Estate of Collin

310 P.2d 663, 150 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2229
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1957
DocketCiv. 21955
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 310 P.2d 663 (Estate of Collin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Collin, 310 P.2d 663, 150 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2229 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment by the court, sitting without a jury, admitting to probate the will of decedent dated December 19, 1951, and denying admission to probate of a purported will executed by decedent on October 24, 1952. Respondents Louis E. Swarts and Florence Ryan, as petitioners, filed their petition for the probate of the will of decedent dated December 19, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as the “Ryan will”). In the Ryan will Florence Ryan and Eva Devynck were named devisees and legatees of the decedent’s entire estate. Elvire Popesco filed objections to the above petition, contending that the Ryan will was not the last will of decedent and that Louis Yerneuil had made a later will dated October 24, 1952 (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the “propounded Popesco will”). Thereafter, proponent Lee D. Mathews filed his petition for letters of administration with-the-will-annexed, wherein he propounded for probate the Popesco will dated October 24, 1952, which would have revoked all prior wills and left the entire estate to Elvire Popesco. Florence Ryan filed objections to the petition for probate of the Popesco will propounded by Lee D. Mathews, and a contest thereto, and objections to the petition of Lee D. Mathews to be appointed administrator with-the-will-annexed, and to the admission of the Popesco will.

Elvire Popesco and Lee D. Mathews filed a contest to the Ryan will, the grounds, among others, being that the December 19, 1951, will had been revoked by a will dated October 13, 1952 (hereinafter referred to as the Tambour will), and by the terms of the propounded Popesco will. Elvire Popesco and Lee D. Mathews and Jean Collin Du Boeage filed their *704 answer to the objections filed by respondent Ryan, and their contest to the Ryan will; Florence Ryan and Louis E. Swarts answered the contest filed by Elvir'e Popesco and Lee D. Mathews.

The Societe Des Auteurs and Compositeurs Dramatiques then filed a petition for the probate of a purported will of decedent dated October 27, 1952 (hereinafter referred to as the “Societe will”), to which objections and contest were filed by Florence Ryan. The Societe answered the objections and contest of Florence Ryan, and alleged that the Ryan will had been revoked by the propounded Popesco will, executed October 24, 1952.

After a trial the court determined and found that the decedent was of sound mind when he executed the Ryan will and that such will is the last will of decedent; that the decedent was of unsound mind and lacked testamentary capacity and was suffering from insane delusions and hallucinations from February 2, 1952, until his death on November 3, 1952; further, that the will offered for probate by the appellants dated October 24,1952, and other documents purporting to be wills of the decedent bearing dates respectively, October 4, 1952, October 13, 1952, and October 27, 1952, were all invalid for any purpose for the reasons set forth above. The judgment was in conformity with the findings.

Louis Yerneuil committed suicide on November 3, 1952. He was a successful French playwright who came to the United States just before the Nazi invasion. In 1945, he came to Hollywood where he met Florence Ryan, who was then a secretary to Sol Lesser, a motion picture producer, for whom Louis Yerneuil had contracted to write a screen play. Thereafter a friendship developed between Miss Ryan and Louis Yerneuil.

Florence Ryan testified that she was 55 years of age and worked as a confidential secretary to Sol Lesser for 20 years, from 1925 to 1945, at which latter time she met Louis Yerneuil. She frequently went to dinner with him and when he had a heart attack in September of 1945, she visited him nightly when he was in the hospital. She drove his automobile for him, loaned him a total of $34,750; she loaned him money to settle an attachment which was made for back .taxes owing to the government. He proposed marriage to her. She organized his contracts and copyright records and coached him in English. In 1947, she was expected nightly for dinner at his home on Faring Road. Eva Devynck, Louis *705 Verneuil’s secretary from France, visited with Verneuil at his home during July, 1947, and brought all of his household goods, library files, and manuscripts with her from Paris. Louis Verneuil told her that Eva Devynck had been his secretary since 1930; that she was an intelligent and capable person and most devoted and honest. In 1949, Verneuil told her that he had drawn a will in which he had left everything to her (Miss Ryan). She told him that she thought it unfair to omit Eva Devynck from his will. At Verneuil’s invitation, she moved into the Faring Road home in January, 1950, and she lived there until his death. In 1950, he wrote a successful play, “Affairs of State,” and asked her opinion concerning it during rehearsals at his home. When Verneuil went on the road with the play before it opened in New York, he and she wrote to each other daily. In 1951, she stopped working for Sol Lesser and went to work for Verneuil. She went to Florida with him after he became ill in the fall of 1951. After they returned to Los Angeles, he became ill again in December, and she gave him medication under the supervision of doctors. On February 2, 1952, Verneuil talked to her as if she were a stranger, stating that he was the worst criminal in the world and asking to be turned over to the police. He was completely incoherent. From then on he had delusions and hallucinations about the house having been wired for television to the end that every word spoken would be recorded and every move photographed. He stated, among other things, that there was a television camera placed in his fireplace directly in front of his desk where he worked, and that there were television cameras in his bedroom; that there were shows concerning him going on 24 hours a day all over the United States. While staying in Laguna with her, the decedent said that everybody was laughing at him; that the water sprinklers in the hotel room were microphones to pick up the conversations and that it all had been ordained ahead of time. After February 2,1952, he spoke each day about his being on television, about being ridiculed when people on the street recognized him, saying that all of the taxi drivers, colored chauffeurs, soldiers, sailors and marines in particular, laughed every time he appeared on the screen. He told her that she, too, was a part of the conspiracy to ridicule him and to make fun of him. He told her all of his files had been searched by the F.B.I., and all of the books in his library had been taken out and reprinted over night and then put back *706 in the same bindings, so as to confuse him. He stated that the newspapers delivered to his house were special editions for his sole benefit—that all of his friends were in a conspiracy against him. He stated that his deceased wife was not in fact dead, but she merely pretended to die in 1940, and she was alive and hiding somewhere in France to make him appear ridiculous for believing she was dead. Frequently he shut himself up in a dark room. He threatened suicide many times. On one occasion he indicated the place where he had contemplated suicide by jumping from a tall building; on another occasion he asked if the sharp knives had been hidden so that he could not use them to commit suicide, though in fact the knives had not been hidden.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 P.2d 663, 150 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-collin-calctapp-1957.