Hays v. Mercantile Investment Co.

132 P. 406, 73 Wash. 586, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1642
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1913
DocketNo. 10607
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 P. 406 (Hays v. Mercantile Investment Co.) 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
Hays v. Mercantile Investment Co., 132 P. 406, 73 Wash. 586, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1642 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

This is a recrudescence of the contest involving the estate of John Sullivan, deceased, which has been intermittently before some court, either of first instance or appellate, state or Federal, ever since the spring of 1901. For the history of that estate, reference is made to the following decisions: In re Sullivan’s Estate, 40 Wash. 202, 82 Pac. 297, 111 Am. St. 895; Hays v. O’Brien, 56 Wash. 67, 105 Pac. 162; O’Callaghan v. O’Brien, 116 Fed. 934; Carrau v. O’Callighan, 125 Fed. 657; O’Callaghan v. O’Brien, 199 U. S. 89.

The plaintiff, who claims a half interest in the entire estate by reason of a contract with Marie Carrau giving him that interest as an attorney’s fee, in consideration that he establish her rights as devisee under an alleged nuncupative will, brings this action by a bill in equity to set aside the judgment of this court entered upon the decision in 40 Wash. 202; and to set aside the judgment of the superior court of King county, Washington, in probate, dated January 25, 1906, finally rejecting the probate of the alleged nuncupative will of John Sullivan, deceased; and to vacate and set aside the judgment of January 10,1907, in the same court distributing the property of the estate to Edward Corcoran and Charles H. Farrell, as administrator of the estate of Hannah Callaghan, deceased, and to Samuel H. Piles; and to cancel and hold for naught certain quitclaim deeds conveying the property formerly belonging to the estate to the defendant corporations; and to require the defendant, Marie Carrau, to deed to the plaintiff an undivided one-half interest in the property.

The grounds of complaint are an alleged fraud and conspiracy between Corcoran, Farrell, and their attorneys Piles, [588]*588Donworth, Howe and others, and one J. W. Robinson, who represented Marie Carran in most of the litigation above referred to, by which conspiracy and fraud the plaintiff claims to have been prevented from having a hearing on the original appeal to this court, and from having a hearing before the superior court of King county in probate at the time the probate of the nuncupative will was refused, and in the distribution of the estate above referred to. It is alleged, in substance, that, at the time of the entry of the order dismissing the petition of Edward Corcoran and Charles H. Farrell, as administrator of the estate of Hannah Callaghan, deceased, in contest of the alleged nuncupative will, and at the time of the appeal from that dismissal to this court, and the decision thereon as reported in 40 Wash. 202, the plaintiff was absent from the state of. Washington; and that all these things were done without his knowledge or consent, and through a conspiracy between the predecessors in interest of the defendant corporations and the attorney for Marie Carrau in that proceeding, who, it is alleged, assumed to represent her without plaintiff’s consent and in fraud of his rights under his contract with Marie Carrau. It is further alleged that, in that proceeding and on that appeal, the record was falsified to make it appear that the petition had been originally filed in the probate proceeding in King county within one year after the entry of the original order of probate on March 8, 1901, whereas, it is now claimed that it was filed as a petition in a separate proceeding in equity to contest the alleged nuncupative will. It is also alleged that the proceedings seeking to re-probate the will, culminating in the order of the superior court of King county rejecting the will on January 25, 1906, were without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent; but it is not alleged that the last mentioned attempted probate was not upon regular citation as required by the statute.

In his complaint, the plaintiff also alleged, in substance, that he had filed a suit against the predecessors in interest of [589]*589the defendants herein; that one Tei’rence O’Brien, administrator of the Sullivan Estate, and Marie Carrau were parties to that suit, and filed demurrers to his complaint; that the superior court dismissed his action as to O’Brien, administrator, and Marie Carrau; that the plaintiff herein appealed from that order of dismissal to this court; that this court dismissed his appeal; and that plaintiff was thereby prevented from having a trial of that action upon the merits. The decision on that appeal is reported in 56 Wash. 67.

The answer of the defendants in this action, after denying the allegations of the complaint, pleaded that the action last above referred to had been tried in the superior court of the state of Washington for King county; and that plaintiff’s claim had been adjudged without merit and vexatious; that he was prosecuting that action not in good faith, but for the purpose of clouding the defendants’ title; and that the decree entered in that suit perpetually enjoined the plaintiff herein from asserting any right, title or interest in any of the property in question; that the plaintiff had sought to have that decree set aside; that his motion was denied; that he appealed therefrom, and the supreme court of this state dismissed his appeal. This affirmative defense sets forth the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint in the former action, wherein practically the same charges of fraud and conspiracy, though not with the same particularity, are set out as appear in the complaint in the present action. The answer herein further alleges that, when that suit was brought on for trial, the plaintiff appeared in person and by attorney, but after an opening statement withdrew and refused to participate in the trial, though advised that the defendants, the predecessors in interest of the defendants here, would proceed to put in their evidence sustaining their denials and the allegations of their affirmative answer and cross-complaint, which was accordingly done, and a decree entered dismissing the plaintiff’s action with prejudice, and granting the defendants relief as prayed for in that answer. A copy of that decree is [590]*590set out in the present answer, in which it is recited, that, upon motion of the defendants, the action was dismissed as to the codefendants O’Brien and Marie Carrau, for failure of the plaintiff to prosecute the action against them; and that the plaintiff made his opening statement, at the close of which he moved the court to vacate the order of dismissal as to O’Brien and Carrau, which motion the court denied; whereupon the plaintiff, by his attorney, in open court, gave notice of appeal to the supreme court from the order of dismissal as to O’Brien and Carrau, and from the order denying the motion to reinstate them as defendants; and that plaintiff proceeded no further; and the other defendants, by their attorney, inquired if the plaintiff intended to proceed with the trial, to which the plaintiff in person replied that he did not intend to' continue further with the trial; that thereupon the defendants, by their attorney, announced that they would proceed to introduce evidence in support of their denials and in support of their affirmative answer, and would move the court to dismiss the plaintiff’s action with prejudice; whereupon the court directed the defendants to proceed with the introduction of their evidence, and the plaintiff and his attorney, without obtaining permission from the court, withdrew from the court room and from the presence of the court and took no further part in the trial of that action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P. 406, 73 Wash. 586, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-mercantile-investment-co-wash-1913.