Sackman v. Campbell

45 P. 895, 15 Wash. 57, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 136
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1896
DocketNo 2230
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 P. 895 (Sackman v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sackman v. Campbell, 45 P. 895, 15 Wash. 57, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 136 (Wash. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.

The plaintiffs have appealed from a judgment of dismissal rendered upon an order sustaining a demurrer to their complaint. The complaint purports to contain two causes of action. It is alleged in the first cause of action that in 1840 Joseph [62]*62Sylva, then a resident of Philadelphia, died intestate on the high seas, leaving a widow, Sarah M. Sylva and their three minor children, two of whom are the plaintiffs ; that he left an estate consisting of certain personal property which by the laws of the state of Pennsylvania descended»one-third to the widow and the remainder to said children ; that about 1842 said widow married .one William Renton, and that she and Renton took possession of the estate of Sylva, realizing some $5,000 in money; that with a part of this sum they purchased a sailing vessel in which they with the children went to California and took up their place of abode ; that one of said children died in California, unmarried, and without issue, in 1857, and that her share of the property went, one-half to the mother and the other half to the plaintiffs. It is alleged that at the time of said marriage Renton had no property of his own, hut that on removing to California he employed said vessel and the remainder of the proceeds of Sylva’s estate in business of various kinds, by the profits of which he realized a large sum of money, with which he dealt in various properties, investing and reinvesting the same; by means of which he accumulated an estate exceeding three millions of dollars in value; that all of these properties became a trust fund to which the heirs of Sylva were entitled in their distributive shares, and that said Renton .became a trustee for them, but never accounted to any of them, or paid over to any of them any of the trust estate; that in 1890 their mother, said Sarah M. Renton, died in this state intestate, then being the wife of said William Renton, and leaving as her sole surviving children, heirs and next of kin the plaintiffs; that in 1891 said William Renton died,'having in his possession and under his control said estate [63]*63which he had attempted to dispose óf by will to other parties; that an executor had been appointed who had taken possession of the estate.

In this cause of action the plaintiffs seek to have the entire estate adjudged to belong to them on the grounds of its being a trust estate now in the hands of the legal representative of said Renton. They claim, that they first learned of their Pennsylvania estate and their rights therein in October, 1891, and they, allege that Renton had concealed the facts from them; that he occupied the position of a parent to them from the time he was married to their mother, and took them into his house, they then being eight and four years of age; that he always treated them affectionately, maintained and educated them as if they were his children, and that they bore his name and lived with him as his children until they were married.

A number of objections are urged against this cause of action, one of which is that the plaintiffs’ rights, if they ever had any, were barred by the lapse of time; that it fails to show sufficient reasons why the plaintiffs remained silent from the time they attained their majority until 1891, a period of over thirty years-The only answer to this is that Renton concealed the facts from them and represented that the property was his own.

We are of the opinion that the demurrer to this cause of action was well taken. The complaint fails to show how the plaintiffs obtained their information in 1891, and the bare allegation that they had no knowledge of the facts prior to that time is overcome by the other matters pleaded. It appears that at the beginning of the action they were fifty-nine and fifty-five years of age, and were women with husbands, and they do not [64]*64allege any want of capacity upon the part of themselves or their husbands to attend to or inform themselves of business matters of the character in question. There is no allegation that their mother had withheld from them their parentage or their family history, or that they were ignorant of it. The complaint simply rests upon the bare allegation in this particular, that they had no knowledge of the facts until October, 1891, and that Renton concealed the same from them and represented that the property was his. The plaintiffs having no legal claims upon said Renton and having already obtained over $700,000 worth of property from his estate by virtue of a settlement, as appears in their complaint, when they come into a court of equity and seek from an investment of $5,000 to obtain alleged accumulations amounting to millions, after the lapse of half a century, they must make a clear and explicit statement of all matters connected with their failure to assert their rights at an earlier date, including the source of their final knowledge as to their rights, when and how obtained, etc., in order to avoid a charge of laches. It does not appear that this information, which they acquired so shortly after the death of their mother and Renton, had not been open to them for years. No facts are alleged showing any fraudulent concealment by Renton. His saying that the property possessed by him was his may have been but the honest expression of his opinion only, and the circumstances would indicate that it was nothing more. Considering the parental care he had exercised over these plaintiffs, and the kind and generous manner in which he at all times treated them, it is certainly a most far-fetched claim that he intentionally, persistently and fraudulently, during all of said years, concealed from them the facts connected with [65]*65their parentage, and that their real father had left this small amount of property, which he and their mother had taken possession of, and which the plaintiffs represent had grown into this colossal fortune to which they are entitled.

Conceding all that can be legitimately drawn from the allegations in this cause of action, in favor of the plaintiffs, it nevertheless is apparent, beyond all sensible controversy, that the claim is one of the stalest of the stale, and in all reason at this late day and time the plaintiffs, should be “barred from pressing it, there-being no sufficient facts alleged to show any fraudulent concealment or dealing. We are aware that we have uniformly followed a liberal rule in construing pleadings as against demurrers; but the facts apparent from the complaint in this case should make an exception to that rule in considering the bare allegations of the deception by Renton and a want of knowledge on their part. Under all the circumstances shown, good pleading demands that they should allege sufficient facts, with particularity, showing such an exceptional case as would authorize them after all this lapse of time to successfully lay claim to this vast estate accumulated from so small a start. As was said in a somewhat similar case, Felix v. Patrick, 145 U. S. 317 (12 Sup. Ct. 867) :

“The disproportion is so great that the conscience is startled, and the inquiry is at once suggested whether it can be possible that the defendant has been guilty of fraud so gross as to involve consequences so disastrous.”

If so, it is apparent that an exceptionally strong case must be made, and it is not made by the general allegations pleaded. Hazard v. Griswold, 21 Fed. 178; Ambler v. Choteau, 107 U. S.

Related

Lutton v. Steng
227 N.W. 414 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)
Kellner v. Rowe
242 P. 353 (Washington Supreme Court, 1926)
Johnston v. Spokane & Inland Empire Railroad
177 P. 810 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)
Kline v. Galland
102 P. 440 (Washington Supreme Court, 1909)
Gay v. Havermale
71 P. 190 (Washington Supreme Court, 1903)
Huntington v. Lombard
60 P. 414 (Washington Supreme Court, 1900)
Pronger v. Old National Bank
56 P. 391 (Washington Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 P. 895, 15 Wash. 57, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sackman-v-campbell-wash-1896.