Williford v. Cantwell

380 P.2d 584, 141 Mont. 583, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 167
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1963
DocketNo. 10430
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 380 P.2d 584 (Williford v. Cantwell) 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
Williford v. Cantwell, 380 P.2d 584, 141 Mont. 583, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 167 (Mo. 1963).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by petitioners from an adverse ruling by the district court of the sixth judicial district, County of Park,, sitting in probate without a jury. This matter came to a hearing by the filing of a petition to ascertain and declare rights and interests in the Estate of Bess I. Cox, and to determine to whom distribution thereof should be made. This petition was filed by the heirs of Jess A. Cox.

Petitioners-appellants, hereinafter known as petitioners, are the children by a prior marriage of Jess A. Cox, except David Cox who is a child of Bess and Jess Cox. Respondents are the executor and heirs at law of the estate of Bess I. Cox.

A summary of the facts brought out in the hearing in the district court are as follows:

[585]*585On the morning of June 5, I960, there was living in the Cox home, Bess and Jess Cox, Mrs. Joe Edwards, a sister of Mrs.' Cox, and Mrs. Sarah McCullough, the 78 year old invalid mother of Bess Cox. The home was a two-story house, with a basement apartment, and a utility room in the basement. All the family bedrooms were on the second floor. Mrs. Edwards testified that prior to getting up on the morning of June 5th she heard her sister come upstairs and go into her bedroom and then go downstairs. Shortly after that she heard Jess Cox come upstairs, go into his bedroom, and then go downstairs. She estimated the time between 5:30 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. Shortly after their going downstairs she heard two thuds or noises like the backfiring of an automobile, and that the noises were about two minutes apart. She got up about 7:30 a.m. and went downstairs to the kitchen where she had a cup of coffee. Seeing a light on in the basement she went part way downstairs when she saw her sister lying' on the floor in a pool of blood. She immediately called the Livingston Police Department.

Testimony of the coroner, the police, the sheriff, and Mr. Yardley, the county attorney, showed that they all arrived shortly after eight o’clock, and that they carried out a careful investigation of the two deaths. Pictures were taken, physical examinations were made, and the gun and shells were examined. From their investigation it was concluded by all parties in the investigation that Bess Cox had been shot from behind by a Winchester Model 95, Pump 12 gauge shotgun fired by her husband Jess. Lying alongside Bess’s body was an empty 12 gauge shell. The body of Jess Cox was in another room a short distance from that of his wife. The physical evidence with regard to Jess Cox indicated that he had discharged the shotgun into his head and exhibits of the ceiling above where his body lay indicated that pellets from the shell went into the ceiling. The shotgun with an empty unextracted shell lay alongside Jess. A door leading out of the basement was [586]*586found to be locked with the key in the door. The evidence indicated that Bess was headed for this door at the time she was shot for there were pellets outlining her body in the door.

Prior to her death, Bess had consulted an attorney and papers were drawn, although not yet filed, for a divorce from Jess on the grounds of mental cruelty.

The realty in question was owned jointly by Jess and Bess Cox. Respondents listed an undivided one-half interest in the property as an asset of the estate of Bess. Petitioners sought to have the entire realty declared to be the property of the estate of Jess A. Cox.

The district court found that Jess had unlawfully and feloniously killed Bess I. Cox, and that he therefore became an involuntary trustee of her share of the property for the benefit of the heirs of Bess. Petitioners appealed from the ruling.

The issues raised in this appeal are whether the district court had jurisdiction to rule that Jess had feloniously killed Bess, and if so, whether the court erred in holding that Jess had held the interests of Bess in an involuntary trust for the benefit of the heirs of Bess. The latter question is one of first impression in this jurisdiction.

Since title to the joint interest which Jess held was not brought into issue by the pleadings, this appeal is concerned solely with the undivided interest held by Bess during her lifetime.

With regard to petitioners’ claim that the probate court did not have jurisdiction to rule that Jess had feloniously killed Bess, we cannot agree.

The rule has been well-settled in Montana that a probate court’s jurisdiction is limited by statute with regard to probate matters, but since it is a court of general jurisdiction, in a determination of heirship, it may rule on any issue raised that falls within its original jurisdiction at law or equity. See In re Baxter’s Estate, 101 Mont. 504, 54 P.2d 869; Daly Bank v. State, 132 Mont. 387, 318 P.2d 230. The foregoing [587]*587«ases were decided upon an interpretation of section 91-3801, R.C.M.1947, which reads in part:

* * the court or judge shall thereupon acquire jurisdiction to ascertain and determine the heirship, ownership, and interest of all parties in and to the property of said deceased, and such determination shall be final and conclusive in the administration of said estate, and of the title and ownership of said property * * ®.”

It is to be pointed out that the determination that Jess feloniously killed Bess is not a criminal determination, but is solely restricted to the issue of right to acquire the joint interest of Bess. If such a finding were made in an instance where the one party survived, it could not be construed as a substitute for a criminal action. We therefore hold that the court had jurisdiction to rule in the instant case that Jess had feloniously killed Bess.

Petitioners urge that the real property statute, section 67-310, R.C.M.1947, be strictly applied to any joint tenancy title; that therefore Jess became the sole owner of the property held jointly at the instant he killed his wife. The petitioner thus argues against the weight of the authority at the present time, and against the modern view.

The decisive fact in the case at bar is the voluntary, unlawful and felonious killing of one joint tenant by another as distinguished from an unintentional killing. From all the evidence it appears that Jess Cox shot his wife causing her immediate death before killing himself. This controlling fact cannot possibly be disregarded in a just determination of the case. Conversely, there would seem to be no justification whatsoever for disposing of the case as though Bess died of a natural cause, for no amount of speculation can dissolve the crucial distinction in circumstances.

The general subject of acquisition of property by one who has feloniously killed the owner has been extensively treated [588]*588in 4 Scott on Trusts (2d ed.) 1956, Chapter 13, entitled “Constructive Trusts”, and particularly §§ 492, 493, and 494.

There is a conflict of authority, in the absence of a statute, in those cases where property is acquired by will or intestate succession by the felonious legatee or heir, but, most jurisdictions apply the constructive trust theory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
380 P.2d 584, 141 Mont. 583, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williford-v-cantwell-mont-1963.