Ruick v. Twarkins

367 A.2d 1380, 171 Conn. 149, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1150
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 367 A.2d 1380 (Ruick v. Twarkins) 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
Ruick v. Twarkins, 367 A.2d 1380, 171 Conn. 149, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1150 (Colo. 1976).

Opinion

House, C. J.

This was an action to settle title to ten acres of land in the town of East Granby and for damages and attorney’s fees. The plaintiff is the mother of the three defendants, and this controversy between her and three of her four daughters concerns the daughters’ claims to the one-half interest in the land previously owned by the plaintiff’s deceased husband, their father. The plaintiff *151 claims title to this contested one-half interest by adverse possession. The defendants claim title by the law of intestate succession.

The court found facts which it concluded warranted a judgment of title in the plaintiff by adverse possession but no relief in the form of damages or attorney’s fees. From this judgment the defendants have appealed, making numerous assignments of error in the court’s finding of certain facts, in reaching certain conclusions, and in rendering the judgment without factual support. Most of the assignments of error have been abandoned in the defendants’ combined brief on their appeal. First Connecticut Small Business Investment Co. v. Arba, Inc., 170 Conn. 168, 169-70, 365 A.2d 100. The issues briefed concern whether a probate decree, allegedly void because of fraud in obtaining jurisdiction, may be used as a basis for a claim of title by adverse possession, and whether possession by a parent who is a cotenant with her children may, as against those children, furnish a basis for the parent’s claim of title by adverse possession.

The plaintiff filed a cross appeal, maintaining that the court’s conclusion that she had committed fraud in procuring the Probate Court decree “was legally or logically inconsistent with the facts found.” She also made numerous assignments of error addressed to the finding but those not briefed are treated as abandoned; First Connecticut Small Business Investment Co. v. Arba, Inc., supra; and, in the ones briefed, we find a conflict in the evidence and evidence which fully supports the court’s finding. We do not retry the facts or pass upon the credibility of witnesses. Marquis v. Drost, 155 Conn. 327, 330, 231 A.2d 527. Since the issue *152 whether there was fraud in obtaining the probate decree must be resolved in order to treat adequately the defendants’ appeal, we consider first the merits of the cross appeal.

From the evidence, the court found the following facts: On October 9, 1922, the plaintiff married James Hayes and had as issue of the marriage four daughters born between 1923 and 1929, the three defendants and Helen Powers. With money borrowed from the plaintiff’s mother, the plaintiff and Hayes purchased at auction, as tenants in common, property in East Granby for $1000. The plaintiff and Hayes livéd on the property until 1925 when they moved and lived at various addresses in Hartford and Newington. In July, 1929, Hayes left home, abandoned ¡the plaintiff and never returned. During these difficult depression years, the family was further brbken up, the plaintiff was hospitalized and the daughters became wards of the state. In 1933, the plaintiff and her daughters were reunited. Although the evidence is conflicting, the court found that during the years 1932 to 1937 the plaintiff and some of her daughters made visits to the home of Hayes’ parents in New York City and often saw him there.

The court found further that the plaintiff, on June 3, 1938, applied to the Probate Court for the district of East Granby for letters of administration on Hayes’ estate and, despite her knowledge to the contrary, stated on her application that he had died on or before June 27, 1930. The Probate Court granted administration of the estate based on the statutory presumption of death arising from the alleged seven-year period of unexplained absence. General Statutes (Eev. 1930) § 4908. The inventory filed listed Hayes’ only asset as a half- *153 interest in the property in question which, for inventory purposes, was valued at $125. On July 26, 1938, the Probate Court distributed Hayes’ half-interest in the property to the plaintiff in the form of a widow’s allowance, and a copy of the order of distribution was recorded on the land records on August 20, 1938. No further steps were ever taken to complete the administration of the estate. At the time of the administration of the estate, all four daughters were minors but no guardian ad litem was appointed and they were not told that their mother had probated their father’s estate. On August 6, 1938, the plaintiff married her present husband, Jesse Euick, and less than one month later, on September 3, 1938, Hayes died.

On these findings, the court properly could conclude, as it did, that the decree of the East Granby Probate Court was procured by fraud on the part of the plaintiff. Smith v. Frank, 165 Conn. 200, 202, 332 A.2d 76; see Paiva v. Vanech Heights Construction Co., 159 Conn. 512, 515, 271 A.2d 69. The fraud concerned a jurisdictional fact, the asserted death of the decedent, and the decree was subject to collateral attack and to being declared null and void. Kitten v. Klebanoff, 140 Conn. 111, 116, 98 A.2d 520; Folwell v. Howell, 117 Conn. 565, 572, 169 A. 199; 1 Locke & Kohn, Conn. Probate Practice §§ 41, 121; see General Statutes § 45-9. The court did not find, however, and there is nothing in the record to indicate, that the plaintiff in any way influenced the Probate Court to distribute the property solely to her. In fact, her application for letters of administration listed all the daughters.

Notwithstanding the questionable validity of the probate decree, the court found the following facts relevant to the plaintiff’s claim of title by adverse *154 possession: Hayes’ one-half interest was distributed to the plaintiff as a widow’s allowance and the certificate of distribution was recorded. Since the termination of the probate proceedings in 1938, the plaintiff has regarded herself as the sole owner of the property and has never regarded her children as having any interest. She and her present husband, Jesse Ruick, built a house on the property and moved into it in 1939 with her four daughters. She and Ruick have made other improvements on the property, including painting, aluminum siding, a barn, and a garage. The garage was converted into living quarters for Ruick’s father. Portions of the property at various times have been rented and all income from rents or farming were retained by the plaintiff. In 1957, the plaintiff sold seven-eighths of an acre along the highway to the state of Connecticut. On two occasions after 1938, the plaintiff mortgaged the property. She has paid real estate taxes on it each year from the time it was purchased.

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Bluebook (online)
367 A.2d 1380, 171 Conn. 149, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruick-v-twarkins-conn-1976.