James v. James

274 P. 816, 85 Colo. 154, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 28, 1929
DocketNo. 11,375.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 274 P. 816 (James v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. James, 274 P. 816, 85 Colo. 154, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 179 (Colo. 1929).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The pending controversy arose out of two different transactions between Thomas 'E. James and his brother William H. James during their lifetime. Both parties thereto are now dead. One transaction was an alleged will of Thomas whereby he devised to his brother William the bulk of his estate and gave to him a bill of sale of personal property, both instruments being executed by *156 Thomas on the same day in February, 1913. The other consisted of two alleged deeds of conveyance by Thomas to William of the former’s real estate, which instruments were executed in March, 1912. After the will was filed by William for probate a protest thereto was made by plaintiffs in this action, two brothers and a sister of Thomas. On the hearing the district court of Moffat county declared the will void on the ground of mental incapacity of the testator Thomas, and of undue influence exerted upon him by his brother William and the latter’s family. The protest was sustained by the district court in all respects and a decree was entered declaring the will void. As this was a contest only of the will no specific ruling was made as to the bill of sale and its validity was not then directly passed upon. On review of this judgment by us the decree below declaring the will invalid was affirmed. James v. James, 64 Colo. 133, 170 Pac. 285. Thereafter the two brothers and sister of Thomas, deceased, brought the pending action in the district court to set aside that other transaction above mentioned wherein and whereby Thomas made two deeds of real estate to William and also the bill of sale that was part of the same transaction as the will. The action was based upon the same grounds as those relied upon in the action to set aside the will. The district court rendered judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant upon the ground that the plaintiffs ’ cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. On review of this judgment in the Supreme Court the same was reversed and the cause was remanded to the district court for trial on the merits. James v. James, 75 Colo. 164, 225 Pac. 208. Such trial was had in the district court and judgment was for the defendant, executrix of the will, who had been substituted in place of William H. James, her husband, then deceased. This writ of errors was sued out by the plaintiffs below for a review of the adverse judgment against them.

*157 This cause has been unnecessarily delayed and prolonged after this writ of error was sued out, for which neither party is entirely free from blame. After the decree of the district court was rendered in November, 1924, time was given to the plaintiffs to file a bill of exceptions and within the limited time the plaintiffs lodged the bill with the trial judge as the court rules require. The defendant spent part of her time in Colorado and part in California. Her counsel of record had terminated his employment and withdrawn from the case and plaintiffs’ counsel was unable to have served either upon the defendant or her counsel the notice or summons provided by statute and court rule relating to the settling'of a bill. The record attorney would not accept service as his employment was at an end, and the defendant herself, through some artifice not disclosed, was able to persuade the officers in both states whom plaintiffs employed to serve process upon her, that the same should not be, and they were not, served upon her. This court then, upon proper showing, directed that service of summons on the defendant might be, and it was, made by publication. Thereafter this court on application made a further order that unless within a designated time the defendant filed in this court her written consent that the bill of exceptions as tendered to the trial judge might be considered as such, the trial court would be ordered to set aside its findings and decree and grant plaintiffs a new trial. The defendant thereupon accepted the bill and thereafter the cause has been submitted on oral arguments and briefs. Before the bill, however, was lodged in this court, both the parties had filed a series of printed briefs and after the bill was thus settled they have filed another series of briefs, thus entailing upon us unnecessary labor which the dilatory tactics imposed and which would have been unnecessary had the usual practice and procedure been followed.

The previous opinions of this court relating to this controversy, which should be read in connection with' this *158 opinion, are James v. James, 64 Colo. 133, and 75 Colo. 164. In our view of the applicable law the discussion by-counsel has gone far beyond the real issues. An attentive reading of this record and of our former opinions above referred to, satisfy us that the controlling question, which the defendant has discussed at great length and upon which she relies here, is res judicata against her and requires a reversal of this judgment. In the case reported in 64 Colo. 133, we affirmed the decision of the district court which found the alleged will of Thomas James void because -at the time of its execution he was mentally incapacitated to make it, and because of the undue influence of his brother William which was brought to bear upon him and to whom the instrument purported to give his entire estate. The bill of sale of personal property it is true was not directly involved in that case and our decision there does not purport to include it. But this bill bears the same date as that of the will. They were .made on the same day and, as decided in the case reported in 64 Colorado, the bill of sale and the will were component parts of the same business transaction. If the will was void because, at the time of its execution, Thomas James was of unsound mind and was unduly influenced by William to make it, it would seem as a matter of logic, and we think it true as matter of law, that the same infirmity attaches to and vitiates the bill of sale the same as it did the will. True the defendant says that the bill of sale was made several months before the will was executed, but the evidence as brought up in the transcript of the record discloses that the two papers were signed on the same day and, as said in the James case (64 Colorado), that they were part of the same transaction. We find nothing in the record before us or in the findings below to justify the assertion of the defendant here that the bill of sale was made ten or twelve months before the will was executed. We think it clearly appears — and if the court had found otherwise the find *159 ing would not be sustained — that the two were part of the same transaction that occurred or took place on the same day.

There is an additional reason and it seems to us a conclusive one why our decision in the case reported in 64 Colorado is res judicata as to this bill of sale and also the two deeds which were made ten or eleven months before the will was made, and we might add that even if the bill of sale was made at the same time the two deeds were made, several months before the will was executed, the judgment in that case would still be res judicata as we now proceed to show.

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 816, 85 Colo. 154, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-james-colo-1929.