Villalon v. Bowen

273 P.2d 409, 70 Nev. 456, 1954 Nev. LEXIS 73
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1954
Docket3778
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 273 P.2d 409 (Villalon v. Bowen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Villalon v. Bowen, 273 P.2d 409, 70 Nev. 456, 1954 Nev. LEXIS 73 (Neb. 1954).

Opinion

*459 OPINION

By the Court,

Merrill, J.:

This is an appeal from judgment impressing a trust upon assets in the hands of appellant, which assets had, prior to distribution, constituted the estate of appellant’s deceased husband. The essential question involved is this: the probate court having distributed the estate to appellant as widow of the deceased, did the court below in this independent suit err in decreeing that appellant in fact was not decedent’s widow; that she had wrongfully concealed this fact from the court and from those entitled to know and had thus fraudulently advanced her claim to the estate; that equity should intervene to prevent her from enjoying the fruits of her fraud by impressing upon the estate distributed to her a trust in favor of those entitled to it under the will of decedent?

In 1946 appellant was married to Charles Benjamin Knox in Virginia City, Nevada. In 1949 she commenced a suit for divorce in Washoe County, Nevada. While that suit was pending Knox died. Three days later, August 17, appellant, under the name of Geral Phyllis Knox, filed her petition for letters of administration of the Knox estate.

Knox had left a will executed in 1941 .naming one *460 Renwick Thompson of San Diego, California, as executor. On September 4, 1949 Thompson filed a petition for probate of the will. Appellant promptly filed objections to probate upon the ground that the will had been executed prior to her marriage to Knox and thus had been revoked by operation of law. She then went to San Diego and conferred with Thompson, representing herself to be Knox’s widow and sole heir at law. She prevailed upon Thompson to file a renunciation of his right to act as executor.

Appellant, without opposition, was duly appointed administratrix and proceeded to administration of the estate. In June, 1950 the probate court ordered distribution to her of the entire estate.

In March, 1951 information was received by Thompson which, upon investigation, brought to light facts casting doubt upon the validity of appellant’s marriage to Knox. It was discovered that in 1933 appellant, under her true maiden name of Phyllis Lucille Names, had been married to one Domingo Villalon, a native of the Philippine Islands.

Upon representation to the probate court that the estate possessed a possible equitable interest in the distributed assets, respondent Bowen was appointed special administrator. He thereupon brought this action against appellant to recover the assets distributed to her. He contended that the Villalon marriage had still been in effect at the time of the Knox ceremony; that the Knox marriage was thus rendered null and void under Nevada law. He contended that these facts had been known to appellant at the time she had secured Thompson’s renunciation and her own appointment as administratrix and distribution of the estate to her and that she had been guilty of fraud.

On August 28, 1953, after trial without jury, judgment was rendered in favor of respondent, holding appellant to be trustee of the estate distributed to her by the probate court and directing that the trust estate *461 be delivered over to respondent. From that judgment appellant has taken this appeal.

This factual outline will be amplified as appellant’s various assignments of error are discussed. These we shall discuss in six divisions.

First: Appellant contends that her marriage to Villalon had been terminated prior to her marriage to Knox by virtue of Villalon’s “civil death.”

In 1935 in Oregon, Villalon had been convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in the state penitentiary. Oregon law (sec. 23-1407, Oregon Compiled Laws Annotated) provides: “A-person sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life is thereafter deemed civilly dead.” Our question, therefore, is as to the effect of civil death in Oregon so far as concerns a pre-existing marriage.

Oregon law is silent upon the question. Decisions of courts of other states are rare. Appellant directs our attention to certain authority exemplified by the cases collected in annotation, 139 A.L.R. 1323. In these cases, however, the civil death statute was supported by statutes relating to marriage or divorce and could not be said in and of itself to have caused termination of the marital status. The only case cited which appears squarely in point is Graham v. Graham, 251 Ala. 124, 36 S.2d 316, 319. The court was there faced with a civil death statute and also with a statute providing as ground for divorce imprisonment in the state penitentiary for two years under a sentence of seven years or longer. It held that the divorce statute “in pari materia with the civil death statute, convinces us that the Legislature did not intend that the civil death statute should have the effect of dissolving the marital status-.”

Oregon law (sec. 9-907, Oregon Compiled Laws Annotated) provides that conviction of a felony shall be ground for divorce. In our view the Oregon legislature, having expressly provided means for dissolution of a *462 marriage to a felon, could not have intended the civil death statute to have such effect.

This would appear to be in accord with the general view that in absence of express language such statutes are not to be broadly construed. In Plainer v. Sherwood, 6 Johns. Ch., 118, 129, Chancellor Kent points out that at common law civil death did not apply to persons attainted of felony but “seems to have been confined to the cases of persons professed, or abjured or banished the realm.” In 139 A.L.R. 1308, 1310, the annotator states, “* * * even where a statute has incorporated [civil death] as a part of the punishment for crime, the courts have been reluctant to invoke it unless the express language of the statute left no escape and compelled them to do so.”

We conclude that the Villalon marriage was not terminated under Oregon law by Villalon’s civil death.

Second: Appellant contends that the Villalon marriage was terminated by divorce prior to the Knox marriage. The question here is essentially one of fact rather than law. Appellant’s contention essentially is that the trial court believed the wrong witnesses, a contention we would ordinarily dismiss without discussion. The facts are, however, helpful in depicting a full chronology of events and were established by depositions which are before us to the same extent as they were before the trial court.

We note, therefore, that after serving a few years of his sentence Villalon was, in 1939, deported to the Philippine Islands. In 1951 his whereabouts were ascertained by Thompson. On October 29, 1951 he voluntarily appeared in the office of a Manila attorney for respondent and made affidavit that he had married appellant in Vancouver, Washington in 1933;“ had never heard from her since his deportation; and had never secured a divorce or annulment of that marriage.

Subsequent to commencement of this action steps were *463 taken by respondent to establish these facts by the taking of Villalon’s deposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P.2d 409, 70 Nev. 456, 1954 Nev. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/villalon-v-bowen-nev-1954.