Schaible v. Heller

308 P.2d 597, 78 Idaho 632, 1957 Ida. LEXIS 181
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1957
DocketNo. 8429
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 308 P.2d 597 (Schaible v. Heller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaible v. Heller, 308 P.2d 597, 78 Idaho 632, 1957 Ida. LEXIS 181 (Idaho 1957).

Opinion

BAKER, District Judge.

Herman A. Schaible, who was generally known as Herman Stone, a bachelor, resident of Clearwater County for a period of more than forty years, died on March 19, 1951 at the age of seventy-nine years leaving a will by the terms of which his entire estate was given to a grandnephew and a grandniece. The will was admitted to probate and, one of the named executors being dead and the other declining to act, an administrator with the will annexed was appointed. Prior to hearing on petition for distribution in accordance with the will, Lawton S. Schaible, asserting that he was a pretermitted son and sole heir of deceased, filed obj ections to distribution under the will .and prayed that the entire estate be distributed to him. His petition did not disclose that he claimed as an acknowledged illegitimate son.

From adverse decree in the probate court claimant appealed to the district court. Upon trial in that court two special interrogatories were submitted to the jury as follows: “Is Lawton S. Schaible the illegitimate son of Herman Stone, also known as Herman Schaible?” and “Did Herman Stone, also known as Herman Schaible, in writing signed in the presence of a competent witness, acknowledge himself to be the father of Lawton S. Schaible?” The jury was instructed that if the first question be answered in the negative the second need not be answered. The jury answered the first question in the negative and made no answer to the second. The jury’s answer was adopted as finding of fact and decree was entered affirming the decree of the probate court distributing the estate in accordance with the will.

From that decree claimant appealed. The judgment was reversed, 77 Idaho 63, 286 P.2d 329, 333, for errors of law occurring at the trial. The cause was remanded for new trial. The sufficiency of the evidence to require or to sustain a finding that claimant was the illegitimate son of deceased or that deceased, by an instrument in writing signed by him in the presence of a com[636]*636petent witness, had acknowledged himself to he the father of claimant was not considered or determined.

On the former appeal this Court, after quoting from Section 14 — 104, I.C. that “Every illegitimate child is an heir of the person who, in writing, signed in the presence of a competent witness, acknowledges himself to he the father of such child; * * *” said:

“Under the provisions of the statute, before appellant is entitled to inherit his alleged father’s estate, he would not only have to prove that he was fathered by deceased, but it must also be made to appear that the alleged father in writing signed in the presence of a competent witness, acknowledged himself to be the father of such child.”

Upon retrial no special interrogatories were submitted to the jury. By agreement of counsel two forms of general verdict, one in favor of the plaintiff (appellant) and the other in favor of the defendants (respondents) were submitted. The jury returned general verdict in favor of defendants (respondents) .

The court instructed the jury in part that:

“You are instructed that the issues to be determined by you in this case are these: First, is Lawton S. Schaible the illegitimate son of Herman A. Stone, also known as Herman A. Schaible, deceased ?

“Second: Did Herman A. Stone, also known as Herman A. Schaible, deceased, in writing, in the presence of one or more competent witnesses, acknowledge himself to be the father of Lawton S. Schaible?

“If your answer to both of the foregoing questions is ‘yes’, then your verdict must be in favor of the plaintiff.

“If your answer to either or both of the foregoing questions is ‘no’, then your verdict must be in favor of the defendants.”

The quoted instruction fairly and accurately directed the attention of the jury to the two disputed questions of fact actually involved and correctly stated, as this court decided, that the appellant could prevail only in the event both questions were answered in his favor. It is not contended that any other or additional question of fact was for the consideration of the jury.

Upon the general verdict the trial court found “that * * * the plaintiff has failed •to prove that he is entitled to share in the estate of the deceased” and accordingly entered decree again affirming the decree of the probate court. It cannot be determined from the record whether the decree was entered upon findings in favor of the respondents on the issue of paternity or on the issue of acknowledgment or on both of said issues. Appellant did not question or object to the sufficiency of the findings or request the trial court to make more definite or certain findings or to find distinctly [637]*637and separately on the two issues of fact involved.

From the decree so entered on the general verdict claimant has again appealed. His chief contention is that the evidence requires findings favorable to him on both questions of fact. He argues upon the premise, and apparently assumes, that the general verdict was a finding adverse to him on both of said questions.

We have concluded, on the first question, that the evidence is sufficient to require a finding that appellant is the illegitimate son of the deceased. At the time of the trial the two persons who had personal knowledge of the facts were deceased; naturally the evidence was circumstantial. It would serve no useful purpose to detail the circumstances established. Suffice it to say that the circumstances point definitely and rather conclusively to the fact that the relation of father and son existed between deceased and appellant.

The question of the sufficiency of the evidence to require a finding that the- deceased, in manner required by statute, Section 14-104, I.C., above quoted so far as material, had, in writing, acknowledged-that he was the father of appellant renders consideration of the evidence necessary. Appellant’s chief witness on this phase of the case was one Franklin J. Davidson, a life insurance agent, who testified by deposition on the first trial, in open court on the second. This witness on the trial testified that he was then eighty-one years of age, a personal friend of appellant, that he knew Herman Schaible (deceased) by sight and met him and his cousin, Albert Zahn, on a cold but snowless day in the early part of December, 1929, at the American Hotel in Ann Arbor, Michigan, that Zahn informed the witness that deceased wanted to purchase a policy of life insurance, that an application for a $1,000 policy in the Northern States Insurance Company of Michigan was prepared, that in its preparation he (witness) read the questions on the application and wrote in blank spaces left therefor the answers made by Schaible (deceased), that in answer to the question as to beneficiaries Schaible said the first beneficiary should be “my cousin, Albert Zahn, and I want my son, Lawton Schaible, second beneficiary”, that such answer was written in the application which was then signed by deceased. There is at least an indication that by deposition on the first trial he said that deceased refused to sign. He also testified on the second trial that he then requested payment of the premium, that Schaible did not have sufficient money with which to make payment, that some argument developed and the witness tore up the application and threw it into the wastebasket.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
308 P.2d 597, 78 Idaho 632, 1957 Ida. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaible-v-heller-idaho-1957.