State Ex Rel. Thompson v. District Court

163 P.2d 640, 118 Mont. 95, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 7
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1945
Docket8630
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 P.2d 640 (State Ex Rel. Thompson v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Thompson v. District Court, 163 P.2d 640, 118 Mont. 95, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 7 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Relator seeks the supervisory powers of this court to annul an order of. the respondent court dismissing his application for the appointment of a guardian of the person and estate of his mother, Lucile Y. Thompson.

The petition of relator in the respondent court was grounded upon allegations that because of the intemperate use of stimulants Lucile Y. Thompson is mentally incompetent to manage her property of which she is the owner of a substantial amount.

The evidence introduced at the hearing was substantially as follows:

Dr. John G. Thompson, of Helena, died in February, 1945, leaving surviving him his wife, Lucile, and his son, petitioner here, liis only child. Petitioner was living in California with his wife and family at the time of his father’s death. Upon learning of his father’s death he came to Helena and remained here for a short time thereafter.

While in Helena he tried to persuade his mother, Lucile, to go to California with him. She at first agreed to do so and later changed her mind. Before leaving Helena for California petitioner made a complete list of the property of his mother, she not being able at that time to do so herself, she having stated to petitioner according to his testimony: “You take care of it; I don’t know what it is all about.” At that time she was taking seconal tablets and alcohol. She' receives from insurance on an annuity basis the sum of $250 per month. She also owned between twelve and fifteen thousand dollars worth of bonds and there was considerable cash on deposit in the bank at the time of her husband’s death, two automobiles and the home in which they lived; Mrs. Thompson also owned a *97 house and lot in Del Mar, California, which she inherited from her parents.

Petitioner after returning to California telephoned to his mother two or three times in an effort to persuade her to go to California but she said she wasn’t able to travel and couldn’t possibly make it. He finally received word that she was in the hospital at Helena with pneumonia and thereupon petitioner, his wife and Mr. John Young, a brother of Lucile Thompson, who lives in California, in the month of June following the death of Dr. Thompson came to Helena and found that Mrs. Thompson had returned to her home but that she was still very weak and quite ill. They again tried to persuade her to go to California to which she at first agreed and a day or two later changed her mind. When they first arrived in Helena she was glad to see them but by the time they left a few days later she didn’t want to talk to any of the three.

A Mrs. Nash was staying with her some of the nights. She was formerly employed by the Thompson Clinic as a nurse. Mrs. Nash was then making collections for her and paying her bills.

Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Nash each had a separate deposit box in the First National Bank of Helena. When petitioner arrived in Helena in May or June he found that his mother’s jewelry worth about $15,000 was in the safety deposit box of Mrs. Nash. He obtained the jewelry from Mrs. Nash and returned it to his mother with the understanding that she would put it in her own box.

In September petitioner again returned to Helena. Mrs. Thompson was still very weak. She then seemed glad to see him. Petitioner then found that Mrs. Thompson had meanwhile cashed $5,000 of war bonds and made two withdrawals of $5,000 each from her bank account, one' of which was made on July 19th and the other on July 27th.

He asked his mother about these withdrawals and found that she had no recollection of it but that if she had made the withdrawals the money must be in Mrs. Nash’s safety deposit box. *98 Later Mrs. Thompson told petitioner that she thought this money “was collections from the doctor’s accounts.” She said she cashed the war bonds because “She was angry at one of the bankers” and did it to “spite him”. Mrs. Thompson, according to the testimony of petitioner, called Mrs. Nash over the telephone and “told her she wanted to go down to the bank and get into the safety deposit box, Mrs. Nash”; that she informed Mrs. Nash that petitioner was there; that Mrs. Nash thereupon met Mrs. Thompson and petitioner at the bank and there was then removed from Mrs. Nash’s box and placed in Mrs. Thompson’s box $10,000 in cash, the proceeds of the withdrawals, consisting of $100 bills, all of the jewelry valued at $15,000 which had again found its way into Mrs. Nash’s safety deposit box, and all the stocks and bonds belonging to Mrs. Thompson. Petitioner testified that.Mrs. Thompson’s explanation to him of the reasons for the withdrawals was that “she seemed to be afraid somebody was going to take it away from her. She said they put it down there for tax reasons. Then she mentioned the fact that most of it came from past collections from my father’s past accounts.” Petitioner testified that he had arranged to have Mrs. Nash collect the accounts on a 10% commission and that from his personal acquaintance with the accounts the $10,-000 was in no way involved in those accounts.

At the time that the property was removed from the safety deposit box of Mrs. Nash and returned to the box .of Mrs. Thompson petitioner endeavored to persuade his mother to have the bank handle her affairs. She at first agreed to do so and an attorney was consulted 'to draw the necessary papers for her to sign the next day. During the course of the evening she changed her mind.

Petitioner testified that Mrs. Nash “seemed to have a great deal of influence on her.” Mrs. Nash was told by petitioner of the plan to go to California and to have the bank look after his mother’s property. Mrs. Nash planned to go to California with them. The next day Mrs. Thompson had changed her mind, saying that she “considered herself perfectly able to *99 handle her own affairs; that she didn’t want to go to California; and that she wasn’t going to be forced into anything.”

Mrs. Thompson has not yet looked after her inheritance tax. The opinion of petitioner is that Mrs. Thompson is not competent to handle her affairs and that there is great immediate danger of her losing practically all of her personal property. On cross-examination he was asked whether he would, sell the house if he were appointed guardian and he replied “That is up to her.”

Petitioner was also asked: “Q. She was frightened ever since your father died that if she went to California you would attempt to commit her to an asylum. Didn’t she tell you that continuously? A. She didn’t tell me that but she seems to have told everybody else that. ’ ’ He testified that the stocks and bonds that were in Mrs. Nash’s box were not endorsed.

Regarding the house in California the record shows that Mrs. Thompson furnished it with new furniture at a cost of about $5,000 .and then sold the house completely furnished for $8,500 whereas according to petitioner the house alone was reasonably worth $12,000.

Mr. E. D. Patenaude, of Helena, engaged in the insurance and real estate business, testified that in 1942 he had examined the bills for the furnishing of the house in Del Mar, California; that in his estimation such furnishings were well worth $5,000; and that he insured them for that amount.

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

Related

González Hernández v. González Hernández
181 P.R. 746 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 2011)
Hornaday v. Hornaday
48 So. 2d 207 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 P.2d 640, 118 Mont. 95, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-v-district-court-mont-1945.