Estate of Rickey

222 P.2d 628, 222 P. 628, 64 Cal. App. 733, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4574.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 628 (Estate of Rickey) 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 Rickey, 222 P.2d 628, 222 P. 628, 64 Cal. App. 733, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 250 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This appeal is by certain heirs at law of Thomas B. Rickey from a judgment of nonsuit in an action in which they sought the revocation of an order admitting to probate a certain instrument as the will of Thomas B. Rickey, deceased.

*735 Thomas B. Rickey died on January 11, 1920, and an instrument in writing was admitted to probate as his will by the superior court of the county of Alameda, state of California, on January 27, 1920. By this instrument the appellants and contestants were left small legacies with the statement that the testator had made gifts to them at different times, a sister of the testator was given $100 a month for the remainder of her life, together with such additional sums as might be necessary for unusual expenses, such as illness, etc., the wife and youngest daughter of the testator, the proponents of the will, were given $5,000 each and the income from the bulk of the estate was to be enjoyed by the wife and said youngest daughter of the testator during their joint lives, said youngest daughter taking the residuum of the estate after her mother’s death. By the will, the wife and youngest daughter were named as executrices to serve without bond, and they were duly appointed and thereafter qualified and were the acting executrices of the will at the time of the trial.

Within the statutory period the appellants Bertha Levina Scott, a daughter of the testator by his first wife, and Charles Treadwell Rickey and Jeannette Rickey, children of a deceased son of said testator by his first wife, severally, filed petitions contesting the validity of said instrument and praying for the revocation of its probate. The residuary beneficiaries, individually and as executrices, severally, answered each of the petitions. The contests were consolidated. A jury was called in an advisory capacity by the court, but after the evidence was presented the trial court refused to submit the case to the jury but granted the motion of the proponents of the will for an order of nonsuit against the contestants.

The petitions are lengthy, the allegations including recitals of incidents in the personal history of the testator occurring during a period of nearly thirty years. A detailed statement of these matters does not seem necessary and we shall merely state the general issues as they are concisely outlined by the appellants in their brief, to wit: Was the paper writing probated executed by Thomas B. Rickey as his will! Was the signature to said paper writing procured by fraud exercised and practiced upon said T. B. Rickey by the proponents of the will? Was the signature *736 to said paper writing procured by the undue influence of said proponents or cither of them?

It is, of course, beyond question that if there is evidence in the record, which standing alone or coupled with testimony erroneously excluded, or admitted and subsequently erroneously stricken out, sufficient to sustain a possible verdict that the will should be set aside on any of the grounds alleged in any of the petitions for revocation of probate, the judgment upon the order granting the non-suit must be set aside.

The trial of the ease extended over a period of many days, sharp legal contests occurring over the admission of evidence and much of the evidence admitted was subsequently stricken out upon motions of the proponents of the will. The reporter’s transcript includes over 2,500 pages.

The appellants have printed in their brief the testimony upon which they rely and have included therein not only the testimony admitted by the trial court, but also the testimony which was stricken out upon motion. The rulings upon these motions present many intricate questions in the law of evidence, but for a decision upon this appeal a solution of these problems in unnecessary. For the purposes of this appeal only, we will concede to the appellants that every ruling on evidence of which they complain was erroneous; that all the testimony printed in their brief should' have been admitted by the trial court. We consider the motion for nonsuit, then, in the light of all the testimony appearing in the appellants’ brief and accept it all as true. -

That evidence indicates reasons for antagonism between the proponents of the will and the contestants, who were descendants of testator’s first wife. It also shows that the testator and Alice Belle Rickey, one of the proponents of the will, had been husband and wife for over twenty-five years prior to his death; that they had married in 1893 after the children of his first marriage were grown and after the death of their mother in 1891. A great deal of testimony was introduced tending to show that the second wife, before her marriage with the testator and during the lifetime of his first wife, had been the cause of unhappiness in his home; that after the death of his first wife, testator married said Alice Belle Rickey and considerable hostility *737 existed between the second wife and the children of the first wife; that testator was a man of great wealth and large business interests. After his second marriage he became involved in business difficulties in Nevada and was sued for a large amount of money and threatened with criminal" prosecution because of, the failure of a bank of 'which he had been president; that he feared his entire fortune would be subjected to the payment of judgments against him and entered into a scheme with the consent and connivance of his second wife and his son by his first marriage by which his property and assets were so manipulated as to be concealed from creditors until such time as he succeeded in disposing of the claims against him.

Testimony was offered showing the testator’s apparent affection for his daughter Mrs. Scott, one of the contestants and appellants here. There was also some testimony that he had made remarks on some occasions during the last few years of his life indicating that he was not happy in his domestic relations and that he disliked and distrusted his second wife; that his daughter, Mrs. Scott, was without money for her support; that she was in poor health; that testator had told his sister that this daughter would be provided for; that the wife and her daughter, the chief beneficiaries under the will, had received valuable property from the testator at different times prior to the execution of his will.

It is upon substantially these facts that the appellants rely. They argue that the wife knew of the concealment of the husband’s property to avoid the payment of possible judgments against him and used this knowledge as a means of coercion. There is not the slightest evidence that she so used this knowledge, but, on the contrary, the record discloses that the lawsuits which brought about the concealment of the property had been settled and the judgment paid years before the making of the will. The record does not even show that this matter furnished a possible means of coercion at the time of the making of the will, much less that such means were used by the proponents. The testimony regarding the early relations of the parties suggests a reason for the alleged hostility between the respondents and appellants. But that fact being established would not raise a presumption of fraud or undue influence in the *738

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Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 628, 222 P. 628, 64 Cal. App. 733, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-rickey-calctapp-1923.