Balemian v. Adeian

90 A.2d 766, 80 R.I. 16, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 1, 1952
StatusPublished

This text of 90 A.2d 766 (Balemian v. Adeian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balemian v. Adeian, 90 A.2d 766, 80 R.I. 16, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 4 (R.I. 1952).

Opinion

Flynn, C. J.

This is a petition for permission to file out of time an appeal from a probate decree -allowing the will of Oscar Barsoian, late of the city of Pawtucket, deceased. The relief is sought under general laws 1938, chapter 535, §6, on the ground that petitioner’s failure to take, within the statutory period, an appeal from such decree of the probate court was caused by accident, mistake or unforeseen cause.

It appears without dispute that Oscar Barsoian, the testator, was married twice and had children of both marriages. By his first wife, who is deceased, he had a daughter Lucy Balemian, who is the present petitioner, and also a son who died during World War II. By his second wife Lausean, who before her marriage was a widow with one child and who is a respondent, he had two other children. The testator died November 24, 1950 and his will was not filed for probate until January 30, 1951. Thereafter the petition for probate, which apparently listed the names and addresses of all the heirs including petitioner, was duly advertised in accordance with the law then in effect and was heard on February 28, 1951 when a decree allowing said will was entered by the probate court of the city of Pawtucket.

The petitioner did not file an appeal within the statutory period but now seeks relief substantially on the basis of six facts, all of which are stated in the petition as happening at some time prior to testator’s death. These allegations are generally: (1) that Lausean Barsoian, the testator’s second wife, represented to petitioner that he had no money or assets and that a mortgage on the house was in danger of being foreclosed; (2) that said wife had tried to [18]*18“cheat” petitioner and her husband by having them pay $450 and take over the testator’s life insurance policy which “was worthless”; (3) that the testator’s wife had also displayed hostility to petitioner and her husband when they visited the testator and had made it impossible for them to talk with the testator without her being present; (4) that the wife at no time disclosed the existence of testator’s will to them before the statutory period for appeal had expired; (5) that the first knowledge petitioner had of testator’s possession of any assets or the existence of his will was in April 1951, when she received a communication from the attorney for the executor requesting her to sign a receipt and release upon payment to her of the $1,000 legacy under the will, and also requesting her to sign a quitclaim deed of her interest in the house, all of which happened after the statutory appeal period had expired; and (6) that in the light of after-acquired knowledge it is now claimed that the widow, through fear that the will would be upset because of her undue influence or because of the testator’s incapacity, had concealed the will, had misrepresented the facts concerning the testator’s assets, and had deceived petitioner into believing that her father had died without any assets and without leaving a will. In support thereof the petitioner and her husband Sahag Balemian have filed separate affidavits setting forth in substance and general terms the above summarized facts.

On the other hand the executor, who is the child of Lausean Barsoian by her first marriage, is contesting the petition and in addition to his own affidavit he has filed one by each of the following: the testator’s wife, his two children by the second marriage, his doctor, and his lawyer. These affidavits set forth many facts which either contradict or reasonably explain the allegations relied upon by petitioner. Indeed in certain material particulars they are of such a nature as to submit to verification and to have called for a reply by petitioner, if the stated facts were not correct. However, no affidavit or specific contradiction has [19]*19been made by the petitioner, her husband, or anybody else.

For example, the widow in substance and effect categorically denied any misrepresentation concerning the will, the testator’s assets, the mortgage foreclosure, and the insurance policy as stated in petitioner’s affidavit. She points out that petitioner’s allegation concerning the alleged misrepresentations about the testator’s assets and about the danger of a foreclosure of the mortgage on the house are not fixed as to time but are merely stated as happening at “Some time prior” to the testator’s death; that as a matter of fact they were made some fifteen years previously at a time during the great depression of the 1930’s; that such representations were true at that time, as the testator’s bank account was down to $1 and there was a threatened foreclosure of the mortgage on the house, which was owned from the beginning by her and the testator as tenants in common; and that they were then desperately in need of cash to prevent the loss of the house.

She further explains that the proposed sale of the life insurance policy was made at the same time in order to raise money to prevent the foreclosure; that the offer was made by the testator himself and not by her; that the policy was entrusted to petitioner and her husband so that they might investigate its status and value; that they were unable or unwilling at the time to take it over; and further that the policy was not valueless, as petitioner alleged, but that after she and her husband had refused the testator’s offer the insurance company granted a loan upon said policy to the extent of $200.

The widow further categorically denies any hostility to the children of testator’s first marriage or to the petitioner’s husband. On the contrary she asserted that she actually reared petitioner’s brother for at least thirteen and one-half years from the time of her marriage to the testator; that petitioner and her husband were always welcome and had visited her home on many occasions; that contrary to their statements she never prevented petitioner from talking [20]*20to the testator alone; and that they had many opportunities to be with him even on their more recent visits, because the testator was not confined to his bed and they were left with him frequently when she, the wife, had to go out to the store or for other purposes.

She admitted that she had not expressly disclosed the existence of a will during the testator’s life but explained that she was acting under instructions of the testator not to tell any of the children about it lest differences develop between the families. Moreover it is expressly admitted by petitioner and her husband that neither of them ever asked her or the testator during his life whether there was a will in existence; that she never stated to either of them that there was no will; and that they made no inquiry at the probate court or elsewhere.

Furthermore she asserted that it was a custom of her race to have a family reunion a month from the death of a parent and a similar gathering the following Christmas; that these reunions were held and the petitioner and her husband were expected to attend; that because she was greatly upset at the time of the funeral by both the testator’s death and the critical illness of her son in the hospital, she did not talk to anybody about the will; that she expected to see petitioner at such reunions and to tell her then of the contents of the will; and that petitioner and her husband, though intending to come, at the last minute explained they were unable to attend such reunions solely for reasons connected with their family in New York.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 766, 80 R.I. 16, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balemian-v-adeian-ri-1952.