Martinez v. Anderson

633 P.2d 727, 96 N.M. 619
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 16, 1981
DocketNo. 4959
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 727 (Martinez v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. Anderson, 633 P.2d 727, 96 N.M. 619 (N.M. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

WOOD, Judge.

This case involves the doctrine of advancements. We (1) refer to certain procedural matters and discuss (2) whether the advancement provision of the Probate Code applies; (3) whether the doctrine of advancements applies to intestate proceedings; (4) the presumption of an advancement; (5) evidence to rebut the presumption; and (6) evidence of advancement apart from any presumption.

Inasmuch as all persons involved in this litigation were at one time named Martinez, we refer to them by their first names.

Theresita, the first wife of Candido, died in 1922 or 1923. There were three children of that marriage — Arturo, Merenciana and Jose G., also known as Jose Diego (hereinafter referred to as Jose).

Candido married Magdalena in 1927. There were six children of this marriage. Three of these six children testified — Gonzalo, Eutimio and Jose Rafael (hereinafter to as Rafael).

Candido executed and delivered a deed to approximately 15 acres of land to each of the children of the first marriage. The deed to Merenciana was in 1937, to Arturo in 1941, to Jose in 1948. Magdalena, the second wife, joined in the deeds to Merenciana and Arturo.

Candido died, intestate, in 1965.

Administration proceedings were begun in 1966. A dispute arose between the children of the first and second wives; the second set of children claimed that the land deeded by Candido to the children of the first wife were advancements. The result was that the attorney who instituted the administration proceedings withdrew and the delays began.

Jose brought a quiet title suit in 1966 that apparently raised the advancement issue as to him. This case was tried in 1974.

Magdalena and her six children filed a quiet title suit in 1970. This suit named the children of the first wife as defendants. This suit involved the question of advancements to Arturo and Merenciana.

In addition, Arturo asserted, in the administration proceedings, that he was entitled to a child’s share of Candido’s estate and that the land deeded to him was not an advancement.

In 1978 the trial court ordered a consolidation of the two quiet title suits and the administration proceedings, at least to the extent of the common question concerning the advancements. Also in 1978, an order was entered in the consolidated case, which gave judgment in Jose’s quiet title suit which had been tried in 1974. That judgment was that Jose’s land was not an advancement and that Jose was entitled to a share of Candido’s estate as provided by the applicable law of descent and distribution. This judgment in favor of Jose is not involved in this appeal.

The question of whether Merenciana’s deed was an advancement has not yet been tried.

This appeal involves the question of whether Arturo’s deed was an advancement. This issue was tried in May, 1980. The trial court’s decision was filed in August, 1980 and judgment adverse to Arturo was entered in October, 1980.

The trial court found: “The conveyance to Arturo . . . was intended by the deceased to be the grantee’s share of (an advancement against) the estate of the deceased.” The trial court concluded: “The conveyance to Arturo . . . was an advancement and said child is not entitled to any other portion of the estate of Candido . . . . ”

Arturo appeals; for convenience, we refer to the opposition to Arturo, in both the administration proceedings and the quiet title suit, as Magdalena.

Procedural Matters

(a) The delays in this case are unconscionable; justice delayed is justice denied. The differences among the children of Can-dido were apparent soon after administration proceedings were begun in 1966; that those differences have been only partially resolved, judicially, in 1981 is appalling. The appellate record suggests some reasons in explanation of the delay — difficulties in obtaining the land description and. in obtaining abstracts, dilatoriness on the part of at least some of the children, changes in attorneys and changes in judges. These suggested reasons are, however, insufficient to justify a fourteen-year delay in resolving the question of whether Arturo’s deed was an advancement. By these comments we do not assess blame against the current trial judge or the current attorneys. The delay does suggest the need for a form of docket control in civil cases which prevents attorneys from proceeding at their leisure. We refer to this again at the close of this opinion.

(b) Arturo complains of various procedures; we dispose of them summarily. (1) The propriety of the trial court’s dismissal and subsequent reinstatement of both the administration proceedings and quiet title suit cannot be answered because of the ambiguity of the record. (2) The consolidation of the administration proceedings and the quiet title suit appears to be a consolidation limited to resolving the advancement question and not a consolidation for all purposes; there are numerous parties in the quiet title suit, and issues in that suit differ from the matters to be resolved in the administration proceedings. (3) The trial court made no finding as to estoppel, laches and the statute of limitations; those are not issues in this case. (4) That the trial court’s judgment as to Arturo was in the quiet title suit, and that there is no judgment as to Arturo in the administration proceedings, presents no difficulty. The question of an advancement to Arturo, in both suits, was to be resolved at one trial. Appropriate judgments, in both cases, should be entered on remand. (5) That the trial court’s ruling, see finding and conclusion quoted above, excluded Arturo from an intestate share, rather than giving Arturo the option of putting the advancement into hotchpot, was consistent with the position of the parties at trial and makes no I difference in this case because of the result we reach.

The Advancement Provision of the Probate Code

Section 45-2-110, N.M.S.A.1978, provides:

If a person dies intestate as to all his estate, property which he gave in his lifetime to an heir is treated as an advancement against such heir’s share of the estate only if declared in a contemporaneous writing by the decedent or acknowledged in writing by the heir to be an advancement.

Arturo contends § 45-2-110 applies, and prevents Arturo’s 15 acres of land from being an advancement because there is no contemporaneous writing by Candido, and no written acknowledgement by Arturo, that the 15 acres of land was an advancement. We disagree.

Section 45-2-110 was enacted as a part of Laws 1975, ch. 257. Section 10-101(B) of that law provides:

B. The Probate Code applies to the affairs of decedents dying on or after the effective date of the Probate Code, and to matters of missing persons, protected persons, minors and incapacitated persons commenced on or after the effective date of the Probate Code.

The effective date of the Probate Code was July 1, 1976, Laws 1975, ch. 257, § 10-101(A). Candido died in 1965.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 727, 96 N.M. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-anderson-nmctapp-1981.