Holmes v. Holmes

12 F. Cas. 405, 1 Sawy. 99, 1 Abb. 525, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedApril 12, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 405 (Holmes v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Holmes, 12 F. Cas. 405, 1 Sawy. 99, 1 Abb. 525, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602 (circtdor 1870).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity, brought by the complainant, styling herself Glervina O. Holmes, against Thomas • J. Holmes, Jr., his brother Byron, his three married sisters — Mary A. Goodenough, Alice J. Strowbridge and Theresa Coulson — and their husbands, to cancel and set aside a cer-' tain deed executed by complainant to defendants, and for assignment of dower in the lands affected by the deed.

The bill was filed January 26, 1869, and . alleges:

I. That the complainant is a resident and citizen of the state of California,. and that the defendants, except Theresa and her husband, are citizens of the state of Oregon.

II. That Thomas J. Holmes, late of Portland, Oregon, died intestate on June 18, 1867, leaving as his children and heirs at law said Thomas J. Holmes, Jr., and his brother and sisters aforesaid; that “complainant was the lawful wife of the deceased and lived and cohabited with him as his wife from the-day of December, 1865, to the time of his death;” “that during the said marriage” and at the time of his death, the deceased was seized in fee and possessed of certain blocks and lots of land in the city of Portland of the value of $100,000, the annual rents and profits of which are worth $10,000; that it was not necessary to sell any of said real property to pay his debts, but that the same was inherited by his heirs, who have since partitioned it among themselves; that “complainant is the widow of said Holmes, deceased,” and by the law's of Oregon was and is entitled to dower in said real property; that the present value of such dower is not less than $25,000; that complainant has never been barred of her dower in said property, and that the same has never been assigned to her, but her right thereto is disputed by said heirs.

III. That said heirs pretend to have purchased and obtained a release of complainant’s right of dower, by virtue of a certain deed signed by complainant, July 31, 1867, and by which complainant, styling herself Glervina O. Holmes, conveys to the heirs of Holmes, deceased, “all her right, title, interest, claim or demand, either in law or equity, as the widow of the said Thomas J. Holmes, or otherwise,” in and to the estate of said Holmes, in consideration of the sum of $1,000, “and the further consideration that it was in his lifetime our w'ish and agreement before and in contemplation of marriage, that upon his, the said Thomas J. Holmes, death, all his property, both real and' personal, should descend to his children, the heirs aforementioned, clear of and unencumbered with any claim of dower or any legal claim of myself in any manner whatever;” that said deed “was procured by said heirs to be executed by complainant through fraud, duress and undue influence exerted over her by said heirs, and especially by said Thomas J. Holmes, Jr., and J. M. Strowbridge,” the husband of Alice J., aforesaid; and that the consideration of said deed “was grossly inadequate and the recitals therein contained false,” and the same was imprudently executed, the complainant being ignorant of the value of her interest in the estate, and unadvised of the nature and effect of said deed.

IY. The bill then sets forth the circumstances and condition of the complainant, at and before the signing of the deed, at great length and with much minuteness, to the effect that the complainant, after the death of Holmes, continued to live in the home house, but that said heirs came there also and took possession; that said heirs then conspired with said J. M. Strowbridge to harass complainant and drive her away from said home and cheat her out of her interest “in the estate of her said husband;” that complainant was then poor and friendless, without means of support and “in great distress, mental and pecuniary,” and without knowledge as’ to the value of the estate; that she did not sign said instrument freely, but through fear of said Strowbridge and Holmes, Jr., who, “in order to induce her to release her interest in said estate, falsely accused her of criminal intercourse with said Holmes, deceased, prior to his marriage with complainant and before the death of a former wife of said deceased, and represented to complainant that she was "liable to a criminal prosecution, and unless she would give up her claim to said estate and leave the house and move out of the state, they would cause her to be prosecuted in the courts and held up to public scandal, infamy and disgrace, and to be punished by imprisonment; and that said Strowbridge and Holmes, Jr., made it a condition of said payment of $1,000, that the complainant should leave the state, and to that end said sum was made payable, $500 in Portland and the remainder in ten months after sight at Wells, Fargo & Co.’s in San Francisco.

On April 1, 1869, an answer to the bill was filed, purporting to be the answer of all the defendants except Mary A. Goodenough and her husband, but such pleading was not signed or sworn to by any of the defendants except Thomas J. Holmes, Jr. To this answer the plaintiff, on May 1, filed exceptions [407]*407for scandal and Impertinence and insufficiency; "wliicli were afterwards heard and allowed by the court.

On August 21, the joint and several answer of all the defendants to the bill was filed, and on September 6 the complainant filed the general replication thereto.

By the amended answer, the defendants admit the allegations of the bill concerning the citizenship of the parties, the death of Holmes, the nature and value of the property of which he died seized, and its subsequent partition among the defendants, his heirs.

They deny that the complainant was ever the lawful wife of the deceased, or that he ever cohabited with her as his wife, or that he ever was married to her, or “that any relation created by marriage ever existed between them.”

They admit the execution of the deed by the complainant to the heirs of the deceased for the consideration mentioned in the bill, but deny that the same was executed by her otherwise than of her own free will and accord.

They aver that for a long time prior to the death of the deceased the said Thomas J. Holmes and complainant “had been lewdly and lasciviously cohabiting together,” and that upon the death of said Holmes complainant freely admitted to said heirs that she had never been married to deceased, and acknowledged that she had no claim on his estate. That she was only anxious to obtain sufficient means to go to her father, in Ohio, and leave the state quietly, without exciting comment upon her conduct in .having lived illicitly with the deceased, and not desiring to be turned away penniless as a cast-off wanton, and that said heirs being also anxious to prevent the relation which had existed between their father and the complainant from becoming more notorious than possible, and to remove any cloud that might exist upon said estate by reason of said relation, it was mutually agreed between the parties, that the said heirs should pay said complainant the sum of $1,000, and that complainant should execute to said heirs the deed in question; and that in pursuance of such arrangement complainant executed such deed and not otherwise, and that the recitals therein contained were inserted at her special instance and request.

On January 6 and 7 the court heard the evidence of the parties, and on January 11, the cause was argued and submitted.

Two principal questions arise in the case; (1) Were the complainant and the deceased married to one another; and, (2) was the deed from the complainant to the heirs wrongfully obtained from her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 405, 1 Sawy. 99, 1 Abb. 525, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-holmes-circtdor-1870.