Eder v. Methodist Episcopal Church Ass'n

29 P.2d 631, 94 Colo. 173
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1934
DocketNo. 12,770.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 631 (Eder v. Methodist Episcopal Church Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eder v. Methodist Episcopal Church Ass'n, 29 P.2d 631, 94 Colo. 173 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hilliard

delivered the opinion of the court.

Martin Eder, for many years and at the time of his death a resident of Otero county, died September 5,1928. September 27, 1928, H. W. Fox was appointed administrator of Eder’s estate, apparently on theory of intestacy. April 8, 1929, three of the individual defendants in error, averring that they were the duly authorized representatives of the several churches, also defendants in error, filed a petition seeking the admission to probate, as a lost will, of an instrument set forth in full in the petition, alleged to have been made and published by Eder as his last will and testament January 27, 1919, and witnesesd by Walter M. Berry and Ambrose B. Wallis. The petition avers that Eder had no known heirs, that diligent search for the original of his will failed to disclose its whereabouts, that it “had been in *176 advertently, by tbe custodian thereof, lost or mislaid,” and prays that the administrator Pox be granted letters of administration with the will annexed. A motion to make the petition more specific, among other things, by setting forth who was the custodian said to have lost or mislaid the will, was denied.

Error is assigned to the overruling of the motion to make more specific, to the admission of the testimony of several witnesses, and to the admission to probate of the will as a lost will. The assignments are voluminous, but generally are to be grouped as outlined above. Those we have not discussed are to be considered as without merit or as unnecessary to a decision.

Several provisions of the statutes with respect to wills and to the competency of witnesses are involved., These are sections 5204, 5205 and 6556, C. L. ’21. So far as pertinent to this inquiry they read as follows: 5204, amended, Session Laws 1923, p. 710. “If, upon the hearing of such proof, it shall satisfactorily appear by the testimony of two or more of the subscribing witnesses to such will that said will was executed, declared and attested as provided in section 13 hereof, and that they believe the testator to have been of sound mind and memory at the time the same was executed, declared and attested, the court may admit the same to probate and record; Provided, That no proof of fraud, compulsion or other improper conduct be exhibited, which, in the opinion of the court, shall be deemed sufficient to invalidate or destroy the same, and every will, when thus proven and recorded by the clerk of the county court in a book to be provided by him for that purpose shall be good and available in law, for the granting, conveying and assuring the lands, tenements and hereditaments, annuities, rents, goods and chattels therein and thereby given, granted, devised and bequeathed.” 5205. “Whenever any will shall have been lost or destroyed, and the fact of the execution thereof can be established, as herein provided, and the contents thereof are likewise shown *177 by the testimony of two or more witnesses, the county court may admit the same to probate and record, as in other cases; Provided, That in every case the order admitting such will to probate shall set forth the contents of the will at length, and the names of the witnesses by whom the same was proven, and such order shall be recorded in the record of wills; and, Provided, further, That no will shall be admitted to probate upon proof of the contents thereof unless it shall be proven that the same was in existence at the time of the death of the testator.” 6556. “That no party to any civil action, suit or proceeding, or person directly interested in the event thereof, shall be allowed to testify therein, of his own motion, or in his own behalf, by virtue of the foregoing section, when any adverse party sues or defends as the trustee or conservator of an idiot, lunatic or distracted person, or as the executor or administrator, heir, legatee or devisee of any deceased person, or as guardian or trustee of any such heir, legatee or devisee; unless when called as a witness by such adverse party so suing or defending and also, except in the following cases, namely:

“First- — In any such action, suit or proceeding, a party or interested person may testify to facts occurring after the death of such deceased person.”

“Sixth — -In any such action, suit or proceeding, any adverse party or parties in interest may testify as to any conversation or admission, or as to all matters and things connected with the subject matter of said action, suit or proceeding, and which conversation and admission and matters and things aforesaid, occurred before the death and in the presence of such deceased and also in the presence of any member of the family of such deceased person over the age of sixteen years, or in the presence of any heir, legatee or devisee of such deceased person over the age of sixteen years; Provided, however, That such member of the family, heir, legatee or devisee as the case may be, is present at the hearing of said *178 action, suit or proceeding, or whose testimony is or may be procurable at such trial.”

While no provision is made in the statutes as to the manner in which letters testamentary or of administration with the will annexed shall be sought, it has been the practice to present a petition setting forth facts, which, if established, will justify admission of the will to probate. On the part of those desiring to contest the validity of a will, the statute (§5211, C. L. ’21) provides that "a caveat or objections, in writing*,” shall be filed, "which objections shall be subject to demurrer for insufficiency or motion to make more specific, definite or certain, and to amendment and answer as a complaint and answer in civil cases.” In this proceeding a petition substantially in the usual form, varied to meet the situation presented by a lost will, was filed. A caveat as contemplated by the statute was filed, but included in it was an answer to the petition for probate. No answer to the caveat appears in the record. The parties, without objection, proceeded to trial upon the issues so made up, it apparently being considered that the allegations of the caveat were to be taken as denied. This departure from the procedure prescribed by the statute is not to be commended, and since a new trial may be had the pleadings should be made up as the legislature has commanded. The issues are upon the caveat and the answer thereto, and it follows therefore that it was proper to deny the motion to make the petition for probate more specific. The only office of the petition was to bring* the alleged will to the attention of the court to the end that citation to attend the probate thereof might issue and, if admitted, that letters be granted. The confusion that seems to attend the record is largely obviated if the nature of the proceedings is observed in light of the statutes. The petition for probate brought the will before the court, and the burden was upon the proponents to establish the facts required to be established if the will were to be admitted. Upon the caveat, however, the burden must *179 be sustained by tbe objectors. In tbe case at bar tbe record discloses that there was actually no hearing upon the caveat.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 631, 94 Colo. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eder-v-methodist-episcopal-church-assn-colo-1934.