signing of the will the pen would be
important for it was the pen used by Vance to sign documents. If the ink in the
pen matches the ink on the will there is important proof supporting the
validity of the will.
Holograph
wills are an exception to the requirement that wills to be valid need to have
the signatures of two witnesses. Who can be the witnesses is a subject for
another post.
For
most holograph wills a handwriting expert is not needed if there is no dispute over the making of the will and there are people who
can swear affidavits that the body of the will and signature are in the handwriting of the
deceased.
As
we now live in an era where some people rarely handwrite anything and some
signatures are more printed than written I wonder how experts will give
opinions on contested holograph wills in future cases. Experts need examples of
uncontested handwriting to have the comparisons needed for analysis
While
I have not researched California law in Saskatchewan the Wills Act provides that that a holograph will must be totally in
the handwriting of the testator, the maker of the will.
As
a young lawyer I dealt with a case where the testator’s wife had printed the
will and he had then signed it. Though no one was challenging the will it was
rejected for probate as he had not written all of the will.
Holograph
wills need not be written on ordinary paper. I once probated a will that was
written by the testator on the back of an envelope. We filed the envelope as
part of the application for probate.
The
most famous holograph will in Saskatchewan and, perhaps the world, was written
in 1948.
A farmer in west Central Saskatchewan, Cecil Harris, was pinned beneath his
tractor when it rolled on its side. While Harris could not free himself he
could move his upper body. Taking out his jackknife he scratched on the fender
of his tractor:
In
case I die in this mess I leave everything to the wife. Cecil Geo Harris
While
discovered alive he died from his injuries.
The
family lawyer, George Stanley Elliott, arranged for the portion of the fender
containing the holograph will to be cut out. He then tendered that portion of
the fender to the Surrogate Court as the will of Harris.
It
was accepted for probate. The fender will was the first will in the British
Commonwealth not written on paper to be accepted for probate.
When
the Kerrobert courthouse closed the fender will and the jackknife were taken to
the College of Law at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon where I
attended law school. The photo at the top of this post shows the display at the
College of Law Library. The photo to the right shows the fender bearing the
scratched words of Harris.
The
fender will and jackknife are vivid legal artifacts of a Saskatchewan tragedy.
What an interesting story, Bill, of Harris' will. The man was inspired. And the whole question of what counts as a will, and what can be probated, is fascinating. It must be difficult at times to determine exactly what the deceased intended; I'd bet that ends up in quite a bit of debate.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Each time I read the story of George Harris and his holograph will I reflect on the torment he must have experienced being pinned by the tractor for hours and how he thought of the one thing he could do to make the situation simpler for his wife if he died.
DeleteFascinating details and stories Bill! It's not surprising they feature in mystery stories so much, with so many weir possibilities ...
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. Holograph wills have an aura about them because they are insights into the mind of the maker considering his/her death.
Delete