Close v. Flanary

339 P.2d 379, 75 Nev. 255, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 138
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1959
DocketNo. 4143
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 339 P.2d 379 (Close v. Flanary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Close v. Flanary, 339 P.2d 379, 75 Nev. 255, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 138 (Neb. 1959).

Opinions

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This is an appeal from an order and judgment dismissing a petition for revocation of probate of the alleged last will of decedent, made at the conclusion of a preliminary trial to determine the status of the petitioner as an interested person. Petitioner, sole beneficiary under an earlier will, which the proponents of the later will contend had been revoked, had objected to the motions for separate trial of this issue of whether petitioner was an interested person and, after the overruling of such objection, demanded a jury trial, which demand was rejected by the court.

Although the appellant’s brief contains 33 assignments of error, each of which she asserts entitles her to a reversal, we need consider only one, as we are satisfied that the court erred in denying trial by jury, under specific statutory provisions, of the issues raised.

[257]*257NRS 137.010 provides for the contesting of a will by “any person interested.” NRS 137.020 provides: “Any issue of fact involving the competency of the decedent to make a last will and testament, the freedom of the decedent at the time of the execution of the will from duress, menace, fraud or undue influence, the due execution and attestation of the will, or any other question substantially affecting the validity of the will, shall be tried by the court unless one of the parties demands a jury. * * *” With reference to a petition, after probate, for the revocation of such probate, NRS 137.080 and 137.100 require that proceedings be had thereunder as in the case of a contest before probate.

Mildred Jane Close, the appellant herein, in her petition for revocation of probate, alleged that under a will of the decedent dated May 4, 1953, and which was duly executed, attested and subscribed according to law, when the testator was of sound and disposing mind, she was the sole beneficiary and was named as executrix; that under the will of May 27, 1955, revocation of whose probate was sought, Raymond S. Flanary, Juanita D. Flanary, his wife, Frances Atkinson, Vern Hursh, Nevada Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Charles Peterson and Julia Erskine were named as the legatees of the estate valued at $130,000, and that Raymond S. Flanary was named as executor; that the will of 1955 was not the last will and testament of the decedent; that the same is invalid; that the decedent was not, at the time of the execution of said 1955 will of sound mind and memory, but was by reason of extreme age and protracted sickness mentally incapacitated; that said will of 1955 was not executed, attested and subscribed in conformity with the requirements of the laws of the State of Nevada; that the signature to said 1955 will is not the signature of the decedent and was not signed by the decedent or by some person in his presence or by his express direction; that the purported signature is a forgery and was forged by the said Raymond S. Flanary; that said will was not attested by at least two competent witnesses subscribing their names thereto in the presence of said decedent; [258]*258that said will was procured by fraud and the undue influence of Raymond S. Flanary; that the decedent at the time was blind and had been blind for approximately 25 years prior to his death; that at the time of the purported execution of the 1955 will, decedent was 83 years of age; that Flanary was the attorney at law for the decedent at the time and bore a confidential and fiduciary relationship and the relationship of attorney and client with him at the time; that said Flanary prepared, typed, wrote and drew the purported will; that he actively participated in its execution, suggested its phraseology and drew the will upon his legal paper bearing his name and address; that under such will he was bequeathed the sum of $10,000 and his wife Juanita D. Flanary the sum of $5,000; that such bequests were unnatural and unreasonable and to which the said legatees had no natural claim, and that they were not the natural objects of the decedent’s bounty; that the entire will comprised four typewritten pages, the purported signature of the testator appearing only on page 2, the remaining pages being taken up with the attestation clauses; that the bequests to Flanary and his wife appear on page 2; that Flanary had substituted said page 2 after the purported execution, attestation and subscription by the subscribing witnesses; that Flanary prepared, drew, signed, and substituted such page 2 subsequently to the purported attestation and subscription by the subscribing witnesses; that the bequests to the other legatees therein named were unnatural, unreasonable, and unjust and that such beneficiaries were not the natural objects of the testator’s bounty and had no natural claim to his estate; that on May 11, 1955, which was 16 days before the execution of the 1955 will, Flanary entered safe deposit box'No. 1808 in the Nevada Bank of Commerce, in Reno, Nevada, which box was in the name of decedent and the appellant Mildred Jane Close, from which he removed the will of 1953 (it appearing later that at such time he was accompanied by the decedent); that Flanary thereafter destroyed the 1953 will but had a copy in his possession (Flanary testified that he [259]*259destroyed it in his office on May 27, 1955 at the direction of the decedent).

The proponents of the will of 1955 admitted many allegations of the petition for revocation of the probate of that will, including the allegations concerning the execution of the 1953 will naming appellant as sole beneficiary. They denied all of the allegations as to lack of mental capacity, fraud, undue influence and forgery and denied the allegations that it was not executed, subscribed and attested in conformity with the law. They admitted the allegations of the testator’s blindness, his age of approximately 83 years, the attorney-client relations between the testator and Flanary, the drafting and typing of the 1955 will by Flanary upon his stationery and the description of the bequests contained in the 1955 will. As affirmative defenses, they alleged that appellant was not an interested person in that the 1953 will had been revoked by being torn up and destroyed, and that appellant was estopped to assert lack of testamentary capacity in the testator.

Both the proponents of the will of 1955 and the absent heirs1 filed motions for a separate trial upon the issue of the status of appellant as an interested party entitling her to contest the validity of the 1955 will. These motions were granted over the appellant’s opposition.

Respondent R. S. Flanary resigned as executor, filed his accounting, and renounced his $10,000 legacy.

Under the issues as developed under this situation, the court, as noted, rejected appellant’s demand for jury trial, tried the preliminary issue of plaintiff’s status as an interested party before itself without a jury and found that on May 27,1955, at Flanary’s office, Flanary, at the testator’s direction, destroyed the will of May 4, 1953, and on the same date decedent executed the 1955 will before the attesting witnesses, and that at the time he was mentally competent and of sound mind and .had the mental ability and capacity to revoke the 1953 will.

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Related

Close v. Flanary
360 P.2d 259 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
339 P.2d 379, 75 Nev. 255, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/close-v-flanary-nev-1959.