Harris v. Schoonmaker

58 P.2d 415, 50 Wyo. 119, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 6
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1936
Docket1949
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 415 (Harris v. Schoonmaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Schoonmaker, 58 P.2d 415, 50 Wyo. 119, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 6 (Wyo. 1936).

Opinions

*125 Riner, Justice.

This is a proceeding by direct appeal to obtain the review of a judgment of the district court of Fremont County dismissing with prejudice the petition of Mary Harris filed in that court for the purpose of contesting the Last Will and Testament of Sarah N. Lane, deceased.

The facts necessary to be considered in disposing of the matter here are substantially these: A. D. Lane and his wife, Sarah N. Lane, many years ago came to the Lander Valley and he engaged in the mercantile business as a licensed Indian trader at Wind River Agency, Wyoming. A son, William N. Lane, was born to them August 12, 1871, who during the years 1884 to 1894, inclusive, attended school without Wyoming, vacationing with his parents during the summer months until about the last of August or the first of September of each year. He finally graduated in law at Cornell University and engaged in business in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. There he was married June 27, 1911. As the issue of that marriage there were born to him and his wife, Elizabeth Lane, two children, John S. Lane and William N. Lane, both being minors, John aged twenty years and William seventeen years, at the time the hearing of the will contest was had in December, 1934. July 26, 1920, while traveling from Milwaukee to Lander, the father of these children was killed in a railroad accident. Their grandfather, A. D. Lane, died April 17, 1930. Their mother thereafter, on February 2, 1931, was married to Charles Baerwald of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

July 31, 1931, Sarah N. Lane, being then about eighty or eighty-one years old, executed the will in question, which was witnessed by E. E. Coon and P. B. Coolidge, both residing in Lander, Wyoming. By that will, after directing that her debts and funeral expenses be paid, the testatrix bequeathed to Charles E. *126 Lane, a brother of her deceased husband and a resident of East Rochester, New York, the sum of $4000.00, and to her daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Lane, a legacy of §5000.00. Certain real and personal property in Lander, Wyoming, was by the will devised and bequeathed to Elizabeth Lane and her children, the two grandsons of the testatrix, John S. Lane and William N. Lane, an undivided one-third interest to each to be distributed to them in kind, their several interests not to be transferred in any way until the grandson William N. Lane attained the age of twenty-one years. The residue of her estate the testatrix devised and bequeathed to Gwynne F. Schoonmaker of Lander, Wyoming, as trustee, to be managed and disposed of by him under certain detailed trust provisions, among which may be mentioned that the trustee was to use all or a portion of the income from the trust estate, as he should deem advisable, for the maintenance and education of both the grandsons of the testatrix aforesaid, until John attained the age of twenty-one years, when he should be paid §10,000.00 from the estate, a similar amount to be paid William when he became twenty-one, at which time also his brother should receive §15,000.00; a like sum as that last mentioned was required to be paid to William when he became twenty-five years old, and upon their attaining the age of thirty years, each grandson should then be entitled to receive one-half of the estate remaining in the hands of the trustee and the trust should thereupon be closed. The trustee, who was also nominated in the will as the executor thereof, was given broad powers by it in the management and disposal of the estate and the property thereof, without the necessity of obtaining the consent, approval or confirmation in such transactions by any court, and without reports concerning the same, he being also excused in the will from giving bond either as executor or as trustee.

*127 The attestation clause subscribed by the witnesses to the will was in the usual form required by law, but it additionally stated that they believed the said Sarah N. Lane to be at the time of subscribing their names as witnesses “of sound and disposing mind and memory,” and also that, “we further certify that the said instrument was, word for word, carefully and distinctly read over to the said Sarah N. Lane, by each of us before she executed the same, she being blind, and that she fully understood each and every provision thereof.”

Sarah N. Lane died May 7, 1933, and on the 12th of that month a petition for the probate of the will aforesaid was filed by Gwynne F. Schoonmaker in the district court of Fremont County, and notice of proving the will was duly published. On June 26, 1933, the court took the testimony of the subscribing witnesses and also that of the proponent of the will, found the fact of her death as a resident of Fremont County, Wyoming, the value of the estate, that the instrument submitted was the Last Will of Sarah N. Lane, that it was executed as required by law at a time when the testatrix was of sound and disposing mind and not acting under duress, menace, fraud or undue influence, and ordered that the instrument be admitted to probate as the will of Sarah N. Lane. Gwynne F. Schoon-maker was appointed executor to serve without bond, as directed by the will. He immediately qualified and assumed the duties of executor.

On October 24, 1933, and within the time fixed by Section 88-701, W. R. S. 1931, Mary Harris filed her petition to contest the will aforesaid, alleging herself to be a daughter of William Lane, the only son of the testatrix, and a granddaughter of the latter. Summarized the petition charged that the will was invalid because “not legally witnessed and attested as required *128 by law”; that the testatrix at the time the will was executed was incompetent to do so and was “acting under undue influence, duress, fraud, mistake of facts, misapprehension of facts and lack of understanding and comprehension.” Elaborating these averments the petition alleged:

“That at the time of the execution of said will, the said Sarah N. Lane, deceased, was not of sound mind, was not of deposing memory, did not understand the legal effect of said purported will; did not understand the relation she bore to those dependent upon her, or those entitled by reason of the blood relationship, and lineal decendency, to share in her estate, and to have her make provision for them, and especially this contestant, the only granddaughter of said deceased testatrix ; and that said deceased testatrix never intended to make said purported and unnatural will, and deprive this contestant of a share in the estate of said deceased; and she never read said will and did not understand what she was signing when she signed said purported will.
“That said purported will was not signed by said testatrix in the knowledge of what she was signing; that the witnesses did not sign the same in her presence ; that the said testatrix never asked said witnesses to sign said purported will; that said testatrix never declared the said purported will to be her last will and testament; that the testatrix at the time of the execution of said purported will, never intended it to be her last will; and the said purported will was not the last will of said testatrix.”

The petition is quite long, but the foregoing outline thereof indicates, we think, its purport so far as it undertakes to attack the validity of the will.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 415, 50 Wyo. 119, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-schoonmaker-wyo-1936.