Hoppin v. Lang

263 P. 421, 81 Mont. 330, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 117
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
DocketNo. 6,240.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 263 P. 421 (Hoppin v. Lang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoppin v. Lang, 263 P. 421, 81 Mont. 330, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 117 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a second appeal in an action brought by the guardian of Ernestina Lang, an insane woman, to have the decree of distribution entered in the matter of the estate of Gustav Lang, deceased, set aside and the property therein distributed to her and the defendant, A. Lang.

The record shows that A. Lang and Ernestina Lang were the parents of Gustav Lang, who died in 1920, and that .at the time of his death three quarter-sections and a thirty-acre tract of land stood of record in Valley county in his name; that A. Lang was duly appointed administrator of his estate, listed the land as belonging to Gustav, and in closing the estate secured a decree of distribution in which all of the land was distributed to A. Lang as the sole heir at law of Gustav Lang. A. Lang’s defense was that the land was bought and paid for with his money, and that the title was placed in the name of Gustav Lang merely for convenience and protection and was held in trust for the defendant.

On the first trial the court held that defendant was es-topped by the record in the probate proceedings from asserting ownership in the land other than by the decree of distribution, and directed the entry of a decree distributing the land to plaintiff and defendant, share and share alike. Never *333 theless the court properly permitted all testimony relative to ownership to go into the record.

On appeal from the first • judgment this court held that, under the circumstances of the case, the doctrine of estoppel was not applicable, and that, therefore, the trial court should have considered the evidence as to ownership and made findings thereon; the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. (Hoppin v. Long, 74 Mont. 558, 241 Pac. 636.) Therein the law of the case was declared and only the determination of questions of fact remained.

On the retrial of the case counsel for the respective parties submitted the matter on the record made at the first trial alone, although the trial judge was not the judge who presided at the first trial.

1. In the former opinion we said that: “In order to warrant findings in favor of the defendant on this phase of the case [resulting trust] the evidence should be clear, satisfactory, and convincing to the court, and, on the cold record, we will not presume to determine the matter, but leave it to the trial court with its superior advantage in seeing and hearing the witnesses on the stand.” Counsel for plaintiff construe this statement to mean that, on the cold record, the testimony adduced is held to be not clear, satisfactory and convincing. The statement does not justify the construction placed upon it, but declares that we would not determine a question depending for solution upon conflicting evidence and not passed upon by the trial court. "We did not consider the evidence as to ownership of the property, as this court is one of review, and, although authorized by statute to review all questions of fact arising upon the evidence presented in the record, in equity cases (sec. 8805, Rev. Codes 1921) it is not vested with original jurisdiction to try questions of fact de novo (Finlen v. Heinze, 32 Mont. 354, 80 Pac. 918).

2. However, as the matter was submitted to the trial court on the record made on the original trial and that record is before us on appeal, we are not bound by the rule that find *334 ings made by the trial court will not be disturbed unless the evidence strongly preponderates against them, as the trial court occupied no more advantageous position in considering the testimony than we do (Morgan v. Butte Central Mining & Milling Co., 58 Mont. 633, 194 Pac. 496); this is so also as to findings based on conflicting evidence.

3. We enter upon a considertion of the evidence, however, indulging the presumption that the trial court has decided the matter correctly.

4. It is first contended that certain findings as to the time when Ernestina Lang first became insane and the period of her initial detention in an asylum are not supported by the evidence. A showing of insanity in this case was important only as excusing laches in applying to have the decree of distribution set aside and authorizing the appointment of a guardian to prosecute the action. It might have been pertinent to inquire as to her sanity at the time Lang secured a divorce, had the legality of the decree of divorce been questioned, but no such proceeding was had. It is, therefore, apparent that no substantial right of the plaintiff was affected if error was committed in this regard, and it becomes immaterial to determine whether those findings are correct or otherwise.

5. The sole determinative question herein is as to whether, under the evidence, it was shown that the property in question belonged to Gustav Lang at the time of his death, in which event his mother inherited the one-half interest therein, or whether, in fact, the property was purchased by the defendant, A. Lang, with his own money and the bare legal title was held by Gustav Lang in trust for his father, thus creating a resulting trust. (Meagher v. Harrington, 78 Mont. 457, 254 Pac. 432.)

The plaintiff’s case in chief consisted of the introduction of recorded deeds to the property in which Gustav Lang is named as grantee, the records in the probate proceeding above referred to, and proof that Ernestina Lang was, at the time of *335 the trial and for a long period prior thereto, hopelessly insane and confined in an asylum in Wisconsin.

The defendant’s testimony is, in substance, as follows: A. Lang and Ernestina Lang were married in Russian Poland some time prior to 1892 and had two sons, Rudolph and Gustav; in 1892 the family migrated to Canada and later located in North Dakota. In 1898 Ernestina Lang deserted her family, and three years later the defendant secured a decree of divorce. At the time of his wife’s desertion, A. Lang had filed on a homestead entry in North Dakota, but had not yet established residence upon it and, at that time, he had no property standing of record in his name, but was supporting his family by his labor on rented lands.

Lang later acquired three quarter-sections of land in North Dakota, but subsequently conveyed this land as a down payment on some city property in Winnipeg; he failed to make payment on the Winnipeg property and returned his contract to the parties from whom he received it, who later threatened to cause him trouble over the unpaid installments. In 1916 Lang with his two sons removed to Yalley county, Montana, and Lang there purchased the land which is the subject matter of this action. Fearing trouble from his Canadian creditors, but feeling that he had more than satisfied any just claim they might have against him, he had the conveyances made to his son Gustav. Gustav was a cripple from childhood and was always weak and ailing and unable to do more than assist with housework; he never earned or received any money from any source, but the father deposited his funds in the Marne of Gustav.

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Bluebook (online)
263 P. 421, 81 Mont. 330, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoppin-v-lang-mont-1928.