Master Montana's high court held that Charles Kuralt's handwritten hospital letter operated as a valid holographic codicil devising his remaining Montana property to his longtime companion. with this comprehensive case brief.
Estate of Kuralt is a leading case on holographic wills and codicils under the Uniform Probate Code (UPC) framework. The Montana Supreme Court confronted whether a widely publicized handwritten hospital letter from journalist Charles Kuralt—stating that his companion should "inherit the rest of the place in MT"—demonstrated sufficient testamentary intent to function as a codicil that altered his formal will. The case thus squarely presented the tension between strict compliance with will-execution formalities and the UPC's more flexible approach that permits holographic instruments and extrinsic evidence to establish testamentary intent.
For students of Wills and Trusts, the decision is significant on multiple fronts: it illustrates the evidentiary role of surrounding circumstances to prove testamentary intent; it underscores how informal writings, including letters, can carry dispositive effect; it explores the distinction between an intent to make a will in the future and a present intent that a document operate as a testamentary disposition; and it highlights practical pitfalls when a testator pursues parallel inter vivos conveyances while relying on last-minute handwritten directions. The case also demonstrates how a codicil can carve out specific property from a prior formal will's residuary scheme.
In re Estate of Kuralt, 2000 MT 359, 303 Mont. 335, 15 P.3d 931 (Mont. 2000)
Charles Kuralt, the prominent journalist and longtime host of CBS's "Sunday Morning," maintained a decades-long, private relationship with Patricia Shannon while married to Suzanne "Petie" Kuralt. Over the years Kuralt purchased and improved rural property in Montana along the Big Hole River near Twin Bridges. He had previously conveyed some portions of that Montana property to Shannon, and in the spring and early summer of 1997 he was taking steps to transfer the remainder to her by deed. In June 1997, Kuralt fell gravely ill and was hospitalized in New York. From the hospital he wrote a handwritten letter to Shannon stating, in substance, that if they could not complete the transfer by deed, he would have a lawyer come to the hospital "to be sure you inherit the rest of the place in MT," signing the note "Love, C." Kuralt died days later on June 28, 1997. His 1994 formal will largely benefited his wife and family and did not specifically devise the remaining Montana acreage to Shannon. Shannon petitioned to probate the hospital letter as a holographic codicil to Kuralt's will, seeking to devise to her the remaining Montana parcels not already deeded. The district court proceedings produced two appellate trips: first, the Montana Supreme Court reversed summary judgment, holding there was a triable issue whether the letter reflected testamentary intent; on remand, after a bench trial, the district court found the letter to be a valid holographic codicil that effectively devised the remaining Montana property to Shannon. The estate again appealed.
Does a handwritten letter from a hospitalized testator, stating that his companion should "inherit the rest of the place in Montana" if deeds could not be completed, satisfy Montana's UPC-based requirements for a holographic codicil by demonstrating present testamentary intent to alter his prior will?
Under Montana's adoption of the Uniform Probate Code, a document may be admitted as a holographic will or codicil if (1) the signature and material portions are in the testator's handwriting and (2) the document reflects testamentary intent. Extrinsic evidence is admissible to establish testamentary intent and to resolve ambiguities, including identification of property and the testator's plan. Testamentary intent must be present (that the document is to operate to dispose of property at death), not merely an expression of intent to make a will in the future. A codicil modifies a prior valid will to the extent of any inconsistency.
Yes. The handwritten hospital letter was a valid holographic codicil. It was wholly in Kuralt's handwriting, signed by him, and—considering its language and the surrounding circumstances—manifested present testamentary intent to devise the remaining Montana property to Patricia Shannon if the planned inter vivos deeds were not completed.
The court first confirmed that Montana's UPC provisions recognize holographic instruments when the signature and material provisions are in the testator's handwriting, without witnesses, and allow consideration of extrinsic evidence to prove testamentary intent. The letter was handwritten and signed "Love, C," which the court held sufficed as a signature because the UPC does not require a formal or full signature so long as the mark is intended to authenticate the writing. The court next examined whether the letter demonstrated testamentary intent or merely an intent to arrange future legal acts. Although the letter referenced bringing a lawyer to the hospital, it also employed unequivocally testamentary language—"inherit the rest of the place in MT"—and was written while Kuralt was gravely ill, in close temporal proximity to his death. The court considered extensive extrinsic evidence: Kuralt's longstanding plan to transfer the Montana property to Shannon; prior deeds already made to her; his concrete efforts, immediately before hospitalization, to complete further conveyances; and the specificity and consistency of the Montana property as the subject of his intent. In context, the court found that the letter was not a mere statement of future intent but a present direction that, if the deeds failed, Shannon was to receive the remaining Montana property upon his death. The court rejected the argument that conditional phrasing (e.g., "if it comes to that") negated testamentary character; rather, such phrasing reflected the anticipated contingency of death or the failure of the deeds, both consistent with a testamentary disposition. The phrase "the rest of the place in MT" was sufficiently definite when read with extrinsic evidence identifying the parcels Kuralt still owned. Finally, the court noted its earlier decision (in a prior appeal) that the question of testamentary intent was triable, and it found no clear error in the district court's post-trial factual finding that the letter functioned as a codicil. Accordingly, the judgment awarding the remaining Montana property to Shannon was affirmed.
Estate of Kuralt is a seminal illustration of the UPC's flexible approach to will formalities. It shows how a handwritten letter can operate as a codicil when coupled with clear testamentary language and corroborating circumstances, and it underscores the broad admissibility of extrinsic evidence to establish intent and clarify property references in holographic instruments. For law students, the case clarifies the difference between a present testamentary act and a mere promise to execute a will in the future, and it demonstrates how a codicil can partially revoke or modify a prior formal will's dispositions. It also serves as a cautionary tale: informal end-of-life communications can have dispositive legal effect, for better or worse, and careful estate planning should avoid ambiguity when parallel inter vivos transfers are in motion.
A codicil is a testamentary instrument that modifies an existing will. Kuralt already had a valid 1994 will; the letter addressed only a specific subject—the remaining Montana property—and was intended to alter the prior scheme as to that property. Under the UPC, a holographic codicil can validly change a prior will without republishing an entire new will.
No. Under Montana's UPC-based rules, a holographic will or codicil does not require witnesses if the signature and material provisions are in the testator's handwriting. The court found both requirements satisfied, and it accepted "Love, C" as a sufficient signature.
The court read the phrase in context. Kuralt was gravely ill and had been actively transferring property by deed; the letter's contingency referenced the possibility that deeds would not be completed or that he might not recover. The operative term "inherit" conveyed a present testamentary direction, not merely a plan to consult a lawyer later.
Yes. While the phrase is informal, the UPC allows extrinsic evidence to clarify ambiguities. The record showed which Montana parcels Kuralt still owned and which he had already conveyed to Shannon, permitting the court to determine with reasonable certainty the property covered by the codicil.
Not necessarily. Some jurisdictions require strict adherence to formalities and may not admit holographic instruments or extrinsic evidence as liberally. The flexible UPC approach adopted in Montana was pivotal; in a strict jurisdiction, the same letter might be deemed an unenforceable expression of future intent.
Estate of Kuralt stands as a powerful example of how courts applying the UPC respect the substance of a testator's intent over strict formalities. Kuralt's handwritten hospital note, authenticated by his handwriting and signature and supported by surrounding circumstances, was enough to operate as a codicil that carved out the Montana property from his earlier formal will's plan.
For practitioners and students, the case underscores both the utility and the risks of informal testamentary communications. When intent is clear and corroborated, a holographic writing can control valuable assets. But Kuralt also teaches that clearer drafting and timely execution of formal instruments would have spared his estate protracted litigation and public controversy.
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