In Re Estate of Holum

229 N.W. 133, 179 Minn. 315
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 7, 1930
DocketNo. 27,628.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 133 (In Re Estate of Holum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Holum, 229 N.W. 133, 179 Minn. 315 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Holt, J.

The action was tried and findings made in favor of appellants by Judge Nelson. Judge Howard, his successor in office, granted respondent a new trial, stating in the order that it was “granted entirely for errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to.” This appeal followed.

Iver I. Holum, a farmer, died- February 25, 1918, intestate. He owned a farm of 210 acres in Murray county, 'this state,’ 80 acres of which was his homestead. He was survived by his wife and three sons. One of the sons died July 25, 1920, without wife or issue. On April 23, 1923, a decree of descent ivas entered in the probate court of Murray county assigning the farm in proper proportions to the widow and sons then living. No appeal was ever taken from this decree. One August 27, 1927, Ingebrigt Holum petitioned the probate court to vacate the decree, claiming to be an illegitimate son of Iver I. Holum, whom the latter in writing, duly attested by a competent Avitness, had declared to be his son, and asserting “that because of a mistake in fact and inadvertence this petitioner was omitted and not included in this distribution and so was deprived of his just proportion and share of said estate.” He alleged that he did not learn of his legal rights until in May, 1927. In ansAver to the petition the appellants here denied that the petitioner was the illegitimate son of Iver I. Holum or that the latter ever at any time acknowledged him as his son in writing or otherivise, and they pleaded the decree, that petitioner knew of the death of Iver I. Holum and had never asserted any title or interest in or to the premises and is noAv estopped from so doing. The probate court denied the petition, principally on the ground of laches and lack *317 of satisfactory proof of a written attested acknowledgment by Iver I. Holum that petitioner was his son. Petitioner then appealed to the district court, where Honorable L. S. Nelson made three decisive findings against petitioner, viz: That his parentage was not proved; that Iver I. Holum did not in writing, attested as alleged in the petition, acknowledge himself to be the father of Ingebrigt Holum; and that the latter’s laches barred the relief asked.

It is clear that the rulings of Judge Nelson, which Judge Howard assigns as grounds for granting Ingebrigt Holum’s motion for a new trial, were erroneous. They excluded family traditions and declarations of deceased members of the family, and the testimony of an interested heir on that subject contrary to the holding of this court in Geisler v. Geisler, 160 Minn. 463, 200 N. W. 742. The appellants do not seriously attempt to justify such rulings. They do claim that some of the evidence excluded was subsequently received, and also that the evidence excluded bore entirely on the issue of parentage; and therefore, even though erroneously rejected, no prejudice resulted, for either one of the other two above mentioned pivotal findings requires a judgment denying the petitioner, Ingebrigt Holum, relief.

We are persuaded that if the testimony erroneously excluded had been received, a finding that Iver was the father of Ingebrigt would have been compelled. And we are not prepared to say it might not also have had some effect, at least indirectly, upon the issue of the existence of the written acknowledgment of parentage, as to which issue we concur in the opinion of Judge Howard, that the evidence received would sustain a finding either way. The evidence excluded might have turned the scales in favor of Ingebrigt on that issue. But we are unable to find in any of the rulings upon which Judge Howard predicated a new trial which admitted or rejected testimony that could have had the slightest bearing upon the issue of laches or estoppel.

Appellants claim that the vacation of the decree was addressed to the judicial discretion of the probate court and that its action could not be reversed by the district court except for abuse of dis *318 cretion. Southern Minn. I. & L. Co. v. Livingston, 117 Minn. 421, 136 N. W. 8. But the trial in the district court was de novo, and that court was invested with the same discretion as the probate court. The application to vacate Avas here made Avithin a year after knowledge of the decree and comes within the statute authorizing opening a judgment or decree for fraud, mistake, inadvertence or excusable neglect. G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) §§ 8701(4) and 8983(8); Savela v. Erickson, 138 Minn. 93, 163 N. W. 1029; In re Estate of Koffel, 175 Minn. 524, 222 N. W. 68. The decree was subject to being opened for good cause under the decisions cited, and the contention of appellants that it is noAV invulnerable cannot be sustained.

The probate court as well as Judge Nelson in the district court held that by his laches in asserting his rights Ingebrigt Holum is barred or estopped from having the decree vacated so as to assert title to the property distributed thereby. As already stated, as to that issue the trial court committed no error in the exclusion or reception of evidence upon which Judge Howard predicates the order granting a new trial. The finding thereon, if supported by the record, necessarily disposes of the case against the respondent, irrespective of the errors of laAv affecting the findings as to parentage and the acknowledgment thereof. Nichols v. Atwood, 127 Minn. 425, 149 N. W. 672. It is apparent that in granting a neAv trial exclusiA'ely for errors of laAv Judge Howard overlooked the consequences of the finding of laches. These are in substance the facts found supporting the conclusion of fact that laches of Ingebrigt should debar him from the relief he petitioned for:

Ingebrigt attended the funeral of Iver I. Holum, and some two years later the funeral of one of the latter's sons. He kneAv the situation of the land, its OAvnership by Iver I. Holum, and that it was occupied and claimed by his wife and two sons. He asserted no claim to any share therein. In the meantime the Avidow of Iver I. Holum has grown too old and infirm to appear in court or to testify; some witnesses for appellants have died. The land has been much improved and it has been farmed in connection with *319 80 acres owned by one of Iver I. Holum’s sons without any thought of accounting to anyone, such owner being Avilling that his mother and brother should share in the profit without any effort at keeping separate accounts. Subsequent to Iver I. Holum’s death assessments of more than $3,000 against the land have been paid. And the finding was:

“That the delay of petitioner in making said petition was unreasonable, and the situation of the parties and of said lands was changed between the time of the death of said Iver I. Holum and the presenting of the petition herein by the petitioner. That any readjustment of the rights of the parties would be very difficult, and that said petitioner Avas guilty of laches in the presentation of any claim.”

In connection Avith all this the record reveals Avithout dispute that Ingebrigt had knoAvn at least for 40 years that Iver I. was his father, and knew before the father died that the latter had in a writing, Avitnessed by Paul Iverson, the brother of Iver, acknowledged Ingebrigt as his son.

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Bluebook (online)
229 N.W. 133, 179 Minn. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-holum-minn-1930.