Ellis v. Colorado National Bank

10 P.2d 336, 90 Colo. 489
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 4, 1932
DocketNo. 12,824.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 336 (Ellis v. Colorado National Bank) 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
Ellis v. Colorado National Bank, 10 P.2d 336, 90 Colo. 489 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hilliard

delivered the opinion of the court.

November 6, 1922, Ivy May Ellis, plaintiff’s wife, made her will, devising and bequeathing her entire estate *490 in trust, the income therefrom to he paid one-half to her husband and one-half to their three minor daughters, who are among the defendants here; William A. McKinlay, a brother-in-law of Mrs. Ellis, and the Colorado National Bank were named executors and testamentary trustees; October 9, 1923, Mrs. Ellis died; November 2, 1923, her will was presented for probate and November 20, 1923, it was duly admitted and the executors qualified; December 8, 1924, the estate was closed, the executors discharged, and the assets taken over by them as testamentary trustees; March 30, 1925, William A. Mc-Kinlay died, and since the bank has been sole trustee; October, 1926, the plaintiff remarried; and March 24, 1927, this action was begun. It has been before us twice on procedural questions. Ellis v. Bank, 84 Colo. 266, 269 Pac. 997; Ellis v. Bank, 86 Colo. 391, 282 Pac. 255. On the first occasion we determined that plaintiff had pleaded but one cause of action in his complaint and held that the sum of the allegations was that “through conspiracy, and actual or constructive fraud,” the defendants had despoiled the plaintiff, while insane, of his property. In exposition of this view, Mr. Justice Burke, speaking for the court, analyzed the complaint, and such analysis became fair notice not only as to what defendants would be expected to meet, but of the proof that would be required on plaintiff’s part. Defendants made denial and the matter came on for trial. At the close of plaintiff’s case in chief defendants moved to dismiss, or for a non-suit, on the ground, generally, that plaintiff had failed to prove the material allegations of his complaint. The motion was granted and judgment given against plaintiff.

For understanding of the complaint we quote from Ellis v. Bank, 84 Colo. 266, 271: “'Mrs. Ellis illegally took over the property and business of her insane husband; Mr. McKinlay was a party to that wrong' and guided her to Bancroft who, acting for the bank, drew a will disposing of it; Mr. McKinlay and the bank became and acted as executors and trustees under that testa *491 ment; Bancroft and Mande Keller witnessed the will'and helped secure its probate; that probate was procured and the estate settled and disposed of by all these people without notice to plaintiff and without his consent or appearance; the bank and McKinlay paid $2,900 out of that estate, of which amount $2,000 was divided! equally between themselves; Mrs. McKinlay took and still holds her husband’s share of the last named amount; Mr. Mc-Kinlay and the bank, for a mere nominal consideration, conveyed one of the plaintiff’s ranches to Maude Keller who still holds it; Mr. McKinlay procured from plaintiff the deed to the Steamboat Springs home which the grantee still holds and Mrs. McKinlay and Maude Keller moved into the home, took charge of it and the minors, and ousted plaintiff. All these acts were done by all these persons with full knowledge of plaintiff’s insanity, of the method by which his property was taken from him, of its disposition by will as the property of another, and its distribution through an illegal probate and settlement ; and each act was done by each with the consent of the others and with their assistance, so far as the same was necessary to consummate it. ’ ’

These are serious allegations. They charge the several defendants, either to have actively cooperated in an original scheme to defraud an insane man of his property, or with guilty knowledge of what had gone before, and in furtherance of their evil purpose, to have contributed thereto, and together effected its consummation; When the case came on to be tried the trial court, on consideration of the evidence, concluded that the allegations of the complaint had not been proved. We have examined the record and can not doubt the soundness of that conclusion.

There is no evidence that at the time Bancroft drew Mrs. Ellis’ will he had been told, otherwise knew or should have suspected she was not the owner of all the estate of which she was desirous of making- testamentary disposition, if indeed she was not such owner. It does *492 not appear that Mrs. Ellis told him the source of her titles, and we know of no rule making it incumbent on one who drafts a will in such circumstances to make inquiry concerning the prospective testatrix’s ownership. Nor is there evidence as to any knowledge on Bancroft’s part that Ellis was not mentally sound. The evidence is undisputed that Bancroft had never known or heard of Mrs. Ellis until he drew her will, and it does not appear that he ever saw or had communication with her after he drew the will. The first time he saw Ellis was when he went to Steamboat Springs to present Mrs. Ellis’ will for probate and he testified that he regarded him then and thereafter as mentally responsible. It does appear that pursuant to Mrs. Ellis’ directions, which included naming McKinlay and the Colorado National Bank as executors and testamentary trustees, Bancroft drew the will mentioned in the record, was one of three witnesses to its execution and so testified. His conduct as attorney for the estate proceeded in course and his acts, and those of the executors as well, met with the approval of the county court. The formal closing of the estate proper and the turning over of the assets to the testamentary trustees and the redocketing thereof as a trust estate, were also approved by that court. The basis of the claim against the bank is grounded solely on what it was alleged Bancroft, then and now its trust officer, knew or had done. It is clear from the record that Bancroft had no part in, or knowledge of, any wrongdoing in the premises, if any there was, nor had the bank, through Bancroft or otherwise.

The record does not show that McKinlay had anything whatever to do with plaintiff’s property or affairs, before, during or after the time of plaintiff’s illness, or that he conducted Mrs. Ellis to Bancroft’s office, advised her to go or had knowledge of the fact that she did go. He was named in Mrs. Ellis’ will as one of the executors and testamentary trustees and acted as such until his death, and as one of the executors had part in expending for *493 Mrs. Ellis’ estate the sum mentioned in the complaint, $2,900, $900 of which was for inheritance tax and other usual cost items, and $2,000 as executors’ fees, one-half of which he received. All of these expenditures had the approval of the probate court. It does not appear that in reference to anything in the premises there was concert of action on the part of McKinlay and Bancroft except in orderly probate court proceedings, of which, as such, no criticism is suggested as to a single item.

There is no showing that McKinlay procured from plaintiff a conveyance of the so-called Steamboat Springs property. A deed was given by plaintiff to the bank and McKinlay, as trustees of Mrs. Ellis ’ estate, but why he executed it rests in surmise. The transfer simply increased the trust estate to the extent of the property conveyed, the use and income of which plaintiff and his children shared.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 336, 90 Colo. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-colorado-national-bank-colo-1932.