Pottetti v. Clifford

150 A.2d 207, 146 Conn. 252, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 150 A.2d 207 (Pottetti v. Clifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pottetti v. Clifford, 150 A.2d 207, 146 Conn. 252, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 152 (Colo. 1959).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The plaintiff brought an action in the Superior Court at New Haven, returnable in February, 1957, against the defendants Raymond H. Goodrich of Camden, Maine, Warren Clifford of New Haven, and The Union and New Haven Trust Company, a corporation located in New Haven, as ex *254 ecutors of the will of Walter H. Goodrich. Pottetti v. Goodrich, Superior Court, New Haven County, No. 84931. In that action, referred to hereinafter as the original action, she seeks to recover on a claim for $900,000 which she made against the Goodrich estate and which the executors disallowed. While the original action was pending, she instituted the instant case, an action in equity for discovery. The executors in the original action are named as defendants, together with Raymond H. Goodrich and Warren Clifford, in their individual capacities, and Gladys Chatfield of Ansonia, Ann Taylor of North Haven, Raymond H. Goodrich, Jr., of Bethany, William E. Goodrich of Woodbridge, and Donald E. Goodrich of New Haven, all in this state.

The parties stipulated that the instant case be submitted to the Superior Court upon the file in the original action and a deposition of Raymond H. Goodrich taken in that action. The trial court found these facts: The complaint in the original action contained the following allegations, which we state in abbreviated form. Walter H. Goodrich died testate on February 23, 1956, leaving an estate inventoried at $1,500,313.80. The defendants Warren Clifford, Raymond H. Goodrich and The Union and New Haven Trust Company were duly qualified as executors. In 1918 the decedent was president of Walter H. Goodrich and Company, Inc., oil dealers in East Haven. He was legally married and lived with his wife in East Haven, where they were prominent and highly respected members of the community. They were parents of a son, the defendant Raymond H. Goodrich. Mrs. Goodrich predeceased her husband. The decedent’s will leaves part of his estate to his son, Raymond, and part to Raymond’s sons, Raymond H. Goodrich, Jr., William E. Good *255 rich and Donald E. Goodrich. These allegations were admitted in the answer filed by the defendants in the original action. Denied were allegations as follows: In 1918 Elizabeth MacPhail was employed by Walter H. Goodrich and Company and lived in the home of the decedent. They cohabited together and begot a child, the plaintiff, who was born on December 10, 1918. The decedent requested of Elizabeth MacPhail that she conceal these facts and not seek from him recognition of the plaintiff as his daughter. He made this request upon his oral promises that he would support and educate the plaintiff and would, by his last will or otherwise, provide as well for her as for his son, Raymond. The decedent repeated these promises to the plaintiff, and to others interested, in order to induce her to continue to conceal her identity as his daughter. Relying upon these promises, both the plaintiff and her mother did as the decedent requested. The plaintiff has married Peter Pottetti and they have two children. Except for sums for the support and education of the plaintiff until she reached her majority, the decedent failed to provide any substantial amount of property for her benefit or that of her issue. His will leaves the major part of his estate to his son, Raymond, and Raymond’s issue. The value of what the decedent provided for Raymond by will or otherwise was at least $900,000. The plaintiff has fully performed the obligations imposed by the decedent’s request. It was also alleged in the complaint that the decedent during his lifetime gave and transferred to Raymond “substantial assets and property.” By the answer, it was admitted that the decedent gave and transferred “certain assets and property” to Raymond and, with respect to another allegation, that after 1918 the de *256 cedent made numerous purchases and sales of real property in this state.

The court found these further facts: All the defendants in the instant action except Raymond H. Goodrich are residents of this state. In the original action, the plaintiff took the deposition of Raymond H. Goodrich in Augusta, Maine, on August 1, 1957, and interrogated him concerning gifts and loans made to him by the decedent, his own personal income, property, business and financial affairs, and the provisions made by the decedent during his lifetime for Raymond’s children and first and second wives. The deposition was subscribed by Raymond H. Goodrich under oath.

The court also made the following findings, in which error is assigned. To establish her case in the original action, it will be necessary for the plaintiff to present evidence of the provisions made by the decedent during his lifetime for his son. The deposition of Raymond H. Goodrich is not sufficient to present all available evidence of those provisions. The defendants are persons who in the ordinary, everyday affairs of their lives would have knowledge of them. Error is further assigned by the defendants in the failure of the court to find three paragraphs of their draft finding. These contained, in substance, statements that Raymond H. Goodrich had answered fully and without equivocation all the questions put to him when his deposition was taken, that the testimony of all the other defendants and all documentary evidence within their possession or control can be adduced at the trial of the original action by the use of subpoenas, and that the plaintiff has obtained through the deposition of Raymond all the information which she seeks from him. These requested findings are, for the most part, mixed con *257 elusions of law and fact. No correction of the finding which can benefit the defendants is warranted.

We add certain facts which are admitted in the pleadings in the instant action. These concern the identity of the defendants Warren Clifford, Gladys Chatfield and Ann Taylor. Clifford, one of the executors, was at the time of the death of the decedent employed by him and had been so employed for many years. Gladys Chatfield, for a period of years before the decedent’s death, was employed by him. Ann Taylor is the widow and executrix of the estate of Arnold R. Taylor and was a partner with her husband in the accounting firm of A. R. Taylor and Company, which was employed by the decedent Walter H. Goodrich and the corporations he controlled in connection with the preparation of income tax returns, gift tax returns and other accounting problems.

The present complaint prayed a discovery in equity by the defendants of the facts concerning provisions made directly or indirectly by the decedent for the benefit of his son, Raymond, and the appointment of a committee before whom discovery should be made. The trial court granted these prayers for relief, judgment was entered accordingly, and the defendants have appealed.

The case at bar is an action in equity ancillary to the original action. The only relief sought is a discovery of facts to be used as evidence in that action. It is a pure bill of discovery as distinguished from a bill for discovery and relief. A pure bill of discovery is favored in equity and will be granted unless there is some well-founded objection against the exercise of the court’s jurisdiction. Peyton v. Werhane, 126 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
150 A.2d 207, 146 Conn. 252, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pottetti-v-clifford-conn-1959.