Judge to assess Dummar's claim

Published: Tuesday, Oct. 31 2006 12:00 a.m. MST

A pair of Howard Hughes associates are trying to discredit a new witness for a Utah man who insists he once rescued the reclusive billionaire from a ditch and was cheated of a share of his estate.

The two men, who were beneficiaries of the Hughes fortune, are asking a federal judge in Salt Lake City to throw out Melvin Dummar's latest lawsuit, filed in June.

U.S. District Judge Dale Kimball will hear arguments Thursday.

Dummar is suing Hughes' cousin William Lummis and Frank Gay, who was chief operating officer of Summa Corp., which controlled Hughes' major assets.

He claims that Hughes left him $156 million in a handwritten will. In 1978, after a seven-month trial, a Las Vegas jury declared the will was a fake. Witnesses said Hughes never left the Desert Inn between 1966 and 1970.

Dummar now is looking for another day in court.

This time he has a new ally, Guido Roberto Deiro, a pilot who said he routinely flew Hughes to rural Nevada brothels — and did so on the night in 1967 that Dummar insists he rescued Hughes from a roadside ditch.

Deiro only recently came forward with his account, chronicled in a book by a former FBI agent.

Dummar's claims of racketeering, fraud and unjust enrichment are speculative and so old they're barred by statutes of limitation, said Gay's attorney, Peggy Tomsic.

"The bottom line is my guy didn't do anything," Tomsic said.

In court papers seeking to throw out Deiro's affidavit, she said Dummar's claims are impossible to verify, Deiro can't be certain his passenger was Hughes, and the pilot got so drunk that he "passed out" at the brothel.

Another attorney, Randy Dryer, is making some of the same arguments on behalf of Lummis, the main beneficiary of Hughes' estate.

"The main thrust of our motion is that this is too little, too late," Dryer said. "There's got to be some finality in things that happened almost 30 years ago."

Hughes never left a will accepted by any court, although dozens of purported wills surfaced after his death in 1976. A number of women also claimed to have been secretly married to him.

His estate was divided up in probate court. Because there were no direct relatives, the fortune was given mostly to cousins, some of them many times removed.

Dummar, a 61-year-old frozen-meat delivery man, has an unlisted phone number in northern Utah's Brigham City and could not be reached Monday.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS