In Re the Estate of Koshman

288 P.2d 652, 77 Idaho 96, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 322
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1955
Docket8275
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 P.2d 652 (In Re the Estate of Koshman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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 the Estate of Koshman, 288 P.2d 652, 77 Idaho 96, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 322 (Idaho 1955).

Opinion

*98 TAYLOR, Chief Justice.

William H. Koshman, Sr., died December 30, 1953, at Richland, Washington, where he had been employed for a number of years by General Electric as a patrolman. After services at Kennewick, Washington, burial took place at Lewiston, Idaho. Respondent, decedent’s son, claiming to be sole heir, filed a petition for probate in Benton County, Washington, January 21, 1954, and letters were issued to him. January 29, 1954, appellant, claiming to be the widow of deceased, filed a petition for probate in Nez Perce County, Idaho, praying that letters be issued to her. Objections were filed by respondent. After hearing, the probate court granted the petition and ordered letters issued to appellant. Respondent appealed to the district court. After a trial de novo, the district court reversed the probate court and appellant brought the case here.

Appellant’s claim is based upon an alleged common law marriage, which she said she and deceased entered into September 20, 1952. She had been married to one Charest (father of her two sons) from whom she was divorced. She married one Pemberton in 1939 or 1940, and divorced him after about eight months. She married one Hewitt in the fall of 1950, separated from him in the spring of 1951, and divorced him September 10, 1952. Appellant and deceased had been friends during all of these years and, except during the periods when she was living with the husbands mentioned, she kept company with deceased. They went to dances and other places together and he was a frequent caller at her home. Deceased had been living at Lewiston, operating as a dealer in second-hand and scrap goods. After he went to Richland he continued to maintain a rented building on G Street in Lewiston, where he kept a supply of such materials and in which he had a room' furnished for sleeping quarters. While an employee at Richland, it was his practice to come to Lewiston once a month and spend three or four days on his “long change.” These lay-off periods were occasioned by the monthly change of shifts at his place of employment. On these occasions he usually came to Lewiston on Saturday and returned to Richland the following Tuesday.

Appellant, her sons, and daughter-in-law, testified that upon the agreement of marriage he moved his personal belongings into her home and thereafter spent, his leave periods there, living, eating and sleeping *99 with appellant, and that he bought her clothes and groceries and generally supported her. A neighbor, Hasenoehrl, testified that on one of these visits appellant introduced deceased as her husband, and that he brought his washing there. Witness Choate testified deceased at one time told him, “he came up to see his wife.” Witness McNicholas testified he at one time referred to her as his “Missus.” Mr. and Mrs. Paffile testified deceased came with appellant to look at a house they had for sale, and that deceased said he would talk it over with the woman who was with him.

Mrs. Cromer, a tenant in one of appellant’s apartments, testified appellant introduced deceased as her husband, but she could not say they were living together. H. E. Maughan, who lived in one of her apartments from May to August, 1953, testified that on his visits the deceased lived with appellant and referred to her as “the Missus.”

Witness Hammack, clerk in a diamond shop, testified that appellant came in, in the spring of 1953, with a “big man,” who bought her a zircon ring. Witness Shawley testified he had known deceased and appellant for a number of years and that they had been “going together” most of that time; that in the fall of 1952 deceased told him they were married.

Mr. O’Coyne, nephew of appellant, and his wife testified that they met appellant and deceased in Coeur d’Alene in the spring of 1953 and were told by the couple that they were married, and that they visited, stayed overnight and slept together in the witnesses’ home in Murray, Idaho, in the fall of 1953. Leslie Mitson and his wife, the latter being a great-niece of appellant, testified that deceased and appellant visited them in Coeur d’Alene in the spring of 1953 and in October, 1953; that she called him “My Bill” or “Billy.” Marriage was not mentioned, nor were any introductions made. Mrs. Bertsch, operator of Bert’s Cabin Camp at Coeur d’Alene, testified that deceased and appellant registered at her place May 2, 1953; that appellant signed the register, “Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Koshman [address] Moscow.”

Mrs. Hill testified that the deceased registered at the Desert Hotel in Coeur d’Alene, October 8, 1953, accompanied by appellant, and that he wrote on the registration card, “W. H. Koshman & wife, 122 fetch, Wash.”, no city being named; that the space for address on the hotel’s “reference sheet” was left blank until after Koshman’s death, when, at the request of appellant, a girl in the office entered therein, “Lewiston, Ida.”

While George Weninger, manager of the Moscow Hotel, was on the witness stand, a registration card was produced, purporting to show a registration at that hotel by the deceased as, “W. Koshman & Wife”, July 28, 1953. No address was given and the witness had been unable to find the *100 name “Koshman” in the guest records of the hotel.

Lillian McElvane produced the register of the St. Clair Hotel in Spokane and testified that the deceased and appellant registered and stayed at that hotel October 10, 1953, the registration being made by appellant as “Mrs. & Mr. B. Koshman, Lewis-ton.” State not given.

On behalf of respondent, witness Varvel of Richland, testified that on the occasion of the funeral arrangements in the home of respondent, appellant was introduced to him as Mrs. Charest, and that she told him she was an old friend of the family from Lewiston. Mueller, the undertaker at Kennewick, testified that the information, entered by him on the funeral arrangement sheet, was given him by respondent in the presence of appellant; that deceased was there entered as a “divorced” person; that appellant was not listed as a relative; that she said she was not “of the family.”

Mrs. Harold Coder testified that she canvassed the city of Lewiston in the summer of 1953, obtaining information for the city directory; that at appellant’s residence her inquiries were answered by a lady of appellant’s appearance; that pursuant to information given she was listed as a widow under the name of Charest.

Mrs. Fix had known deceased and appellant for a- number of years, had met them at dances in Clarkston. She testified that about two days after the funeral she said to appellant, “You should have married him instead of Hewitt”, to which appellant replied, “Well, I lived here and he lived down there, and his son lives there, and he thought more of his son than he did me, so we never got married.”

Clara Beaudry testified that deceased brought appellant to the home of the witness’ sister at Uniontown in September, 1952, and left her there, after proposing a date with the witness; that appellant told her on that occasion she was going by the name of Charest, not Hewitt, having decided to take the name of her children.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P.2d 652, 77 Idaho 96, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-koshman-idaho-1955.