Kennedy v. Bailey
Decision Date | 28 April 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 23121,23121 |
Citation | 169 Colo. 43,453 P.2d 808 |
Parties | John M. KENNEDY, III, Benjamin F. Greathouse, Tillie G. Brown, Elizabeth G. Proctor, Elsie G. Talbot, Jessie Greathouse and Carolyn G. Miller, Plaintiffs in Error, v. Clarence W. BAILEY, Jr., and Beatrice Bailey Schmock, Defendants in Error. |
Court | Colorado Supreme Court |
Charles S. Thomas, Clayton H. Morrison, Aurora, R. Russell Grant, Winchester, Ky., V. G. Seavy, Jr., Denver, for plaintiffs in error.
Peter L. Garrett, Ranger Rogers, Denver, for defendants in error.
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The controversy between the litigants in this case is here for the second time. Part of the factual background involved in this writ of error appears in Bailey v. Kennedy, 162 Colo. 135, 425 P.2d 304. In brief summary, those facts are that Morrison K. Bailey died in 1930 leaving a will in which his wife Katherine was named beneficiary of a testamentary trust. She also was given a testamentary power of appointment over the corpus of the trust. In the absence of an exercise of that power the trust assets were to be distributed to the heirs of Mr. Bailey.
Katherine, the wife, died in 1964 and a will executed by her in 1961--with a codicil of 1962--was offered for probate by those appearing in the instant action as plaintiffs in error. The heirs of Morrison Bailey offered a Copy of another will executed by Katherine in 1963 in which all previously executed wills were expressly revoked. It was admitted that this 1963 will was itself intentionally destroyed by Katherine. In the case above cited this court held that the 1961 will was not revived by the destruction of the 1963 document. The mandate was that the trial court,
'vacate the order of probate of the questioned will (1961) and codicil and to distribute the trust property in the estate according to the last will and testament of Morrison K. Bailey, and the remainder in accordance with the laws of intestacy of this state.'
The trial court following this mandate complied therewith by appropriate orders. The plaintiffs in error thereupon filed motions for a new trial based upon 'newly discovered evidence.' This evidence consists of a judgment entered in the District Court of the United States by the Honorable William E. Doyle on December 23, 1965, in which it was adjudged that Katherine was not mentally competent to convey real estate by deed on October 31, 1963, for the reason that she,
'* * * was the victim of continuous delusions of persecution and a paranoid condition was continually present during the time in question.'
The federal court case was filed by John M. Kennedy, III, one of the plaintiffs in error, approximately one year prior to the trial of the case in the probate court which resulted in our opinion hereinabove mentioned. On April 15, 1964, plaintiff in the federal court case filed a petition with the probate court asking leave to file the action in the federal court, and this petition was granted. The complaint in that action contained an allegation that,
'On October 31, 1963, the deceased's mind was so affected by disease, drugs, desperation and the undue influence of the defendant, or one or more of said factors, that she was incapable of executing a valid deed.'
The prayer of the complaint was that a deed executed and delivered by Katherine on October 31, 1963, be set aside. The probate court denied the motions for a new trial and the sole question now presented for determination is whether error was committed by the court in refusing to grant the motions.
As grounds for reversal of the judgment counsel for plaintiffs in error argue that the judicial determination of mental incompetency of Katherine to execute a deed in October 1963 warrants granting a new trial on a new issue to be raised in the probate proceedings, namely, was she competent in 1963 to revoke the 1961 will? Counsel asserts that:
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