In Re Anderson's Estate

194 P.2d 621, 121 Mont. 515, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 44
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1948
DocketNo. 8768.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 P.2d 621 (In Re Anderson's Estate) 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
In Re Anderson's Estate, 194 P.2d 621, 121 Mont. 515, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 44 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*517 MR. JUSTICE METCALF

delivered the opinion of the court.

In November 1939 Emelia Fadden came to Montana to live with her daughter. She had been married to one Walter Fadden since June 18, 1929. Emelia and Walter Fadden lived together for two years in California and then separated and they had lived apart for eight years when Emelia Fadden came to Montana. - In May 1940 Emelia met Peter B. Anderson, a widower, living at Cut Bank, Montana. He proposed marriage but she informed him that she was already married. In June 1940 Emelia acquiesced to Anderson’s proposal and at his suggestion prepared to get a divorce. She had resided in Montana for less than the year required by the Montana statutes, Rev. Codes 1935, sec. 5766, and therefore could not institute an action for divorce in this state. It was arranged that Emelia would go to Las Vegas, Nevada, take up her residence there and procure a divorce and then marry Anderson. Anderson drove her to Butte so that she could take the train to Las Vegas, paid her fare and advanced money to pay her expenses while she stayed in Las Vegas. Emelia arrived in Las Vegas, Nevada, on July 12, 1940, where she took a furnished room. She remained there continuously until September 2, 1940. She filed an action for divorce and then returned to Butte where Anderson met her and together they took a trip to Minnesota, visiting Mr. Anderson’s relatives, and later returned to Browning, Montana. Then Anderson again drove her to Butte where she took the train to Las Vegas in order to procure her final decree of divorce. On November 13, 1940, she was granted a final decree of divorce from Walter Fadden.

Walter Fadden did not appear and service was had upon him by publication. The Nevada court found as a fact “that the plaintiff is now and was for more than six weeks immediately preceding the filing of her verified complaint in this action, an actual bona fide resident of Clark County, Nevada, and' that during all of said time, Las Vegas, Clark-County, Nevada, was the home and only home and sole place of residence of the plaintiff.”

*518 After a brief trip to Los Angeles, Emelia returned to Montana and she and Peter B. Anderson were married at Missoula, Montana, on February 3, 1941. They lived together as man and wife until September 2, 1943. On that date Peter B. Anderson instituted an action for divorce from Emelia Anderson and after hearing Peter B. Anderson was granted a divorce from Emelia Anderson by decree entered October 17, 1944. Thereafter an appeal from the judgment granting the decree of divorce was perfected by Emelia Anderson. On March 17, 1945, subsequent to the perfection of the appeal but before the hearing thereon, Peter B. Anderson died and his administrator was substituted as plaintiff.

The appeal was presented to this court as Cause No. 8578, Judson v. Anderson, 118 Mont. 106, 165 Pac. (2d) 198, and this court ordered the judgment vacated and the plaintiff Peter B. Anderson’s complaint for divorce dismissed. This court retained jurisdiction after the death of Peter B. Anderson over the objections of Anderson’s administrator that the only question was the marital status of the parties which abated on the death of one of them. This court said: “But property rights of the parties are also necessarily here involved, as such rights are lawful concomitants of the marriage status. It is true that no property rights were specifically adjudicated by the decree, but it is equally true in this case that apparently valuable property rights of the wife, including dower and succession rights, will be effectively taken away from the wife should the decree be permitted to stand or the appeal abated. ’ ’

Thereafter on August 6, 1946, Peter B. Anderson, son of the deceased Peter B. Anderson, and Mildred Kittilson, daughter of the deceased, filed a petition for probate of the will of said deceased Peter B. Anderson. The will offered for probate was executed and attested on July 18, 1935.

Emelia Anderson objected to the probate of the will for the reason that she married Peter B. Anderson, deceased, after the execution of the will offered for probate and that by virtue of section 7001, Revised Codes of Montana 1935, this marriage *519 operated to revoke the will. The proponents of the will answered the objections by alleging that Emelia Anderson married Walter Fadden in California on June 18, 1929, that the marriage had never been legally dissolved and that the marriage of Emelia Anderson and Peter B. Anderson was void and therefore did not revoke the will. t

In her reply Emelia Anderson alleged that she was lawfully divorced from Walter Fadden at Las Vegas, Nevada, on November 13, 1940, that she was lawfully married to Peter B. Anderson and consequently the will executed before their marriage was revoked.

After hearing evidence two questions were submitted to the jury for findings. The questions and the jury’s findings thereon are:

“Finding No. 1. Question. Did the Objector, Emelia Anderson, when she went to the State of Nevada and at all times up to and including the time she filed her action for divorce against Walter E. Fadden intend to make the State of Nevada her permanent residence or her residence for an indefinite period of time ? Answer. No.

“Finding No. 2. Question. Did the deceased, P. B. Anderson, prior to and during the time Emelia Anderson was taking steps to secure a divorce from Walter E. Fadden take part in and urge upon Emelia Anderson going to Nevada for the purpose of securing such divorce, including the payment of all, or a substantial part of the expenses of travel and the costs of the divorce action? Answer. Yes.”

The court made additional findings of fact on noneont.roversial matters and made the following conclusions of law:

“I. That proponents, Peter B. Anderson and Mildred Kittilson, as the heirs of and in privity with Peter B. Anderson, deceased, are barred and estopped from questioning the validity of the judgment and decree of the Nevada Court in the divorce action mentioned in said Finding No. 1 of the jury.

“II. That by reason of the said marriage of Peter B. Anderson subsequent to the date of the execution of said will *520 offered for probate said will was and is revoked as a matter of law.

“III. That the objections of Emelia Anderson and the objections of H. C. Hall to the probate of said will should be and they are sustained. ’ ’

The court entered judgment denying probate of the will. The proponents have appealed from this judgment.

The trial court based its decision on the jury’s finding No. 2 that Petér B. Anderson, deceased, had taken, persuaded and induced Emelia Anderson to go to Nevada for the purpose of securing a divorce from'Walter E. Fadden and had paid a substantial part of the expenses of travel and the costs of the divorce action incurred by Emelia Anderson, had supported her while she was living in Las Vegas and subsequently, with full knowledge of the circumstances, married her and they lived together as husband and wife for two and a half years.

The United States Supreme Court in the second ease of Williams v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P.2d 621, 121 Mont. 515, 1948 Mont. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-andersons-estate-mont-1948.