Bennett v. Whitlock

166 P.2d 129, 178 Or. 253
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1946
StatusPublished

This text of 166 P.2d 129 (Bennett v. Whitlock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Whitlock, 166 P.2d 129, 178 Or. 253 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is an appeal by Charles Bennett from the order of the circuit court denying his petition for the removal of Earl Whitlock, as administrator of the estate of Harry Albert Witherill, deceased.

Harry Albert Witherill died intestate on July 4, 1939, leaving surviving him as his only heirs two sisters and two brothers, all residents of the state of California. Mrs. Mary Douglass, upon hearing of her brother’s death, came to Klamath Falls on July 5th and made arrangements for the funeral with the Earl Whitlock Funeral Home in that city. Later, and on December 10, 1939, she requested, and procured, the appointment of Earl Whitlock, proprietor of the funeral home bearing his name, as administrator of her deceased brother’s estate.

At the time of his death, Mr. Witherill was 73 years of age and was living near Klamath Falls, Oregon, on a small dry ranch, which he owned. His nephew, Wade Hampton, who helped him operate the farm, lived with him. Hampton, because of an alleged understanding with the decedent, claimed an interest in the livestock [256]*256on the place. He also claimed that he was the owner of other personal property on the ranch.

Before returning to her home, Mrs. Douglass, with the assistance of Wade Hampton, gave the administrator a list of the personal property which the decedent owned or in which he had an interest. This property and the decedent’s real property, a description of which was furnished the administrator by the abstract companies in Klamath Falls, were included by him in the inventory of the estate. The real property was appraised at $1,200; the livestock, without regard to Hampton’s asserted interest, at $545; the machinery and farm equipment at $100.50; the unpaid balance of the sale price of a tract of land, at $600, and the unpaid balance on a note at $35.00, aggregating $2,480.50. The inventory was sworn to by the administrator on July 10, 1939, but was not filed until November 17 of that year.

The livestock, farm machinery, and the 1939 grain crop had been mortgaged by the decedent and Wade Hampton to the United States Farm Security Administration. A small crop was grown in the year 1939, and the proceeds realized from the sale thereof, amounting to $126.18, were applied on the mortgage indebtedness. On November 29, 1939, an order was entered authorizing the administrator to sell the personal property. He attempted to sell the livestock but was unable to find a purchaser. Feed was scarce, and neither Hampton nor the administrator had funds with which to buy a sufficient supply for the winter. On the advice of his attorney, the administrator decided to and did transfer the mortgaged livestock and farm machinery to the Farm Security Administration in satisfaction of the indebtedness owing it. Both Hampton and the ad[257]*257ministrator joined in the transfer, which was made in the latter part of December, 1939.

In December, 1939, the administrator obtained an order of court for the sale of the real property. The petition for the sale inadvertently failed to include a 40-acre tract. Notice of sale of the real property included in the petition was not published until August 5, 1941. In the interval between the order authorizing the sale of the real property and the publication of the notice of sale, the administrator attempted to secure a purchaser for the property but was unsuccessful. On the 28th day of February, 1940, he leased the real property, with the exception of the 40 acres above mentioned, to Eoy Huff for the period beginning March 1, 1940, and ending on December 1 of that year. The rental was one quarter of all hay and grain grown on the ranch. All the real property was leased to Francis Flowers for the period beginning March 1, 1941, and expiring on December 1,1941, at the same rental specified in the lease to Huff. The Flowers’s lease was extended from March 1,1942, to December 1 of that year.

The administrator, in January, 1942, sold six lots in Midland, a platted portion of Klamath county, for $50.00. On January 28, 1943, he entered into a written contract with Eoy Huff and Gertrude Huff, his wife, for the sale of all the remaining real estate of the decedent, with the exception of the 40-aere tract, for the sum of $800, subject to the approval of the court. This contract further provided that when authorization was procured to sell the 40-acre tract, the Huffs would submit a bid therefor of not less than $400. At the time this contract was entered into it was orally agreed between the administrator and the Huffs that the Huffs should have immediate possession of the property, and, [258]*258in the event the property was not sold to them, they should pay the same rental for the year 1943 as that specified in the 1940 lease. An order authorizing the sale of this 40-acre tract of land was made and entered on the 4th day of March, 1943, and thereupon the Huffs siibmitted a bid of $400 for the tract.

Mr. Bennett, in the early part of February, 1943, heard that the Wither ill estate ranch was for sale. He made inquiry of the administrator about the property and was told that it had already been sold to Mr. Huff, and was advised by the administrator to “go down and see” Huff about the property. Huff informed Bennett that he did not know whether he had bought the property or not, but that he had “paid money down but I do not know; see Whitlock.”

In April, 1943, the administrator filed a petition in which he set forth that the real property had been sold to Mr. and Mrs. Huff for $1,200 and requested an order approving and confirming the sale. A few days later Bennett filed his objections to the confirmation of sale and offered to pay $1,440 for the property. In reporting that higher offer to the court, the administrator requested ‘ ‘ an order vacating the Huff sale and directing a re-sale of the premises.” Such an order was entered on the 30th day of April, 1943.

Due to the drought, poor crops were grown on the Witherill ranch in 1939, 1940, 1941, and 1942. In 1943 there was a greater demand for farm land than there had been for several years.

Some time in May, 1943, Bennett purchased from two of the heirs an undivided one-half interest in the land, and later in July purchased from the two remaining heirs their interest therein. The deeds of conveyance recited that the grantors “hereby remise, release [259]*259and forever quitclaim unto the said Charles Bennett and unto his heirs and assigns all our right, title and interest in and to the following described parcel of real estate,” setting forth the description of the real property. In July, 1943, all the heirs executed and delivered to Bennett an instrument which purported to remise, release and quitclaim to him all of their right, title and interest in “all of the real and personal property of the Harry Albert Witherill Estate of whatsoever sort or description and including the real property heretofore described and conveyed” to Bennett by the quitclaim deeds hereinbefore mentioned. The instrument last mentioned further provided that “the administrator of said estate is hereby directed and authorized to deliver and pay over to said Bennett all assets of said estate remaining upon the settlement of the final account in said estate. Said Bennett agrees to pay any remaining indebtedness of said estate in consideration of this assignment and quitclaim.” Bennett paid the heirs approximately $380 for the transfer of their interest in the estate.

Bennett, upon receiving the documents hereinbefore referred to, demanded possession of the real property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 129, 178 Or. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-whitlock-or-1946.