State v. Vincent

52 P.2d 203, 152 Or. 205, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 68
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 52 P.2d 203 (State v. Vincent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vincent, 52 P.2d 203, 152 Or. 205, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 68 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

*207 KELLY, J.

On February 17, 1930, John Whalen died. On February 18,1930, defendants, John W. Vincent and Susan E. Brentano filed a petition in the county court of Yamhill county, Oregon, for the appointment of said defendant, Susan E. Brentano, as administratrix of the estate of said John Whalen, deceased. In said petition, it was stated, among other things, that defendant, Susan E. Brentano, was a niece, and defendants, John W. Vincent and James M. Vincent were nephews of said John Whalen, deceased, and his only heirs at law. Based upon said petition, said county court entered an order appointing said defendant, Susan E. Brentano, as such administratrix.

On August 30, 1930, said defendant Susan E. Brentano, filed her final account, wherein, among other things, it was stated that said Susan E. Brentano and John W. and James M. Vincent were the only heirs at law of said John Whalen, deceased.

On October 4, 1930, said county court entered an order approving said final account, which said order contained a recital that said Susan E. Brentano, John W. Vincent and James M. Vincent were the only heirs at law of said John Whalen, deceased, and directed the distribution of his estate among them.

On August 5,1931, the state of Oregon, instituted an action at law in the circuit court for Yamhill county, to escheat the property of said John Whalen to the state of Oregon, it being charged therein that said Susan E. Brentano was not a niece and that said John W. Vincent and James M. Vincent were not nephews of said John Whalen, deceased, and that none of said three defendants sustained any kinship whatever to said deceased ; and it being further charged therein that said deceased left no heirs or heir whatever surviving him.

*208 Said Susan Brentano and said John W. and James M. Vincent filed an answer in said escheat action wherein they set out the proceedings in the probate court hereinabove reviewed and pleaded the final order of October 4,1930, as res adjudicata on the question of heirship. To this plea the state demurred. On May 25, 1932, the trial court overruled the demurrer and held that the order of October 4, 1930, until reversed or set aside, was conclusive upon the state and amounted to an adjudication that John Whalen died leaving said Susan E. Brentano and her said brothers, John W. and James M. Vincent, as his heirs.

The state elected not to plead further in that case and on June 28,1933, the court entered an order directing that the action be dismissed with prejudice. The state undertook to appeal to this court from said order of dismissal, but failed seasonably to file a transcript on appeal and said appeal was therefore dismissed. (State v. Vincent, 141 Or. 107 (16 P. (2d) 636.) )

On January 30, 1933, a judgment upon this court’s mandate was entered by the circuit court.

On June 22, 1933, the state filed a motion in the escheat case to reopen the ease and permit the plaintiff to file a reply attacking the validity of the county court order of October 4,1930. There never was any hearing upon this motion.

On October 14, 1933, the present suit in equity was instituted, for the purpose of setting aside the order of October 4, 1930, made and entered by the county court and to declare that the property of said estate belongs to the state. The ground upon which plaintiff bases its right for such relief is that said order of October 4, 1930, was procured by fraud and without notice to the state of Oregon.

*209 Said Vincents and Snsan E. Brentano, in resisting plaintiff’s suit have pleaded in bar, (1) said order of October 4, 1930, (2) the order of the circuit court of May 25, 1932, overruling said demurrer, (3) the order of said circuit court of June 28, 1933, dismissing said escheat action, (4) the motion filed by the state to set aside the order of June 28,1933, and (5), the judgment on the mandate of this court entered by the circuit court on January 30,1933.

It is urged by appealing defendants that grounds for equitable relief against the probate order of October 4,1930, are not shown by this record; that the judgment in the escheat action is a bar to this suit in equity; and that plaintiff has been guilty of laches.

As we understand the argument of appealing defendants, it does not challenge the right of a party adversely affected by an order of distribution in an estate of a decedent to institute and maintain a suit in equity based upon extrinsic fraud to set aside such order of distribution; but their contention here is, that no extrinsic fraud has been shown to exist such as would warrant the setting aside of the probate court’s order of distribution. We can not concur in this view. It seems to be generally held that the fraudulent concealment of facts, which would have caused the judgment or decree not to have been rendered, will constitute extrinsic fraud sufficient to authorize the court, upon the discovery of the fraud, or when such fraud is called to the attention of the court, to vacate such judgment or decree: Paul v. Paul, 41 S. D. 383 (170 N. W. 658). In that case, the divorced wife, of deceased, was appointed administratrix upon a petition alleging that she was deceased’s widow. In point of fact, the petitioner was not the widow of deceased. She had been *210 divorced from deceased and at the time deceased died, she was the wife of another man.

The case of Sohler v. Sohler, 135 Cal. 323 (67 P. 282, 87 Am. St. Rep. 98), is there cited. In the Sohler case, the mother of certain children conspired to procure a portion of the estate of her lately deceased husband for another child of a former husband, representing that said other child was an heir of her late husband. This was held to be extrinsic fraud and concealment of the fact that this other child was not an heir.

In Weyant v. Utah Savings & Trust Co., 54 Utah 181 (182 P. 189, 9 A. L. R. 1119), a husband abandoned his lawful wife, eloped with another woman and lived under a fictitious name until his death, when his paramour secured appointment as administratrix and probated his estate in said fictitious name under representation that she was his wife, and thereby secured his property unknown to his wife and children. It was held that a court of equity had jurisdiction to grant relief, by opening the probate proceedings for the purpose of charging administratrix on her bond in view of Const. Art. I, § 11 and Art. 8 §§ 7 and 9, the fraud practiced by administratrix being “extrinsic fraud”.

In the case at bar, Susan E. Brentano was not related by consanguinity or affinity to deceased. Neither was James M. Vincent nor John W. Vincent. Under the foregoing authorities, the concealment of the fact of the entire lack of any relationship to deceased, is extrinsic fraud.

We are not unmindful that there are numerous decisions, denying equitable relief against judgments resting upon false and perjured evidence, in which it is broadly stated that a court of equity will not interfere in such a case. A note citing many cases on this *211 point will be found in Vol. 3, Ann. Cas. p. 83, et seq.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 P.2d 203, 152 Or. 205, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vincent-or-1935.