Aberle v. Merkel

291 N.W. 913, 70 N.D. 89, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 150
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1940
DocketFile No. 6645.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 291 N.W. 913 (Aberle v. Merkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aberle v. Merkel, 291 N.W. 913, 70 N.D. 89, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 150 (N.D. 1940).

Opinion

Burr, J.

This is an action to determine adverse claims in real estate. The land involved consists of 1120 acres of land in McIntosh county, including a tract of 160 acres in section 35, township 129, range 67; 320 acres in Dickey county; and two lots in Forbes.

All the land was owned by Christian Merkel. He died intestate October 8, 1935. Dorothea Merkel was his wife. The other defendants, with the exception of Max Wishek, are their children, one of whom is Christian Merkel, hereafter known as the son.

On June 13, 1936, judgment for $251.72 was duly entered in the district court in and for McIntosh county, in favor of the plaintiff and against Christian Merkel, the son, and was docketed that day in the office of the clerk of the district court of McIntosh county, and in the office of the clerk of the district court of Dickey county on June 15, 1936.

The estate was probated in the county court of Dickey county as an entity, but the record does not show when the probate proceedings began. The undisputed facts show that this son had a %3 interest in all of the estate at the time of its probate.

On December 5, 1936, the mother, the administratrix, filed her inventory and appraisement of the estate. The real property is appraised in the sum of $7,500, which includes an appraisement of $1,000 for the two lots in Forbes, listed as the homestead. The inventory lists personal property consisting of notes and accounts due from the various children and appraised at $5,931. This list includes a note given by the son to his father for $548, dated June 23, 1926, appraised at $274, and another note for $60, dated March 14, 1927, *92 appraised at $30. The record does not show any debts of the estate, or any claims filed against the' estate. If there were any, they were settled without recourse to the real estate.

On March 8, 1938, the heirs entered into a contract between themselves, and with the mother as administratrix, by the terms of which they settled the debts due the estate from the heirs, and divided the property among themselves so that the mother was given title to the homestead, and accounts due from seven of the heirs in the agreed sum of $2,253.82, including the two notes due from Christian, the son, valued at $346.5$. In this contract all the parties agreed that Christian Merkel, the son, “is to have the title and possession. of ” the land situated in section 35, “subject to the payment of $346.56, which sum is to constitute a first and prior lien against said premises until paid in full, together with interest at 5% per annum from March 1st, 1938.”

On June 9, 1938, the mother and the son entered into a written agreement, reciting that the son was indebted to the estate in the sum of $346.56, that all of the heirs had agreed he was “to receive as his share of the said estate” the real estate situated in section 35, “subject however to payment of $346.50, which sum by law and by agreement constitutes a first and prior lien against the said premises,” that this debt had been given to the mother as part of her share, that the son was unable to pay this debt and unable “to clear said premises from said lien and from the lien of the county for taxes,” and further reciting that the mother, “in order to collect the said indebtedness would be compelled to foreclose the said lien by action at law with consequent large expense.”

Therefore the mother and the son agreed that the son would assign unto his mother “all of his right, title and interest in and to the said quarter section, and does hereby so sell, assign and set over and unto the said Dorothea Merkel, the said real estate, and that the said Dorothea Merkel does hereby satisfy and discharge the said debt and lien of Christian Merkel, Jr., in the sum of $346.56.”

This he did. Both of these contracts were submitted to the county court. The county court adopted these settlements, and incorporated them in its final decree of distribution, giving to the mother the homestead, $2,253.82 of the personal property, and the land in section 35; *93 and this son received no land or share. Thereafter the estate was closed and the administratrix discharged.

Max "Wishek is made party defendant, owing to the fact that he has a claim for $28.82 as attorneys’ fees in the settlement of the estate, which is recognized by the heirs, and all of the assignments of the real estate in McIntosh county are made subject to the payment of this sum.

The plaintiff urges that this settlement and agreement made between the parties totally ignored her lien against the interest of Christian Merkel, the son, in the estate of his father; that her judgment was a lien against this interest; that this lien against, Christian Merkel’s interest is superior to that of any other party to this action; and that the settlement made between the heirs is not binding upon her.

The main facts stand out prominently. The father died October 8, 1935, without disposing of his property by will.

Under the provisions of § 5742, Compiled Laws, 1913, “The property, both real and personal, of one who dies without disposing of it by will, passes to the heirs of the intestate, subject to the control of the county court and to the possession of any administrator appointed by that court for the purpose of administration.”

Hence, upon the death of the father, a %s interest in all of the property — real and personal — passed immediately to the son, Christian, subject to the control of the county court for the purpose of administration, and for that purpose possession of the property may pass to the administrator. In reality it passes at once to the heirs, without any appointment of an administrator. See Elder v. Horseshoe Min. & Mill. Co. 9 S. D. 636, 70 N. W. 1060, 62 Am. St. Rep. 895. The property is the property of the heir at once. When the administrator is appointed, he may take possession of the property for the purpose of administration, and the county court will have control of it; but this administration is primarily for the purpose of paying the debts of the decedent and to see that the property descends and is distributed orderly. As said in Friese v. Friese, 12 N. D. 82, 85, 95 N. W. 446, 447, “Property not disposed of by will passes to the heirs of the intestate. . . . Such property is to be distributed subject to the payment of the debts of the intestate.” And quoting from Re Strong, 119 Cal. 663, 665, 51 P. 1078, 1079, we say: “The whole sub *94 ject matter of dealing with the estates of deceased persons is one of statutory regulation, and the policy and intent of our statute very clearly contemplate that property of decedents left undisposed of at death . . . shall, for the purposes of ascertaining and protecting the rights of creditors and heirs, and properly transmitting the title of record, be subject to the process of administration in the probate court.”

The rights of the heir, therefore, in the property are not in any way affected, except in so far as it may be necessary, in the administration of the estate, to use the property for the purpose of paying debts of the decedent. In fact, the heir need not wait until the settlement of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
291 N.W. 913, 70 N.D. 89, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aberle-v-merkel-nd-1940.