A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by a Utah man who insists Howard Hughes left him millions in a handwritten will after he rescued the reclusive billionaire from a Nevada ditch.
U.S. District Judge Bruce Jenkins said the dispute over the will was "fully and fairly litigated" in Las Vegas in 1978. The jury said the document was bogus.
Melvin Dummar is "attempting to circumvent the Nevada court's final judgment and to, either directly or indirectly, relitigate his entitlement to a portion of Hughes' estate," Jenkins said Monday without ruling on the merit of the claims.
Dummar's attorneys said they will refile the case in Nevada.
Dummar, a 61-year-old frozen-meat delivery man, insists he rescued a bloodied Hughes from a ditch in the Nevada desert in 1967 and was left with $156 million in the handwritten will.
Dummar tried to reopen the case based on new evidence and a new witness, a pilot who says he routinely flew Hughes to brothels in rural Nevada and confirmed parts of the improbable story.
"Melvin had no idea I was with Hughes that night," said Guido Roberto Deiro, who was director of aviation facilities for Hughes Tool Co.
Deiro said he delivered Hughes to the Cottontail Ranch during the same holiday week that Dummar says he found Hughes six miles away.
Deiro said he feel asleep at the brothel, then woke to find Hughes had left. He flew back to Las Vegas in a Cessna four-seater expecting to be fired but was promoted instead.
"I don't have a dog in this hunt, but I wish Melvin good luck. I think his reputation has been restored," said Deiro, a 68-year-old Las Vegas businessman who came forward with his story three years ago, breaking a confidentiality pact.
Dummar wasn't immediately available Tuesday for comment. His wife, Bonnie, said they planned to take the case to federal court in Las Vegas, where Jenkins suggested it belonged in the first place.
The judge told Dummar's attorneys at a Nov. 2 hearing they should be "rapping at the door" of Nevada federal court with allegations of fraud from the 1978 trial.
"It's not over," Bonnie Dummar said. "We've only just begun. This time we know we're right."
Dummar's attorney, Stuart Stein, asserted Hughes associates had orchestrated the "perfect fraud" by getting witnesses to testify Hughes never left the Desert Inn between 1966 and 1970.
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