Bever v. Yount

176 P.2d 574, 162 Kan. 407, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1947
DocketNo. 36,750
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 P.2d 574 (Bever v. Yount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bever v. Yount, 176 P.2d 574, 162 Kan. 407, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 315 (kan 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, by

Hoch, J.:

The principal question presented by this appeal is whether an order in probate court appointing a “special administrator” in. the estate of a decedent and allowing attorneys’ fees was a valid order. About five months after the order was made, it was vacated upon petition of a creditor. Appellants assert that the original order was valid and that the subsequent order vacating it was invalid. The matter is here upon appeal from an order of the district court overruling appellant’s motion for judgment upon the pleadings. Omitting from the narrative many details recited in the abstract, we shall set out only the facts sufficient to present the issue.

In 1937, Arthur J: Click entered into a contract to purchase certain" real estate in Cherokee county from. John F. Oliver, the deed being placed in escrow to be delivered upon completion of the specified' payments. Before payments had been completed, and on July 23, 1943, Oliver died. On August 14, 1943, Click filed a petition for the appointment of an administrator, in which he named five brothers and one sister as heirs of the decedent. After regular hearing, with notice, Fayette Rowe was appointed administrator on September 14, 1943. On October 27,1943, Rowe asked to be discharged as administrator on the grounds that no funds or property had come into his possession. After hearing, with personal notice to the heirs, to Click, and to one Fred Bever, who is the appellee here, Rowe was dis[409]*409charged on November 23, 1943, at which time the court found that no assets had come into his- possession. No inventory was ever filed nor was there any final settlement or closing of the estate.

On April 26, 1945, Click and his wife filed a petition asking appointment of a “special administrator,” and asserting that the time for filing and allowance of claims had expired; that he had a special interest by virtue of the contract hereinbefore referred to; that under the contract Oliver had deposited the deed in escrow with Oscar M. Yount, his attorney who had drawn the contract and deed, with direction to deliver it when full payment of the purchase price of $500 had been made; that he had paid $369 under the contract and that there was then unpaid the sum of $131, which amount was then tendered into court; that Yount had the deed and-desired directions from the court in order to “carry out and perform the escrow imposed upon him as aforesaid . . . that there are no persons interested in or affected in the above-entitlgd matter except, themselves and said Oscar M. Yount, and that no necessity exist for giving notice of the time and placé of hearing .of this petition, and that such a notice will serve no good purpose but simply create extra expense and unnecessary delay” and so forth.

Click then prayed “that letters Of special administration be granted to Oscar M. Yount upon the estate of the said John F. Oliver, deceased; that the court make an order for the cost and expense ■herein, for a reasonable attorney fee for petitioners (Click and wife), and for the special administrator appointed, and for such other expenses out of the sum of money tendered herein,” and so forth.

Hearing was held without notice to anyone on April 26, 1945, the day the petition was filed, and a finding made that it was not necessary to give notice of the time and place of the hearing “as there are no persons interested in the matters and things in said petition other than the said petitioners and said Oscar M. Yount, all who are now present in person in open court,” and Oscar. M. Yount was then appointed special administrator and directed to deliver the quitclaim deed to the Clicks. An allowance of $50 was then made to Helen E. Yount as attorney for the Clicks, and $50 to Oscar M. Yount for his services as special administrator, such allowances together with .costs in the proceeding to be paid out of-the $131. No appeal was taken from this order of April 26,1945.

On October 1, 1945, Fred Bever, the appellee herein, filed’ a petition to vacate the order of April 26, 1945, appointing a special ad[410]*410ministrator and allowing attorneys’ fees. He alleged that the order “was improvidently granted,” that certain statements alleged in the petition upon which said order was granted were untrue in that it was alleged that there were no persons interested in or affected by the matter except such petitioners and Yount; that following the appointment of Rowe as administrator, the petitioner Bever had filed his demand in the sum of $101.25 for the expense of the funeral and burial of the deceased Oliver; that said demand had been set for hearing on September 27, 1943; that notice of such hearing was duly given, and that after hearing at which he appeared and Rowe, the administrator, appeared,. an order was made allowing the demand in the sum of $101.25 as a first-class claim. He further alleged that no part of his claim had been paid, “all of which was well known to said Arthur Jerome Click, Winifred C. Click, Fayette Rowe and to Helen E. Yount and Oscar M. Yount.” Bever then prayed that the order of April 26, 1945, be set aside and that an administrator of the estate be appointed, and that the funds belonging to the estate should be “refunded to said administrator” and applied first to the payment of first-class claims as required by statute.

Hearing was duly had on October 19, 1945, after notice to all concerned upon Bever’s petition to- vacate. Oscar M. Yount and Helen E. Yount filed a demurrer to the'petition on the grounds that Bever had no legal capacity to bring the action and that his petition did .not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them and that any claim or pretended claim that Bever might have against the estate was barred by the statute of limitations and the nonclaim statute. The demurrer being overruled, the Younts filed an answer in which they asserted that the court was without jurisdiction either of the persons or of the subject matter; that the claim of Bever was barred by the statute of limitations and the nonclaim statute; that no inventory or appraisement had ever been had in the estate; that no claims were ever filed or allowed within the time and in the manner provided by the statute; that any administration by Fayette Rowe “was abandoned and never completed more than eighteen months prior to the appointment of .said Oscar M. Yount as special administrator”; that Bever was not a creditor of the deceased and had no legal capacity to prosecute the action; that Oscar M. Yount had been regularly appointed and qualified as special administrator, and had delivered the deed to the Clicks as directed [411]*411by the court, and that he had then tendered into court the sum of $18.32 remaining in his hands after the attorneys’ fees and other cost items had been paid, and that he was thereupon directed by the probate court “to hold said balance of eighteen dollars and thirty-two cents as aforesaid, as said court did not wish to clutter the records of the court with the same, and that there were no claims- or demands allowed against the said deceased on which said sum could be lawfully applied.” Oscar M. Yount then prayed for discharge as “special administrator.”

Bever offered in evidence the files and records in the estate. Younts, the respondents, offered no evidence. The probate court then found “from the files and records herein

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 574, 162 Kan. 407, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bever-v-yount-kan-1947.