In re Estate of Blankenship

Decision Date01 June 1999
Docket NumberNo. 3002.,3002.
Citation336 S.C. 103,518 S.E.2d 615
PartiesIn re ESTATE OF Irene D. BLANKENSHIP. Anne Blankenship Harrell, Appellant, v. Jean B. Grady, Personal Representative, Respondent.
CourtSouth Carolina Court of Appeals

Susan T. Kinard, of Kinard & Kinard, of North Charleston, for appellant.

William W. Peagler, III, and Jeffrey S. Weathers, both of Moncks Corner, for respondent. HOWELL, Chief Judge:

Anne Blankenship Harrell appeals the circuit court's denial of her motion for summary judgment and its grant of summary judgment to Jean B. Grady, the Personal Representative of the estate of Harrell's mother, Irene Dennis Blankenship. We reverse and remand.

I.

Charles Blankenship, Sr. and Irene Dennis Blankenship (together "the Blankenships") executed a joint will on October 12, 1989. In the will, they made provisions for burial and directed their funeral expenses and just debts be paid from their estates. They then devised their entire estates to the survivor. The will also provided,

In the event we should die simultaneously or within a short time of each other, we hereby give, devise, and bequeath all of the property of every kind or nature, real, personal, or real or personal mixed, of which either of us may die seized and possessed, to our beloved children, Jean Blankenship Grady, Charles Clyde Blankenship, Jr. and Karl D. Blankenship. We have intentionally not given, devised or bequeathed] unto our daughter, Anne B. Harrell, anything for we have amply provided for her during our lifetimes.

Mr. Blankenship died on October 30, 1992. Mrs. Blankenship died on January 18, 1996.

The joint will was admitted to probate. Harrell filed a petition, asserting that the will should be construed as making no provision in the event the Blankenships failed to die simultaneously or within a short time of each other. She sought distribution of the estate among Mrs. Blankenship's intestate heirs. Upon Harrell's motion, the case was transferred to circuit court.

In its order, the trial court held that the language of the will as a whole clearly demonstrated an intent of Mrs. Blankenship to dispose of her entire estate. In addition, the court found clear and unambiguous the language setting forth the Blankenships' intent not to make a devise to Harrell. Although the court found the Blankenships did not die simultaneously or within a short time of each other, the court held that the conditional clause was not important in the interpretation of the intent of the testator to disinherit Harrell.

II.

"Summary judgment is appropriate when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Cafe Assocs., Ltd. v. Gerngross, 305 S.C. 6, 9, 406 S.E.2d 162, 164 (1991).

Harrell argues the trial court erred in giving effect to the provisions of Mrs. Blankenship's will that were conditioned upon the happening of simultaneous or common death. We agree.

A conditional or contingent will is a will that conditions its validity upon the occurrence of a specific event. If the event does not take place, the will is void and the decedent's estate passes under the laws of intestacy. See Capps v. Richardson, 215 S.C. 34, 38, 53 S.E.2d 876, 877 (1949). Although the law engages a presumption against intestacy, this presumption may be overcome by the "facts and plain language of the will." Albergotti v. Summers, 203 S.C. 137, 147, 26 S.E.2d 395, 400 (1943).

Whether a will is conditional depends upon the facts of each case. See Capps, 215 S.C. at 38, 53 S.E.2d at 877. "[T]he `courts will not regard a will as conditional or contingent unless the intention of the testator to make it so clearly appears, either expressly or by necessary implication, from the language of the will as a whole.'" Id. at 39, 53 S.E.2d at 878 (quoting 57 Am.Jur. Wills § 672). "In searching for [the testator's] intention, however, [the court] may not conjecture how the testator might have chosen to express himself had his mind adverted to the particular contingency.... [The court] may not redraft the [w]ill, nor ... doctor a crucial part." Limehouse v. Limehouse, 256 S.C. 255, 257, 182 S.E.2d 58, 59 (1971).

The Blankenships' will is clearly and unambiguously conditional. It provides for disposition of the Blankenships' estate to the survivor if one predeceases the other or, in the alternative, to their children other than Harrell if the Blankenships die simultaneously or within a short time of each other. Any presumption against intestacy is overcome by the clarity of the language indicating that the gift of the property to anyone other than the surviving spouse is expressly conditional on the simultaneous or near simultaneous death of both spouses. The conditional language is in every donative clause in the will except for the provision giving the surviving spouse all the property of the other spouse. Even the denomination of Grady as the executrix of the estate is conditional on the Blankenships' simultaneous death. The will simply does not make any provision for disposition of the estate upon the death of the survivor unless that death occurs within a short time of the other spouse's death. To the contrary, that the will contemplates death of the surviving spouse very close in time to the other spouse indicates that the Blankenships considered the contingency of one spouse's surviving the other yet chose to do nothing about it unless their deaths were nearly simultaneous.

Furthermore, that the will contains an explicit disinheritance of Harrell does not change our position. The provision disinheriting Harrell is in the same paragraph as the alternate disposition to the children in the event of a simultaneous death. This location shows that the Blankenships intended to leave the decision of how to distribute the surviving spouse's property to the surviving spouse. Thus, reading the will as a whole, we conclude that the disinheritance provision was dependent on the Blankenships' simultaneous deaths. See Citizens & Southern Nat'l Bank v. Roach, 239 S.C. 291, 296, 122 S.E.2d 644, 647 (1961)

("[I]n determining the meaning of words in a will, they must be construed in their context and not in isolation, apart from other portions of the will."); Schultz v. Barr, 186 S.C. 498, 502, 196 S.E. 177, 179 (1938) ("The meaning which the testator intended to convey, by the use of particular words and expressions, will be determined from their relationship to other words and expressions used, and, when his intention is discovered, it will be enforced, notwithstanding that a meaning broader or narrower than is usual be given to particular words and phrases.").1

In conclusion, we can find no evidence from the will itself that the Blankenships intended the bequests to third parties to operate even if one spouse survived the other for a significant period. As described above, our duty is to interpret the will from the language the testator used to determine the testator's intent. We cannot re-write the will in order to eliminate the contingency of simultaneous death from the alternative disposition to the children other than Harrell. Neither party disputes the trial court's finding that this contingency did not occur. Accordingly, because Mrs. Blankenship failed to make a disposition of her estate in her will, her estate must pass under the rules of...

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