St. Clair v. St. Clair

28 P.2d 894, 46 Wyo. 446, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 44
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1934
Docket1782
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 894 (St. Clair v. St. Clair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Clair v. St. Clair, 28 P.2d 894, 46 Wyo. 446, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 44 (Wyo. 1934).

Opinion

*453 Riner, Justice.

*454 This is a proceeding by direct appeal to review several orders made by the District Court of Fremont County, in the course of the probate of the estate of John St. Clair, deceased, in said court. The facts out of which the controversy arose appear to be, in substance, these:

On December 24, 1928, John St. Clair, a member of the Shoshone Indian tribe, died on the tribal reservation in Fremont County, Wyoming. With him at the time of his death was Annie Tidzump St. Clair, an Indian woman, with whom he had been living; as his wife, for more than 18 years, their marriage having been solemnized by Rev. John Roberts, a minister, on June 1, 1910. At the time this marriage ceremony was performed, the clergyman executed and gave to the parties aforesaid a formal marriage certificate.

It appears that, previous to the date last mentioned and about the year 1900, John St. Clair and one Lucy Enos, also' an Indian woman, were married. The following year a son was born to them, by name of Ray Enos St. Clair. About a year after the birth of the child and in 1902 or 1903, the mother married one Sequail Hurtado, living thereafter with him as his wife until her death, which occurred on September 27, 1921. She also had children by him. Neither the marriage of Lucy Enos to Hur-tado nor that of John St. Clair to Annie Tidzump appear to have been questioned by anyone prior to the deaths of Lucy Enos and John St. Clair.

Letters of administration upon the estate of John St. Clair were issued to J. K. Moore, Jr., on January 11, 1929. An inventory of the estate property was duly made and filed disclosing that said estate consisted of personal property only, valued at $'2,110. *455 A widow’s allowance of $20 per month was ordered by the court to be paid Annie St. Clair. In due course of administration, notice of final settlement of the estate was published, after the final report of the administrator had been filed, and on the last day for the presentation of objections thereto under the law, Ray Enos St. Clair filed a petition asking that the court adjudge him to be the son of John St. Clair, deceased, and heir of said estate.

Thereafter and on May 2, 1930, a hearing was had on the petition last mentioned, and in consequence, the court found that “John St. Clair and Lucy Enos St. Clair were duly and legally married according to the customs of the Shoshone Indian tribe, and that Ray Enos St. Clair is the issue of said marriage.” It was therefore adjudged that he “is the son and legal heir of John St. Clair, deceased, and that as such son and heir he is legally entitled to share in the distribution of said estate with all the legal rights of a son and heir of said John St. Clair, deceased.” Review proceedings relative to this judgment were never perfected. Subsequently, on July 7, 1930, the court ordered that the allowance made to Annie St. Clair, as widow of John St. Clair, deceased, be increased from $20 to $30 per month.

Meanwhile and on April 30, 1930, Annie St. Clair had filed her petition, under the provisions of sections 6879 and 6880, Wyo. Comp. St. 1920 (Wyo. Rev. St. 1931, §§ 88-2904 and 88-2905), praying an order setting over to her, as her absolute property, all of said estate, it being alleged among other things that there was no homestead, that the property remaining in said estate was of less value than the exemption allowed by law, and that there were no minor heirs. A hearing was had on this peti *456 tion, and on February 13, 1932, another judge sitting, the court entered an order granting the prayer thereof. It is from this order that the appellant, Ray Enos St. Clair, appeals, as well as from an order made on the same date overruling his motion requesting that the court declare the widow, Annie St. Clair, in default in the heirship determination hearing before mentioned as held over a year and a half previously.

Respondents have filed a motion to dismiss the case here for failure on appellant’s part to comply with Rule 37 of this court, dealing with the preparation of abstracts' of the record. This motion was filed May 27, 1933. More than two months later and on August 12, appellant filed an “application for permission to file supplemental abstract, also reply and supplemental brief, and statement.” This application was accompanied with the papers for which leave to file was thus sought. Respondents have objected to leave being granted, pointing out, among other reasons for their position, that “No attempt has been made in the original or supplemental abstract to abstract the evidence either in substance or in narrative form as required by Rule 37.”

No satisfactory reason seems to be advanced in the application for permission to file the enumerated papers why a proper abstract of the record was not prepared and filed, in the first place, as the rule of this court requires. An inspection of the proposed supplemental abstract together with the original abstract filed by the appellant makes it very clear that the objection of the respondents, above quoted, is well taken. Rule 37 of this court, in the course of its requirements, directs that:

“In the case of oral testimony and depositions, *457 the substance shall be reduced to narrative form except where, with respect to material portions of the record, it is deemed necessary to use the exact language thereof.”

This was not done. Even the names of the witnesses testifying are in some instances omitted from the abstract, and parts only of their testimony are set forth. We find, also, that argument on the merits of the case is undertaken to be woven into the supplemental abstract with statements taken from the record itself. This should not be done. The proper place for argument, it should hardly be necessary to say, is in the submitted briefs of the parties. Under the decision of this court in Simpson v. Occidental Building & Loan Ass’n, et al., 45 Wyo. 425, 19 P. (2d) 958, we might very properly decline to grant leave to file the supplemental abstract, and forthwith dismiss the appeal.

Without regarding this case at all as a precedent for doing so in the future, yet as the record here covering the principal questions argued in the briefs of the parties is quite short, we have taken the trouble to examine it in its entirety with care. Our study thereof has led us to the conclusion that no good reason has been presented for disturbing the order setting aside the property of the estate to Annie St. Clair. Briefly, our views on the matter are these:

The contention is advanced for appellant that there was no proper proof made of the marriage of John St. Clair and Annie Tidzump. But there appears in the record, not only the testimony of the widow that she was married to John St. Clair by the Rev. John Roberts, a minister, and that she and John St. Clair lived together continuously as husband and wife from the date of the marriage un *458 til his death, but also the fact that the clergyman executed and gave to them the formal certificate of marriage dated June 1, 1910, which was offered and received in evidence on the hearing below.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Powell v. Estate of Fletcher
2006 WY 21 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2006)
Matter of Fray
721 P.2d 1054 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1986)
Compton v. Davis Oil Co.
607 F. Supp. 1221 (D. Wyoming, 1985)
In Re Pilcher's Estate. Von Pilcher v. Pilcher
197 P.2d 143 (Utah Supreme Court, 1948)
Dudley v. Montgomery Ward & Co.
192 P.2d 617 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1948)
Wyodak Chemical Co. v. Board of Land Commissioners
65 P.2d 1103 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1937)
Tibbals v. Graham
61 P.2d 279 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1936)
Harris v. Schoonmaker
58 P.2d 415 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1936)
Farmers State Bank of Riverton v. Investors Guaranty Corp.
45 P.2d 1057 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1935)
Wyoming Automotive Co. v. Weisflog
30 P.2d 490 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 894, 46 Wyo. 446, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-clair-v-st-clair-wyo-1934.