Lindley v. Lindley

356 P.2d 455, 67 N.M. 439
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1960
Docket6560
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 356 P.2d 455 (Lindley v. Lindley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindley v. Lindley, 356 P.2d 455, 67 N.M. 439 (N.M. 1960).

Opinion

D. A. MACPHERSON, Jr., District Judge.

This is a suit to set aside substantial gifts of cash and realty. The lower court sustained the gifts, and we affirm its decision.

The facts before this court are extremely long and complicated, and by reason of the nature of the case, cannot be abbreviated. Trial before the Honorable J. V. Gallegos. District Judge, sitting without a jury, required two weeks. Sixty-two witnesses testified, fifty-three exhibits were - introduced, and a transcript of 2,458 pages comprises the record on appeal.

Effie G. Lindley, the donor, is a widow, living at Clovis, New Mexico, and was seventy-five years of age in September of 1956, the month and year of the deeds of gift under scrutiny, which conveyed the fee title to certain realty, after first reserving unto the donor a life estate therein. The donees consisted of the donor’s pastor, one R. C. Bolton; her attorney, one Harold O. Gore; her bookkeeper, one John Krattiger; and the First Christian Church, Clovis. The donor’s right to dispose of this very considerable reversionary estate, as well as certain cash gifts to the church, was challenged in this suit brought by the sole surviving brother and sister of the donor’s deceased husband, J. E. Lindley, and the donor’s only surviving brother, who intervened, making the same challenge. Two of the latter were recipients ofi a deed to certain land of the donor’s in Webster County, Missouri, executed about the same time, which they tendered back to the donor in their pleadings challenging the other gifts. Defendants in the lawsuit are the donor, Effie G. Lindley, and the said recipients of the gifts. The reserved life estate produces the donor a monthly income of between $2,300 and $2r400. Estimate as to the value of the New Mexico realty involved in the gifts ranges from four hundred thousand to six hundred fifty thousand dollars.

The parties will be designated as they were in the court below, except that plaintiffs and intervenor are collectively herein called “plaintiffs,” since all take the same position.

While the main issue in the lawsuit was the mental competency of the donor, another issue involved the donor’s right to make any gifts at all,, requiring a determination of the nature of the title she inherited from her late husband. The donor, Effie G. Lindley, and her husband, J. E. Lindley, on July 15, 1932, executed a joint will, which was probated in Curry County, New Mexico, following the husband’s death in 1936. Plaintiffs appear as residuary beneficiaries under this joint will, to take after Mrs. Lindley’s death, and they contended in the present suit: first, that Mr. and Mrs. Lindley contracted to be irrevocably bound by the terms of the will; and, second, that the will limited Mrs. Lindley’s interest in the inherited property to a life estate, depriving her of the right to make the gifts in question. As plaintiffs aptly point out, should they be sustained on these points, all other issues become moot. Accordingly, we consider these contentions first.

This court has recognized the enforceability of an agreement to make joint wills, but at the same time has pointed out the type of evidence required to prove such an agreement.

In Schauer v. Schauer, 43 N.M. 209, 89 P.2d 521, 523, we stated:

“When mutual wills are executed, pursuant to an oral contract and upon sufficient consideration, and one testator thereafter dies and the other takes under the deceased’s will, equity will specifically enforce the contract. * *
“The rule of evidence to establish the existence of such parole agreement is that which applies to other cases * * * the existence of the contract and its terms must be proved by clear, convincing and satisfactory evidence.”

See, also, Beveridge v. Bailey, S3 S.D. 382, 220 N.W. 868, 60 A.L.R. 619, in which the court said:

“We cannot establish a contract on a guess. If they wanted to bind each other to their respective wills as written, they should have indicated it in some appropriate manner. * * * ”

There was in fact no evidence of a ■collateral or independent written contract by the Lindleys to be bound by the joint -will. Plaintiffs developed that the will was prepared by Fred E. Dennis, an attorney in •Clovis, adapting same from a will prepared by a lawyer in California. The evidence further showed that there were two witnesses to the incidents leading up to the execution of the joint will. One was A. W. Skarda, President of The Citizens Bank of Clovis, of which J. E. Lindley was one of the vice-presidents during his lifetime. Mr. Lindley was a close business associate of the witness, and brought three or four other drafts of this will to him for examination-Mr. Lindley referring to the same as an “agreement.” Both J. E. Lindley and Effie G. Lindley discussed in his presence what would become of the residue of their property in case of their deaths.

The other witness to these events was Fred E. Dennis. He testified that Mr. Lindley insisted upon a joint will because he was afraid that he and his wife might be killed in a common accident; that he had no knowledge of any negotiations between them, nor of any intention of either that the survivor was contracting to be bound by the will, and that, as a matter of practice, if the will was being drawn as a result of a contract, he would have so indicated in the will. He further testified he had no discussion with Mrs. Lindley prior to the probating of the joint will relative to its effect.

This is the limit of the evidence adduced by plaintiffs and intervenor. We do not believe this constitutes the clear, convincing and satisfactory evidence required, and readily agree with the lower court that no oral agreement, dehors the will itself, was established.

We must still answer a contention that the agreement is made out by the will itself. While examining this instrument, we can also address ourselves to their further contention that the joint will vested Mrs. Lindley with a life estate in the property and no more. With these two matters in mind, we find that on July 15, 1932, J. E. Lindley and Effie G. Lindley duly executed their joint will, pertinent features of which included the following:

“Second: We hereby direct, that in the event of the one or the other of us survive the other, then it is the intent of each of us, that the survivor shall have and receive all of our property and estate, both real, personal or mixed, of every kind and nature and whereever situate, vested or contingent, absolutely free and clear of any conditions or restrictions, with full power of disposition as to any and all of the same, it being the full intention and desire of both of us to convey to the survivor an absolute title in fee simple estate to both the real, personal and mixed estate, the same being subject only to the death of one of us, the survivor shall then become the owner of said estate and the executor of this will and testament, without bond.

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Bluebook (online)
356 P.2d 455, 67 N.M. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindley-v-lindley-nm-1960.