COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED April 6, 2010 David
R. Schanker Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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Appeal No. |
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STATE OF WISCONSIN |
IN COURT OF APPEALS |
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DISTRICT III |
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In
re the estate of Margaret R. Hofacker: Lyle
M. Hofacker, Appellant, v. Lila
M. Bates, Respondent. |
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APPEAL
from an order of the circuit court for
Before
¶1 PER CURIAM. Lyle Hofacker appeals an order invalidating a codicil to his mother, Margaret Hofacker’s, will. Lyle argues the circuit court applied the wrong legal standard and contends the court’s conclusion that his mother lacked testamentary capacity when she signed the codicil was clearly erroneous. We disagree and affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶2 Margaret Hofacker’s will granted her four children—Leon
Hofacker, Lila Bates, Lyle Hofacker, and Lita Hofacker—the option to purchase her
farm. The will also established the
order in which they could exercise the option.
¶3 On September 8, 2007, Margaret signed the codicil at her home. Family friends Gerald and Bonnie Bryse were present to witness the signing, as was Lita. Bonnie testified that after she and Gerald arrived, they chatted with Margaret about her upcoming birthday party for about half an hour. She stated that Lita then announced “it was time now to sign the papers” and presented a document, turned only to the signature page, to Margaret. The Bryses observed Margaret sign the document, though not on the signature line. Then, at Lita’s request, they signed as witnesses.
¶4 Margaret died on December 4, 2007. Lila, to whom the codicil gave last priority to purchase the farm, moved to exclude it from probate, contending Margaret lacked testamentary capacity when she signed it. Lyle, who was given first priority, opposed the motion.
¶5 At a hearing on the motion, various relatives testified Margaret had been largely unresponsive and uncommunicative in the weeks surrounding the codicil signing. The Bryses testified Margaret was able to engage them in small talk about her birthday the day they witnessed her signature, but stated that no one read the codicil aloud or described what it was. Lita testified she read the codicil to Margaret earlier in the day and believed Margaret knew “what she was signing.”
¶6 At the conclusion of the hearing, the circuit court found there was “clear, satisfactory, and convincing” evidence Margaret did not possess testamentary capacity when she signed the codicil. The court cited her attorney’s reservations about her capacity to comprehend the document the week before she signed it, contradictory testimony about whether Margaret read the codicil before signing it, Margaret’s unresponsiveness to her relatives, and her inability to sign the document in the correct place. The court granted Lila’s motion excluding the codicil from probate. Lyle appeals.
DISCUSSION
¶7 Lyle raises two issues on appeal. The first is whether the circuit court
applied the correct standard when evaluating Margaret’s testamentary
capacity. This is a question of law we
review independently. Gittel
v. Abram, 2002 WI App 113, ¶41, 255
1. Whether the circuit court
applied the correct legal standard
¶8 Lyle argues the circuit court injected a requirement not prescribed by law when it ascribed significance to Margaret’s failure to sign on the codicil’s signature line. Under Wis. Stat. § 853.03 (2007-08), wills and codicils must be in writing, signed, and witnessed. Lyle contends that because the statute does not require the testator to sign in any particular place, the court imposed an obligation the law does not require. Lyle misrepresents the court’s rationale.
¶9 The court did not conclude the codicil was invalid because it did not meet the formal requirements to execute a codicil. Rather, it simply identified Margaret’s failure to sign on the signature line as an indication of her state of mind. It observed, “If she knew what she was doing, why wouldn’t she sign … above where her name is typed? I mean, that’s a pretty simple, elementary thing.” The court was permitted to consider the manner in which Margaret signed the codicil when evaluating whether she had the capacity to understand what she was signing.
2. Whether the circuit court’s finding was clearly erroneous
¶10 Lyle argues the circuit court’s finding Margaret lacked testamentary capacity was clearly erroneous because the Bryses and Lita testified Margaret was lucid and responsive the day she signed the codicil.
¶11 While testimony Margaret appeared lucid to the Bryses and Lita the
day she signed her codicil is relevant to whether she possessed testamentary capacity,
it is not dispositive. See Gittel, 255
¶12 The court weighed this testimony against testimony from others about Margaret’s state of mind around the time she signed the codicil. It gave particular weight to the testimony of her attorney, who postponed the signing because she had reservations about Margaret’s ability to understand the codicil. Margaret’s daughter-in-law, Loretta Hofacker, also testified that when she visited Margaret that week, Margaret “never responded to anything that we said or asked her” or indicated “she was aware of what we were saying [or whether she knew us].” Margaret’s granddaughter, Sharon Young, testified Margaret was unable to converse with her during several visits she had with her over the year, including at her birthday party one week after she signed the codicil. Likewise, Margaret’s great-granddaughter, Christine Fox, testified Margaret could neither converse with nor recognize her during the last two years of Margaret’s life. The court could reasonably conclude this testimony indicated Margaret’s ability to make decisions about her property was severely impaired.
¶13 Lyle also argues the circuit court’s conclusion was erroneous because the court incorrectly concluded Lita’s testimony contradicted the Bryses’. When Lita was asked on direct examination whether she explained to her mother what she was signing, she responded that she did. Lita did not say then when she explained the codicil to Margaret, but on cross-examination she clarified it was before the Bryses arrived that day. The Bryses testified Lita did not explain the document when Margaret signed it. The court interpreted Lita’s and the Bryses’ testimony to be contradictory.
¶14 However, the court’s concern was not simply whether Lita in
fact read the codicil to Margaret that day, but whether there was evidence Margaret
knew what was happening when she signed the codicil. Even if Lita read the codicil to Margaret earlier
in the day, it is undisputed no one said anything about what Margaret was
signing when she signed it. The court
pointed out that when Lita gave Margaret the codicil it was open only to the
signature page and there was no discussion about the document. In light of the substantial amount of
testimony that Margaret often appeared unable to comprehend or respond to what
others said to her, the court could reasonably infer the dearth of evidence Margaret
knew what she was signing indicated she lacked the capacity “to comprehend the
nature, the extent, and the state of affairs of [her] property.” See Gittel,
255
¶15 In any event, Lyle failed to file a reply brief refuting Lila’s
argument that the court’s conclusion Margaret lacked testamentary capacity was
not clearly erroneous—or any of Lila’s other arguments. We may therefore deem the matter conceded. See Charolais Breeding Ranches, Ltd. v. FPC
Secs. Corp., 90
By the Court.—Order affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.