Williams v. Williams

263 P. 725, 83 Colo. 180
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 27, 1927
DocketNo. 11,767.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 263 P. 725 (Williams v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Williams, 263 P. 725, 83 Colo. 180 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Whiteord

delivered the opinion of the court,

*181 í

The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the court below. Elizabeth Jane Williams will be referred to herein as the defendant.

The plaintiff, Dudley A. Williams, brought this suit, praying that the marriage between his uncle, Benjamin M. Williams, deceased, and the defendant, Elizabeth Jane Williams, be declared void on the ground of fraud practiced by the defendant upon the deceased, who it is alleged was a mental incompetent, and incapable of entering into a marriage contract. The answer to the amended complaint contains several separate defenses. To the plaintiff’s amended replication the defendant demurred on various grounds. The court sustained the demurrer in part, and the plaintiff elected to stand by his pleadings, and the court thereupon dismissed the action. The plaintiff comes here by writ of error.

The estate of Benjamin M. Williams has been a source of much litigation in the lower courts, as well as in this court. See Williams v. Hankins, 75 Colo. 136, 225 Pac. 243; Williams v. Hankins, 79 Colo. 237, 245 Pac. 483; Williams v. Hankins, 82 Colo. 251, 258 Pac. 1114.

Perhaps a short historical statement of these controversies will tend to clarify the questions raised for our solution. The decedent, Benjamin M. Williams, executed a will on March 28, 1911. Thereafter, on November 27, 1917, Williams married the defendant, Elizabeth Jane Williams. Within three weeks after the marriage the plaintiff instituted lunacy proceedings against his uncle, Benjamin M. Williams, wherein the latter was adjudged a mental incompetent by reason of old age, disease, and mental weakness. Immediately thereafter J. C. Hankins was appointed conservator. The defendant brought suit against the conservator to enforce an antenuptial agreement for $15,000, to be paid to her in lieu of her rights of inheritance, which provided that Williams’ estate should pass by distribution, as by the terms of the will, and the codicils thereto, notwithstandin his marriage to the defendant. Mrs. Williams had *182 judgment in the district court for that sum, and the same was paid to her out of the estate of Williams by the conservator. Thereafter, on October 11, 1920, Williams died, and the defendant, as widow, applied to the county court for letters of administration. Hankins, the conservator, who was named as executor in the will, and who was also a legatee, presented the will for probate. In his petition Hankins alleged the marriage and ante-nuptial agreement suit, the judgment in the district court, its allowance by the county court, and the payment of same by the conservator out of the property of Benjamin M. Williams. To this petition for the probate of the will the defendant, who was admitted in the petition to be the widow of the deceased, filed a caveat, claiming that the district court, in entering judgment in the suit on the antenuptial agreement, was without jurisdiction, and that the will of Benjamin M. Williams was revoked by his marriage to the defendant. The county court, and district court on appeal, sustained Hankins’ petition, and ordered the will admitted to probate. On review of that judgment in this court (Williams v. Hankins, 75 Colo. 136), the judgment was reversed, on the ground that the oral antenuptial agreement was void under the statute of frauds, and that the district court had no jurisdiction to render the judgment, which, it was held, was, in effect, ordering the probate of the will of Benjamin M. Williams before his death. After the issuance of the remittitur out of this court, letters of administration, dated April 24, 1924, were granted to Elizabeth Jane Williams, the defendant, as the widow of Benjamin M. Williams. Thereafter, on December 12, 1924, this suit to annul the marriage was instituted by the plaintiff in the district court.

The essential averments of the amended complaint in the instant case, for the purposes of this review, are: That Benjamin M. Williams died intestate on October 11, 1920; that the plaintiff is his sole, and only heir at law; that Benjamin M. Williams had been adjudged a mental *183 incompetent on December 16, 1917, and that he never thereafter regained his sanity, and that he died insane; that the pretended last will and testament of decedent, dated March 28, 1911, was offered for probate in the county court of Boulder county following the death of Benjamin M. Williams, which was contested by the defendant, and thereafter adjudged by the Supreme Court to be revoked by the pretended marriage of the defendant to Benjamin M. Williams; that the said Williams was at the time of the execution of the said will and codicils of unsound mind and memory; that the same was void; that the said Benjamin M. Williams was a mental incompetent at the time of said marriage, and was well known to the defendant to be insane, and utterly incapable of entering into a marriage contract, but that, nevertheless, the defendant secretly, wrongfully, maliciously, and fraudulently contrived to have a marriage ceremony performed between herself and the said Benjamin M. Williams, in fraud of the plaintiff’s rights of inheritance; that the plaintiff had no notice of any of the suits and proceedings mentioned and referred to in the amended complaint, nor was he represented by an attorney, or otherwise, in the county or district courts, or in the Supreme Court, in such proceedings.

After demurring to the amended complaint, the defendant answered, admitting that the decedent died intestate, and alleged his sanity, and challenged the validity of the lunacy proceedings, and then interposed the plea of the statute of limitations, and other defenses.

The amended replication denied many of the affirmative allegations of the various defenses set up in the answer. The defendant demurred to the replication. In his reply to the fourth defense the plaintiff denied that his cause of action was barred by section 6403, C. L. 1921, and alleged that his cause of action had not accrued more than three years before the time of bringing this suit. The demurrer to the replication to the fourth de *184 fense was sustained by the trial court. This ruling of the trial court constitutes one of the assignments of error for consideration.

We find from our examination of the amended complaint and the amended replication that the plaintiff admits and alleges the following facts: That on March 28, 1911, Benjamin M. Williams was of unsound mind, and assumed to make a will, and several codicils thereto; that on November 27, 1917, the defendant, Mrs. Williams, secretly, fraudulently, wrongfully and maliciously, entered into an illegal, void, pretended marriage with Benjamin M. Williams, while he was insane, and that he never thereafter recovered his sanity; that the plaintiff learned of this pretended marriage and of the fraudulent action of the defendant within a day or two after this alleged pretended marriage; that the plaintiff was the nephew, and only blood relative of Benjamin M. Williams, and when he learned of the fraudulent and pretended marriage he went from his home in Providence, R.

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Bluebook (online)
263 P. 725, 83 Colo. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-williams-colo-1927.