Gullilstad v. Kromm

260 P.2d 888, 43 Wash. 2d 258, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 308
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1953
DocketNo. 32418
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 P.2d 888 (Gullilstad v. Kromm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gullilstad v. Kromm, 260 P.2d 888, 43 Wash. 2d 258, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 308 (Wash. 1953).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a petition contesting a will dated January 13, 1951, on the ground of forgery. Appellants are the sister-in-law and [259]*259brothers-in-law of the deceased, Anton Mayer. They had been named sole legatees under his earlier will but weré not mentioned in the questioned will by which the deceased devised his entire estate to respondent Emma C. Holeman.

The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury. At the conclusion thereof, the court took the matter under advisement. Thereafter, a memorandum opinion was filed, in which the court stated that appellants had failed to sustain the burden of proof required of them and held that their petition should be dismissed.

The court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a decree dismissing appellants’ petition contesting the will. Appellants’ motion for a new trial was denied.

The evidence in this case was extensive and often conflicting. Much of it related to the deceased’s friendship, or lack of friendship, with Mrs. Holeman and the care she gave him following his wife’s death. We do not deem it necessary to review this testimony in detail. The pivotal issue was whether or not the signature on the second will was that of the deceased. On that issue, the opinions of the two experts who testified were in direct conflict.

The undisputed testimony showed that, following the death of his wife in 1946, the deceased lived alone for several months. He had no known living relatives. He was employed as a common laborer by the P.U.D. at Aberdeen, and at the time of his death was about sixty-eight years old.

Undisputed medical testimony established that in the latter part of his life Anton Mayer was suffering from Parkinson’s disease, or paralysis agitans, which is characterized by palsy and a marked tremor of the hands. This disease affected his ability to write legibly, as was shown by many samples of his handwriting admitted in evidence.

About 1948, he began to board at the home of Mrs. Hole-man. He paid her sixty-five dollars a month for his board and occasionally paid her additional sums for small favors which she performed for him. During January and February, 1950, the deceased was confined to the hospital for several weeks. Following his release Mrs. Holeman cared [260]*260for him in her home for some time. During this period, he secured the necessary form from a friend and secretly changed the beneficiary named in his one-thousand-dollar group life insurance policy by making Mrs. Holeman the sole beneficiary. This change was effective as of July 5,1950. His condition improved enough so that he was able to resume work, and his death on January 15, 1951 (two days after the execution of the will), was unexpected.

A will dated January 30, 1947, was found in deceased’s safe deposit box following his death. This will (leaving his entire estate to appellants) was admitted to probate on April 13, 1951. Later, a will dated January 13, 1951, purportedly signed by Anton Mayer and properly witnessed, was found in his home under the circumstances hereafter related. This will revoked all prior wills and left the deceased’s entire estate to Mrs. Holeman. It was admitted to probate as the last will and testament of Anton Mayer, and this contest was instituted by appellants, who alleged that the will was a forgery, and that Emma Holeman had conspired with the subscribing witnesses to have the purported will admitted to probate.

Appellants’ evidence tended to prove that: the deceased had promised his wife just prior to her death that he would leave his entire estate to her relatives. He kept his promise by making the will dated January 30, 1947. He corresponded with her relatives, who lived in Norway, at frequent intervals, exchanged gifts with them, and in other ways evidenced interest in their welfare. He told several witnesses that he had left everything to his wife’s relatives, and they testified that he had never mentioned changing his will. Although he took his meals with Mrs. Holeman because she was a good cook and it was convenient, he said that she was “bossy” and in November, 1950, stated to a friend that she sometimes became angry with him and cursed him. He then purportedly said, “If she ever tries to step in and claim anything you step in and see that she doesn’t try to get anything more, because I am paying her plenty.”

Appellants’ evidence also tended to establish that Mrs. [261]*261Holeman discovered the will of January 13, 1951, during a search of the deceased’s home, made at her request, in the presence of appellants’ attorney and the executor named in the 1947 will. The executor’s testimony regarding discussions with Mrs. Holeman prior to this search and discovery of the second will is too long to quote in full, but his description of her actions at the deceased’s home is as follows:

“Q. Will you describe now the manner in which Mrs. Holeman made her search? A. She lifted corners of the rugs, looked under the rugs, and looked under the cushions in the settee in the front room, in the living room. There was also a magazine rack there with papers in it which she searched. Q. Did she make a careful search in the living room? A. A casual search, I would say. Q. A casual search? A. A quick search, I would say. She was very excited. And in the front room there was a small chest or steamer trunk, which we opened. And it contained, oh, postal cards, and nick-nacks, and things which were Mr. Mayer’s wife’s belongings. She searched through those hastily, and then went into the kitchen, searched the kitchen; search the closet in the hallway. Q. Was her search in the kitchen careful or casual? A. Well, I made the search in the kitchen, opened the drawers, and so forth, and then I invited Mrs. Holeman to look also, and she said, Well, you looked through there,’ and she took my search more or less. Then I went into the bedroom and I searched the closet, where a suit was hanging, and I went through the pockets of it; and also searched a trunk that was in there, which contained a few clothes and a few papers. At that time, Mrs. Holeman came in and she looked at the mattress that was on the bed, — there were no bed clothes over it except the mattress and springs— rolled that back and looked through it. At the end of the bed against the wall was a magazine rack, oh, 3 or 4 shelves in it, full of old magazines. I had looked through those and I thumbed those and I thumbed the pages. I had not located anything. Mrs. Holeman said, Well, I am going to take one more last look.’ And she searched these magazines and then down on the shelf at the bottom she reached down and pulled out a magazine, shook it and said, What’s this,’ and an envelope fell out of it. She gave it to me, and it was addressed to me, and I handed it to you and you said it was a will. Q. Mr. Kellogg, what did Mrs. Holeman say when the contents of that will was made known to her? A. She said, ‘Oh, I will have a heart attack.’ She said, ‘Dear old [262]*262Anton! He did keep his promise. My faith is restored in humanity,’ or words to that effect. Q. Mr. Kellogg, at any time during that search in the Mayer residence, did Mrs. Holeman tell you or me, in your presence, that Nathan Schaffer and Audrey Schaffer had witnessed a will in which she was the sole legatee, or words to that effect? A. Not while we were making the search. Q. She did not tell us that there was supposed to be a will in which she was to-be the beneficiary? A. No. Not during that search. Q. Just one more question, Mr. Kellogg.

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Related

In Re Mayer's Estate
260 P.2d 888 (Washington Supreme Court, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
260 P.2d 888, 43 Wash. 2d 258, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gullilstad-v-kromm-wash-1953.