Mapes v. Mauldin

220 P. 1102, 69 Mont. 132, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 230
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1923
DocketNo. 5,302
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 P. 1102 (Mapes v. Mauldin) 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
Mapes v. Mauldin, 220 P. 1102, 69 Mont. 132, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 3, 1923, T. A. Mapes, a resident of Helena, filed his petition in the district court of Lewis and Clark county, praying for the admission to probate of an alleged will which he averred had been executed by James Mauldin on February 19, 1922, and the appointment of himself as administrator with the will annexed. The petition states that Mauldin died at Los Angeles on February 28, 1922; that he was a resident of the state of Maryland at the time of his death and left both real and personal estate in Montana, some of which was located in Lewis and Clark county. It is further alleged that the will had been proved and allowed in the orphan’s court of Cecil county, Maryland, and a duly authenticated copy of the same and its probate were filed with the petition. [134]*134The names of the beneficiaries under the will were also set out, amongst them being Hugh Mauldin, of Sacramento, California, a nephew of the deceased. With the petition there was presented a request in writing signed by the executor of the will named in the Maryland proceedings, who was also a nephew of the deceased and a resident of Maryland, asking that the petitioner be appointed as administrator with the will annexed of said estate in Montana.

Upon the filing of the petition the court made an order setting the same down for hearing. In due time the above-named Hugh Mauldin appeared and filed his objections to and protest against the granting of the petition on the ground, amongst others, that the deceased James Mauldin at fhe time of his death was a resident of Dillon, Beaverhead county, Montana, and not of Cecil county, Maryland.

The matter came on regularly for hearing before the court without a jury on January 15, 1923. After the conclusion of the testimony the court found as a fact that James Mauldin was a resident of, and domiciled in, Dillon, Beaverhead county, Montana, and not of Cecil county, Maryland, at the time of his death, and that the document purporting to be the will of the decedent is, if it be a will, a domestic will entitled to probate originally in the court of this state; whereupon a judgment was entered denying the petitioner’s application and dismissing the proceedings. From this judgment the petitioner has appealed.

Pending the appeal in this court the protestant and respondent, Hugh Mauldin, died, and on motion of counsel his widow, Eva Gaylord Mauldin, otherwise called Eva G. Maul-din, to whom all his interest had passed by will, was substituted in his place. The case, as argued by counsel on the appeal, presents two questions for determination, the first of which is: Was the deceased, James Mauldin, at the time of his death a resident of Maryland, or a resident of Montana? We have examined the testimony produced at the hearing upon this matter from every suggested angle. No useful purpose would [135]*135be served by setting it out in detail. It preponderates so greatly in favor of the court’s finding as to warrant the statement that Mauldin’s residence in Montana, both at the time he is alleged to have executed the purported will, and at the time of his death, was established beyond a reasonable doubt.

The second controlling question in this case may be stated thus: Can the will of one who was a resident of Montana at the time of his death be proved and admitted to probate in the courts of this state in the manner provided in sections 10039, 10040 and 10041, Revised Codes of 1921?

Chapter 23, Part IV, of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1921 is entitled “Probate of Foreign "Wills,” and embraces three sections, namely, 10039, 10040 and 10041. Sections 10039 and 10040 are as follows:

“10039. All wills duly proved and allowed in any other of the United States, or in any foreign country or state, may be allowed and recorded in the district court of any county in which the testator shall have left any estate.
“10040. When a copy of the will and probate thereof, duly authenticated, shall be produced by the executor, or by any other person interested in the will, with a petition for letters, the same must be filed, and the court or judge must appoint a time for the hearing, notice whereof must be given as hereinbefore provided for an original petition for the probate of a will. ’ ’

Section 10041 provides proceedings on the hearing to be held as provided in section 10040.

Section 10018, Revised Codes of 1921, so far as necessary to be quoted here, provides that “Wills must be proved, and letters testamentary or of administration granted: (1) In the county in which the decedent was a resident at the time of his death, in whatever place he may have died.” The remaining portion of this section, as well as section 10019, have reference to the place of probate of the will of a decedent who was not a resident of this state at the time of his death.

[136]*136Counsel for appellant contend that the provisions of these two sections relate only to the jurisdiction of district courts as between each other, that the procedure prescribed for the probate of wills originally presented for probate in the courts of this state is embraced in sections 10020 to 10031, and that section 10039 is an express declaration governing all wills (both of residents and of nonresidents) admitted to probate outside this state, and that inasmuch as it relates to a specific class of wills, it modifies and limits the provisions of all the preceding sections, both as to venue and procedure, and is not restricted in its application to the wills of those who were nonresidents of the state at the time of death.

The meaning of sections 10039-10041, supra, is not difficult to determine when we consider them in connection with their history. So far as we have been able to ascertain, there was no statutory provision permitting a foreign will to be admitted to probate in this jurisdiction upon the presentation of an authenticated copy of its probate in another state or country, prior to the year 1872.

In the Codified Statutes of 1871-72, page 554, appears an Act of the territorial legislature entitled “An Act concerning last wills and testaments,” declaring, amongst other things, who was competent to make a will, prescribing the method of execution, defining the different kinds of wills, pointing out the procedure for proving the same, etc. Sections 18 to 21, inclusive, of this Act are substantially the same as sections' 10039-10041, supra, except that section 21 thereof declares that the letters granted on such foreign record “shall extend to all the estate of the testator in this territory,” and “Such estate, after paying its just debts and expenses of administration, shall be disposed of according to such will so far as such will may operate upon it and the residue shall be disposed of as is provided by law in eases of estate in this territory belonging to persons who are inhabitants of any other state or territory or country.”

[137]*137The statutes of Vermont relative to the allowance in that state of, the probate of a will from a foreign state were similar to sections 18 to 21 above, section 2369 of the Vermont statute being identical with section 21. In Tarbell v. Walton, 71 Vt. 406, 45 Atl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P. 1102, 69 Mont. 132, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mapes-v-mauldin-mont-1923.