Freeman v. Rapaich

511 P.2d 1338, 95 Idaho 562, 1973 Ida. LEXIS 312
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1973
DocketNo. 11166
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 511 P.2d 1338 (Freeman v. Rapaich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Rapaich, 511 P.2d 1338, 95 Idaho 562, 1973 Ida. LEXIS 312 (Idaho 1973).

Opinion

DONALDSON, Chief Justice.

William Edward Freeman, a/k/a W. E. Freeman, died on February 9, 1971, at the age of seventy-eight, a resident of Lewis-ton, Idaho. His purported will was admitted to probate on March 4, 1971, and defendant-appellant and cross-respondent, Eli Rapaich, an attorney, was appointed executor of the will. The will names Rapaich as residuary legatee. Cross-appellant Lawrence Freeman, a/k/a Larry Freeman, filed “Grounds of Opposition to Probate of Will” on April 29, 1971, alleging that he was the half-brother of the decedent and his sole heir at law, and further alleging that the purported will was invalid. Lawrence Freeman was not among the beneficiaries named in the will.

On July 1, 1971, cross-appellants Clyde Curry, individually and as administrator of the estate of Mary Mason, deceased, Fred Mason, and Mary Alice Morales (hereafter referred to collectively as Curry, et al.) filed a petition to revoke probate of the will. They alleged that when the decedent, W. E. Freeman died, he left as his sole surviving heirs a sister named Mary Mason, and a niece, Mary Alice Morales, the adopted daughter of another (deceased) sister, Annie Morgan. They further alleged that subsequent to W. E. Freeman’s death, his sister Mary Mason died, leaving as her sole heirs her adopted son, Clyde Curry, and her husband, Fred Mason. Therefore, they contended that Clyde Curry and Fred Mason, as the sole heirs of Mary Mason, and Mary Alice Morales, as an heir of W. E. Freeman by virtue of the fact that her deceased mother was Freeman’s sister, were interested parties with standing to contest the will’s validity. The will contained bequests to Mary Mason and to Clyde Curry.

On April 10, 1972, the district court issued a pre-trial order which provided that the issues of the alleged relationships and heirship of the competing contestants with regard to the decedent, W. E. Freeman, were to be tried first. The district court [564]*564reserved the issue of the validity of the will for a later trial if it was determined necessary.

The trial to determine which, if any, of the contestants were the heirs of W. E. Freeman, and thus entitled to contest the will, was had before a jury, beginning on April 10, 1972. Lawrence Freeman was the sole witness in his own behalf. His version of the story regarding family relationship is that he, Lawrence, and the decedent, W. E. Freeman, had a common father, one Samuel Freeman, and that the decedent was the son of Samuel Freeman by his first marriage, while Lawrence was a son born of Samuel’s second marriage. It is undisputed that Samuel Freeman was the father of Lawrence Freeman. During the presentation of his case, Lawrence Freeman made several attempts to introduce into evidence declarations by Samuel Freeman, now deceased, that Samuel was the father of the decedent, W. E. Freeman, and to introduce declarations by W. E. Freeman, that Samuel was his father. Objections to the attempted introduction of these alleged declarations were repeatedly sustained and Lawrence Freeman does not assign as error the action of the district court in sustaining these objections. Lawrence Freeman introduced into evidence a photograph of Samuel Freeman, and a photograph of Samuel and a woman who was allegedly his first wife and W. E. Freeman’s mother. He also produced a letter from Samuel to Lawrence which contained a reference to “Willy Freeman * * * down from Billings [Montana].” Lawrence testified that this was a reference to the decedent, W. E. Freeman. In the course of cross-examination, Lawrence Freeman testified that his father Samuel had a brother named William who lived in Billings. Curry, et al., suggest that the phrase in the letter actually referred to this brother, rather than to the decedent. Lawrence testified that he and W. E. Freeman had been close and that W. E. Freeman had loaned him money and given him a car, and that W. E. Freeman had served as a pall-bearer in the funerals of Lawrence’s mother and brother. There was testimony at trial from which it could have been inferred that W. E. Freeman tried to disavow kinship with Lawrence Freeman because Lawrence’s mother was a mulatto.

The version of W. E. Freeman’s pedigree which was presented by cross-appellants Curry, et al., was that W. E. Freeman was the son of one Tom Freeman and one Amanda Tracy. They contended that Tom Freeman was also the father of Mary Mason and Annie Morgan. Little or no evidence was introduced regarding the mother of Mary Mason and Annie Morgan. The evidence which was introduced by cross-appellants Curry, et ah, consisted of testimony by several witnesses that the decedent W. E. Freeman had disavowed any kinship with Lawrence Freeman, that he had stated that Mary Mason was his sister and that Tom Freeman was his father. In-laws and purported relatives of W. E. Freeman testified that Tom Freeman was the decedent’s father and that Mary Mason and Annie Morgan were his sisters or half-sisters. Curry, et al., introduced into evidence a delayed birth certificate, which W. E. Freeman had secured, on which he had indicated that Tom Freeman was his father. They presented photographs of the decedent as a young man, of Mary Mason as a young woman, and of Tom Freeman. They also introduced photographs of W. E. Freeman as a young man visiting Mary Mason, Annie Morgan, and Tom Freeman in Alliance, Nebraska, and of Mary Mason visiting W. E. Freeman and his wife in Lewiston, Idaho. There was testimony that Lawrence Freeman’s relationship with the decedent was not particularly close and that the decedent loaned money to many people, not just to Lawrence.

At the conclusion of the trial, the district court submitted interrogatories to the [565]*565jury. Those interrogatories and the unanimous answers of the jury were as follows:

“1. Do you find from the evidence that Larry Freeman was a half brother of William Edward Freeman? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: Yes
“2. Do you find from the evidence that Mary Mason was a sister or half sister of William Edward Freeman? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: No
“3. Do you find from the evidence that Clyde Curry is the surviving son, either natural or adopted of Mary Mason ? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: Yes
“4. Do you find from the evidence that Clyde Curry is the administrator of the estate of Mary Mason, deceased? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: Yes
“5. Do you find from the evidence that Fred Mason is the surviving husband of Mary Mason, deceased? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: Yes
“6. Do you find from the evidence that Annie Morgan was a sister or half sister of William Edward Freeman? (Answer yes or no.)
ANSWER: No
“7. Do you find from the evidence that Mary Alice Morales is the surviving daughter, natural or adopted, of Annie Morgan? (Answer yes or no.)
'ANSWER: Yes”

The crux of the verdict was the jury’s findings that contestant Larry Freeman was a half-brother of the decedent, W. E. Freeman, and that Mary Mason and Annie Morgan were not sisters or half-sisters of the decedent.

A decree based on the jury verdict was filed by the court on April 14, 1972. On the basis of that decree, Curry, et al., who claimed the right to contest the will of W. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
511 P.2d 1338, 95 Idaho 562, 1973 Ida. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-rapaich-idaho-1973.