IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
January 1994 Term
___________
NO. 21831
___________
LOIS FOY, HERBERT V. JONES, JR. AND
SHIRLEY ALTA JONES,
Petitioners
v.
COUNTY COMMISSION OF BERKELEY COUNTY;
EULA JONES; AND MARIA L. CHILDERS,
IN HER CAPACITY AS FIDUCIARY SUPERVISOR
OF THE COUNTY COMMISSION OF BERKELEY COUNTY,
Respondents
___________________________________________________
Certified Questions from the Circuit Court of Berkeley County
Honorable Christopher C. Wilkes, Judge
Civil Action No. 93-C-31
CERTIFIED QUESTIONS ANSWERED
___________________________________________________
Submitted: January 18, 1994
Filed: March 28, 1994
Robert D. Aitcheson
Charles Town, West Virginia
Attorney for Petitioners
Janet L. Scalia
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
Martinsburg, West Virginia
Attorney for Respondents
JUSTICE McHUGH delivered the Opinion of the Court.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. "'"A statute is presumed to operate prospectively
unless the intent that it shall operate retroactively is clearly
expressed by its terms or is necessarily implied from the language
of the statute." Syllabus Point 3, Shanholtz v. Monongahela Power
Co., [165 W. Va. 305], 270 S.E.2d 178 (1980).' Syllabus Point 2,
State ex rel. Manchin v. Lively, 170 W. Va. 655, 295 S.E.2d 912
(1982)." Syl. pt. 4, Arnold v. Turek, 185 W. Va. 400, 407 S.E.2d
706 (1991).
2. W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [1975], provided, in part that,
"[e]very will made by a man or woman shall be revoked by his or her
marriage, annulment or divorce, except a will which makes provision
therein for such contingency[.]" The amendments to W. Va. Code,
41-1-6 [Supp. 1992], effective after June 5, 1992, provide that,
"[i]f after executing a will the testator is divorced or his
marriage annulled, the divorce or annulment revokes any disposition
or appointment of property made by the will to the former spouse,
. . ., unless the will expressly provides otherwise." The primary
difference between the 1975 version of the statute and the 1992
version of the statute is that the former, with certain exceptions,
essentially revokes the entire will by marriage, divorce or
annulment. The amended version only revokes the disposition of the
property made by the will to the former spouse upon divorce or
annulment. Marriage no longer revokes a will.
3. When a decedent executed a will in 1986, married in
1990, and died in 1992, the will was revoked pursuant to W. Va.
Code, 41-1-6 [1975], which provides that a subsequent marriage
revokes a will. The will was not revived because it was not re-
executed pursuant to W. Va. Code, 41-1-8 [1923], which requires
that a will be re-executed in order for it to be revived.
McHugh, Justice:
This case is before this Court upon the certified
questions of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West Virginia.
The petitioners, Lois Foy, Herbert V. Jones, Jr., and Shirley Alta
Jones are children of Herbert Vauter Jones, Sr., who is now
deceased. The respondents are the County Commission of Berkeley
County, Eula Jones, the widow of the decedent, and Maria L.
Childers, the fiduciary supervisor of the Berkeley County
Commission.
I.
Herbert Vauter Jones, Sr., died on June 10, 1992.
Petitioner Foy was named, in the decedent's will, as the executrix
and a beneficiary.
At the time of the execution of the will, the will being
dated March 24, 1986, the respondent, Eula Jones, resided with
Herbert V. Jones, Sr., but they were not married at that time. In
November, 1986, Mr. Jones, Sr. changed the beneficiary in his
accidental death and dismemberment policy and made Eula Jones the
beneficiary of such policy proceeds. Eula Jones and Herbert V.
Jones, Sr. were later married on September 21, 1990.
II.
Following the death of her father, on June 22, 1992,
petitioner Foy presented the decedent's will, to respondent
Childers, the fiduciary supervisor of Berkeley County, for
admission of the will to probate and qualification as petitioner Foy as executrix. However, respondent Childers refused to admit
the will to probate but did submit the will to the Berkeley County
Commission. Thereafter, on June 23, 1992, petitioner Foy filed a
petition for probate before the county commission. Eula Jones,
assuming the will was void, was permitted by the county commission
to qualify as the administratrix of the decedent's estate.
On October 1, 1992, the Commission held a hearing and
found the will to be void and would not admit the will to probate
on the grounds that the decedent's marriage to Eula Jones revoked
the prior will under the provisions of W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [1975],
in effect on the date of the marriage.
On January 20, 1993, the petitioners filed a petition
before the circuit court asking, in relevant part, that the court
reverse the ruling of the county commission and admit the
decedent's will to probate. The petitioners further requested
declaratory relief by asking the court to find that the provisions
of W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [Supp. 1992],See footnote 1 as amended and effective June
5, 1992, are operative and applicable to the estates of persons
dying after June 5, 1992. On March 8, 1993, a hearing was held and
the circuit court and counsel certified the following two questions
to this Court:
1. Are the provisions of W. Va. Code,
41-1-6, effective June 5, 1992, applicable to all testators who die on or after June 5,
1992?
2. If a married person dies after June
5, 1992, do the provisions of W. Va. Code, 41-
1-6, effective June 5, 1992, operate to revive
his last will and testament executed by him
prior to his marriage and prior to June 5,
1992?
The circuit court answered both questions in the affirmative.
III.
The underlying issue within these two certified questions
is whether the will is valid in light of the decedent's marriage to
Eula Jones and the recent amendments to W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [Supp.
1992].
Prior to June 5, 1992, W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [1975] read as
follows:
Every will made by a man or woman shall
be revoked by his or her marriage, annulment
or divorce, except a will which makes
provision therein for such contingency, or
will which, though not making provision for
such contingency, is made in exercise of a
power of appointment, when the estate thereby
appointed would not, in default of such
appointment, pass to his or her heirs,
personal representative, or next of kin:
Provided, that even when the estate thereby
appointed would, in default of such
appointment, pass to his or her heirs,
personal representative, or next of kin, such
will shall, nevertheless, not be revoked (a)
by such marriage if such marriage is between
the person appointed in the exercise of such
power of appointment and the person exercising
such power of appointment, or (b) by such
annulment or divorce, unless the person
appointed in the exercise of such power of appointment is the person whose marriage to
the person exercising such power of
appointment was terminated by such annulment
or divorce.
(emphasis added).
Following the June 5, 1992, amendments, W. Va. Code, 41-
1-6 [Supp. 1992] read:
If after executing a will the testator is
divorced or his marriage annulled, the divorce
or annulment revokes any disposition or
appointment of property made by the will to
the former spouse, any provision conferring a
general or special power of appointment on the
former spouse, and any nomination of the
former spouse as executor, trustee,
conservator, or guardian, unless the will
expressly provides otherwise. Property
prevented from passing to a former spouse
because of revocation by divorce or annulment
passes as if the former spouse failed to
survive the decedent, and other provisions
conferring some power or office on the former
spouse are interpreted as if the spouse failed
to survive the decedent. Notwithstanding the
provisions of section three [§ 41-3-3],
article three, chapter forty-one of this code,
the share of such spouse shall be distributed
according to the residuary clause of the
decedent's will or according to the statute of
intestate succession for the decedents
property. If provisions are revoked solely by
this section, they are revived by testator's
remarriage to the former spouse. For purposes
of this section, divorce or annulment means
any divorce or annulment which would exclude
the spouse as a surviving spouse. A decree of
separation which does not terminate the status
of husband and wife is not a divorce for
purposes of this section. No change of
circumstances other than as described in this
section revokes a will.
(emphasis added).
The relevant differences between the old and new versions
of the statute as they relate to the facts in this case are as
follows. The former version of the statute provided that if a
person made a will and then subsequently married, the marriage
would revoke the will entirely unless the testator made a provision
regarding marriage. The amended version of the statute has
abolished the rule that a subsequent marriage revokes a will. The
statute now provides that upon the divorce or annulment of the
testator's marriage, the testator's will is revoked with regard to
the former spouse unless the will provides otherwise. It is the
former version of the statute that is applicable to this case
because the focus is on when the testator married rather than when
the testator died. Because if there is a marriage under the former
version of the statute, then the will is revoked and the will
cannot be revived without re-execution of the same. See W. Va.
Code, 41-1-8 [1923].
A.
The first certified question simply asks whether the
provisions of W. Va. Code, 41-1-6, effective after June 5, 1992,
are applicable to all testators who die on or after June 5, 1992.
With respect to this first certified question, the parties agree
with the circuit court's conclusion that the amendments to W. Va.
Code, 41-1-6 [Supp. 1992] should be applied prospectively.
There is a presumption of prospective application of
statutes unless the intent for retroactive application is expressed within the statute. We have recently reiterated this principle in
syllabus point 4 of Arnold v. Turek, 185 W. Va. 400, 407 S.E.2d 706
(1991), in which we held:
'"A statute is presumed to operate
prospectively unless the intent that it shall
operate retroactively is clearly expressed by
its terms or is necessarily implied from the
language of the statute." Syllabus Point 3,
Shanholtz v. Monongahela Power Co., [165 W.
Va. 305], 270 S.E.2d 178 (1980).' Syllabus
Point 2, State ex rel. Manchin v. Lively, 170
W. Va. 655, 295 S.E.2d 912 (1982).
The statute was amended again in 1993. The most relevant
amendment, in 1993, was the addition of subsection (b) which
clarified when this section applied to all divorces, annulments or
remarriages: "This section applies to all divorces annulments or
remarriages which become effective after the fifth day of June, one
thousand nine hundred ninety-two." W. Va. Code, 41-1-6(b) [Supp.
1993]. (emphasis added).
The circuit court correctly answered the first certified
question. However, the underlying issue in this question with
respect to this case concerns the difference between the former
version and the amended version of the statute.See footnote 2 Accordingly,
W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [1975], provided, in part that, "[e]very will made by a man or woman shall be revoked by his or her marriage,
annulment or divorce, except a will which makes provision therein
for such contingency[.]" The amendments to W. Va. Code, 41-1-6
[Supp. 1992], effective after June 5, 1992, provide that, "[i]f
after executing a will the testator is divorced or his marriage
annulled, the divorce or annulment revokes any disposition or
appointment of property made by the will to the former spouse,
. . ., unless the will expressly provides otherwise." As noted
above, the primary difference between the 1975 version of the
statute and the 1992 version of the statute is that the former,
with certain exceptions, essentially revokes the entire will by
marriage, divorce or annulment. The amended version only revokes
the disposition of the property made by the will to the former
spouse upon divorce or annulment. Marriage no longer revokes a
will.
B.
The second certified question poses the query that if a
married person dies after June 5, 1992, do the provisions of W. Va.
Code, 41-1-6 [Supp. 1992] operate to revive one's last will and
testament executed by him prior to his marriage and prior to June
5, 1992. The circuit court incorrectly answered the second
certified question. It is this question that gives rise to the
dispute between the parties.
The petitioners' primary contention is that even though,
on June 5, 1992, and prior thereto, W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [Supp. 1992], provided that a subsequent marriage revoked a will, the
enactment of the 1992 amendments to this statute eliminates a
subsequent marriage as a circumstance that revokes a will, and
thus, in effect the decedent's will has been revived.
The petitioners conclude that upon the generally
recognized principles of the laws in West Virginia, the will must
be considered valid and thus be admitted to probate. In support of
this conclusion, the petitioners refer to the well-established
proposition enunciated by this Court:
'"Wherever possible to bring into
operation a testator's intention, a court will
give such construction to a will as to bring
into effect every word or part thereof and
such construction will be made as to avoid the
creation of intestacy." In Re: Conley, 122
W. Va. 599, 562 [, 12 S.E.2d 49, 51 (1940)].'
Syl. pt. 3, Rastle v. Gamsjager, 151 W. Va.
499, 153 S.E.2d 403 (1967).
Syl. pt. 3, Matheny v. Matheny, 182 W. Va. 790, 392 S.E.2d 230
(1990).
Furthermore, the petitioners note that wills are
executory instruments, meaning the rights and benefits conferred
thereunder do not become effective until the testator dies. See
W. Va. Code, 41-3-1 [1923]. The petitioners therefore submit that
the legal status of the will cannot be determined until the death
of the testator when the will becomes effective.
Because, as the petitioners maintain, the date of death
serves as the cornerstone in determining when certain rights vest,
the decedent's will was in essence revived by the enactment of the new statute eliminating subsequent marriage as a circumstance
revoking a will. More simply, the enactments to the statute in
question became effective after June 5, 1992; and, this being the
controlling law on the date of the decedent's death, makes the will
valid. Therefore, the petitioners surmise that the date of death
must control because this is when the substantive rights conferred
upon one by a will become vested.
The respondents contend that the real issue is the
existence of the will and not the construction of the will as the
petitioners argue. The respondents argue that there is no will
because it was revoked upon the decedent's marriage in 1990. As
noted by the respondents, W. Va. Code, 41-1-8 [1923] provides:
No will or codicil, or any part thereof,
which shall be in any manner revoked, shall,
after being revoked, be revived otherwise than
by the re-execution thereof, or by a codicil
executed in the manner hereinbefore required,
and the [sic] only to the extent to which an
intention to re-revive the same is shown.
The decedent, as asserted by the respondents, did not re-execute
the will, nor did he execute a codicil as required by this Code
section. Therefore, there was no will in existence at the time of
the decedent's death making construction of the will impossible.
The circuit court, as suggested by the respondents,
misinterpreted the amended version of W. Va. Code, 41-1-6 [Supp.
1992], to read that a previously revoked will can be automatically
revived. The respondents submit that the language in the statute
is clear, there is no proviso for the automatic revival of the will, therefore, there is no basis for the construction of the
statute:
'When a statute is clear and unambiguous
and the legislative intent is plain the
statute should not be interpreted by the
courts, and in such case it is the duty of the
courts not to construe but to apply the
statute.' Syl. Pt. 1, Cummins v. State
Workmen's Compensation Comm'r, 152 W. Va. 781,
166 S.E.2d 562 (1969).
Syl. pt. 3, Kosegi v. Pugliese, 185 W. Va. 384, 407 S.E.2d 388
(1991). See also State v. Boatright, 184 W. Va. 27, 399 S.E.2d 57
(1990).
This Court has reviewed the existing case law of other
jurisdictions regarding this issue and the conclusion we have
reached in this case is supported by the following decisions: In
Re Berger's Estate, 243 P. 862 (Cal. 1926); In Re Estate of
Hemmingsen, 333 N.W.2d 880 (Minn. 1983); In Re Will of Mitchell,
203 S.E.2d 48 (N.C. 1974); and, Wilson v. Francis, 155 S.E.2d 49
(Va. 1967).
The leading case on this issue is Berger, supra. In that
case, in 1911, an unmarried woman executed her will. The law in
California at the time provided that a marriage revoked a woman's
will and it could not be revived by her husband's death. In 1913,
the testatrix married H. L. Boyle whom she later divorced. In
1918, the testatrix married J. B. Berger. In 1919, the law was
amended to provide that if after making the will the testatrix
should marry and the husband survives her the will was revoked unless the husband is provided for or an intention to disinherit
him was so stated. Subsequently, Mr. Berger died in 1923, and the
testatrix died in 1924. The lower court admitted the will to
probate. On appeal, the question was whether the will was
completely revoked by the testatrix's marriage to Mr. Boyle in
1913, or whether the will was valid and governed by the amended
law, the law in force at the time of her death. The California
Supreme Court denied probate and recognized that:
Revocation being a 'thing done and complete'
is not in its nature ambulatory. The rules of
law applicable to the reviving of wills
revoked by the act of the makers are equally
applicable to the reviving of wills revoked by
act of the law, e.g., the effect of marriage;
for in either case the will, being revoked, is
of no effect until new life is given to it.
Sawyer v. Sawyer, 52 N.C. 134.
Id. at 865.
The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia faced this issue
for the first time in Wilson v. Francis, supra. In Wilson, that
court was presented with the question as to whether a will executed
by an unmarried woman was revoked by former Virginia Code, § 64-58See footnote 3 because of subsequent marriage, even though that section was
repealed prior to her death. The court therein looked to Berger
and noted that regardless of the fact that a will is ambulatory and
speaks as of the maker's death, the General Assembly is not
precluded from enacting laws which can revoke and declare a nullity
of an existing will upon the occurrence of a specified event such
as marriage. As the court continued to note, after such a
revocation, unless the will is revived in a manner prescribed by
law, the will never speaks. The court ultimately held that the law
as it stood at the time of the testatrix's marriage controls the
effect of marriage upon the validity of her will and not the law at
the time of her death.
The Berger case also served as the supporting authority
for a case of first impression for the Supreme Court of North
Carolina in Mitchell, supra. In that case, the law in North
Carolina, from 1845, to 1967, provided that upon the marriage of
any person his or her will was revoked. This law was in effect at
the time the testator executed his will and on the date of his
subsequent marriage. This particular law was later repealed and
rewritten, in 1967, to read, in relevant part, that a will was no
longer revoked by a subsequent marriage of the maker. The testator
died in 1972. The lower court denied probate of the will. The question presented on appeal was whether the amended law applied
retroactively to save a will from revocation that was made under
the old law. The North Carolina Supreme Court held that:
[A]t the time of [the testator's] marriage in
November 1963 his will was revoked by
operation of law, and it could not be revived
'otherwise than by a re-execution thereof, or
by the execution of another will in which the
revoked will or part thereof is incorporated
by reference.' . . . After his marriage [the
testator] never attempted to revive his
revoked will in any manner whatever. . . .
Marriage had revoked the will as completely as
if it had been physically destroyed. Thus, at
the time of his death on 18 July 1972 [the
testator] had no will and, as an intestate,
[the amended law] had no application to him.
Had his marriage occurred after [October 1,
1967, the date the law was amended] it would
not have revoked his will but . . . [his]
surviving spouse, could have dissented in the
same manner as if the will had been made
subsequent to the marriage.
Id. at 49-50. See also In Re Estate of Ralston, 674 P.2d 1001,
1003 (Colo. Ct. App. 1983) ("[W]e do not agree with petitioners'
contention that the effectiveness of revocation is dependent on the
law in force at the time of the testator's death (citations
omitted). . . . The statute in effect at the time of [the
testator's] marriage provides that a testator's subsequent marriage
revokes any prior will, unless the will expressly provides
otherwise. . . . [the testator's] will was revoked instantly upon
his marriage. . . .")
Upon facts and law analogous to the facts and law in the
above cases, we are of the opinion that the decedent's marriage to Eula Jones in September of 1990, revoked the decedent's will,
leaving the decedent to die intestate.
When a decedent executed a will in 1986, married in 1990,
and died in 1992, the will was revoked pursuant to W. Va. Code, 41-
1-6 [1975], which provides that a subsequent marriage revokes a
will. The will was not revived because it was not re-executed
pursuant to W. Va. Code, 41-1-8 [1923], which requires that a will
be re-executed in order for it to be revived.
These certified questions having been answered, this case
is dismissed from the docket of this Court and remanded to the
Circuit Court of Berkeley County.
Certified questions answered.
Footnote: 1 The statute was amended again in 1993, however, these
latest amendments do not affect the outcome of this case.
Footnote: 2 As we have previously maintained regarding certified
questions, "we retain some flexibility in determining how and to
what extent [a certified question from a circuit court to us] will
be answered." City of Fairmont v. Retail Wholesale & Department
Store Union, 166 W. Va. 1, 3-4, 283 S.E.2d 589, 590 (1980), citing
West Virginia Water Service Co. v. Cunningham, 143 W. Va. 1, 98
S.E.2d 891 (1957). See also Kincaid v. Mangum, 189 W. Va. 404, 432
S.E.2d 74 (1993); W. Va. Code, 58-5-2 [1967].
Footnote: 3 In Wilson, the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals noted
that the Virginia Code 1950, § 64-58 (§ 5232, Code 1919), which was
in effect at the time of the testatrix's marriage provided:
'Every will made by a man or woman shall
be revoked by his or her marriage, except a
will made in exercise of a power of
appointment, when the estate thereby appointed
would not, in default of such appointment,
pass to his or her heir, personal
representative or next of kin.'
Wilson, supra at 49. This section was subsequently repealed in
1956.