McLellan v. Sherwood

266 P.2d 580, 123 Cal. App. 2d 209, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 16, 1954
DocketCiv. 4839
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 266 P.2d 580 (McLellan v. Sherwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLellan v. Sherwood, 266 P.2d 580, 123 Cal. App. 2d 209, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Contestants and appellants, father and son,' strangers to the blood of decedent Franklin P. Sherwood who died on January 20, 1952, filed a petition to contest his last will and testament and codicils thereto, on the ground of incompetency of deceased to execute a will, and on the further ground of undue influence.

The will and codicils were admitted to probate on February 18, 1952. This contest was not filed until August 1st, 1952. The citation thereon was not served until November 19, 1952, on the respondent Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, the coexecutor. It has never been served on many other named respondents. The only interest of *210 contestants in the matter, as set forth in an amended petition, is alleged upon information and belief to be that there existed a prior will or document, the contents of which are said to be unknown, except that the contestants claim they were beneficiaries under certain writings which they allege constituted decedent’s will and which were delivered by decedent to one Antoine E. Windson, a trusted employee of deceased, on a date unknown to petitioners, but during his lifetime, in which there was devised to petitioner Douglas Hull McLellan a certain parcel of real estate adjoining decedent’s residence in La Jolla, valued at $25,000, and that they also provided a “substantial” fund for the education of contestant Douglas B. McLellan, the son; that said writings, constituting the last will and testament of decedent, were destroyed or suppressed by Windson, acting in concert with decedent’s brother, Howard C. Sherwood, and without the knowledge of Franklin P. Sherwood; and that such will was never revoked.

Defendants and respondents Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, Antoine E. Windson, and Emma Feldman on February 24, 1953, answered and denied generally the allegations of the petition in reference to the claimed undue influence and unsound mind of deceased, and specifically denied that deceased ever made a will or other instruments constituting a will in which petitioners were ever devised any property or in which they were ever mentioned, and specifically denied the petitioners’ allegation that contestants were interested parties by reason of being legatees or beneficiaries under any purported last will and testament of deceased.

The contestants never took steps to bring the action to trial and refused to stipulate to taking, by written interrogatories, the deposition of Howard C. Sherwood, the brother, residing in New York. They also refused to stipulate to the taking of the deposition of Windson, to determine the truth of contestants’ allegations in reference to the existence of any such claimed documents or of their claimed destruction thereof.

Thereafter, the executor, after due notice, did take steps to obtain these depositions, which resulted in the testimony that no such will ever existed, and these witnesses knew of none. Finally, on April 14, 1953, the coexecutor served notice on contestants that it and Howard 0. Sherwood, the other coexeeutor, would move the court on a day certain, *211 to first hear and determine the question of the interest of contestants and their right to maintain the will contest before determining the other issues raised by the answer, and to dismiss the contest if the court concluded they had no such interest, and also for the reason that the alleged contest was groundless, fictitious and sham, and an abuse of the process of the court. It averred that the motion would be based on the depositions of contestants, taken by respondents, as well as those of Windson and Sherwood, and upon the affidavits submitted, as well as the papers on file in the probate proceedings.

Contestants appeared and, without objections to the method of proceeding, filed an affidavit of Douglas Hull McLellan, in opposition to the motion, in which he recited generally that decedent had been a friend of his for many years and had, prior to April, 1948, informed him that he proposed to leave affiant a “substantial amount of property,” including the property indicated, and to leave a fund for the education of his son, and that this property would be available to him at the time of his death; that when decedent became ill in April, 1948, it was exceedingly difficult for affiant to visit Mr. Sherwood because of the interference of Windson, who assumed great authority over these matters; that after Sherwood’s death, about February 6, 1952, Wind-son called affiant and was complaining about unfair treatment of him, and affiant asked him if he (affiant) was provided for in the will, and that Windson said: “I will not make any statement until I have seen Howard Sherwood, hut if Mr. Howard Sherwood does not make things right, I will have something very interesting to say to you”; that later, in May, 1952, Windson told him that he had in his possession an instrument or instruments signed by Franklin P. Sherwood, in which provision had been made for affiant in reference to the real estate mentioned and the fund for the education of his son, and that he had medical records that “would sure tell a story”; that Windson said that Howard Sherwood was shown the instruments and demanded that they be turned over to the attorney for deceased, Mr. Gray; that Windson said he was so upset he took a match and burned them up in the presence of Howard Sherwood, and that Howard Sherwood said that he would remember him in his will to the extent of $10,000 for so doing; that the next day Windson said: “Please forget everything I told you yesterday. I cannot go through with it.”

*212 Respondents’ affidavits, in support of the motion, recite generally that the time for filing claims against the estate expired on August 8, 1952, and that all debts and claims of decedent were paid; that the federal estate tax would be due April 20th, 1953, and if not paid on or before that date would become delinquent; that neither the amount of the federal estate tax nor the California inheritance tax could be determined until the validity of decedent’s will had been established, and that further delay would result in penalties and interest and in damage and loss to the estate and to the persons entitled thereto.

The attorney for decedent, Mr. Gray, filed an affidavit in which he stated that he had been attorney for decedent for many years; that decedent on many occasions counselled with him in reference to his estate and its disposition, and that never did decedent mention contestants or indicate a desire to remember them in his will, and never mentioned making a will in their favor nor exhibit any instruments that would indicate any such intention. He also showed that he had been a member of the firm of attorneys who drew deceased’s will which was admitted to probate, and all the codicils thereto.

The depositions of contestants show generally that the only knowledge the son had of the affair was what his father told him. The father reiterated the statements he claimed Wind-son made to him.

The deposition of Antoine Windson was taken on April 7, 1953. He was extensively cross-examined by counsel for contestants. He stated that he had been estate manager for deceased for over 20 years. He identified a typewritten note, dated January 17,1951, and initialed by deceased, reading:

“Antoine, Mesa Grande Property, Union Oil property &

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Bluebook (online)
266 P.2d 580, 123 Cal. App. 2d 209, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclellan-v-sherwood-calctapp-1954.