Bradley v. Mayhew

263 P. 741, 146 Wash. 421, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 759
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1928
DocketNo. 20660. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 263 P. 741 (Bradley v. Mayhew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Mayhew, 263 P. 741, 146 Wash. 421, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 759 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

*423 Fullerton, J.

This controversy involves the rights of the respective parties thereto in and to certain real and personal property, formerly the estate of Neis Truedson, deceased. To its understanding, it is necessary to recite, with some detail, the facts which give rise to it.

Neis Truedson died intestate in Lincoln county, in this state, on October 30,1915. He left as his heirs at law his widow and five children. Two of the children, the plaintiffs, Lena J. Bradley and George A. Trued-son, were children of a former wife, and the others Edward McK. Truedson, Nettie F. Truedson and Myrtle M. Truedson, were children of the wife living at the time of his death. All of them were then minors.

The widow was appointed administratrix of the estate, and, in due course, filed her final account as such administratrix in the court in which the proceedings were pending. The account showed that she had paid all of the debts of the estate and the expenses of administration, and that she had remaining in her possession some 468 acres of farm land, and personal property of large value, subject to be partitioned among the heirs of the estate. The court, after due notice, entered a decree approving and confirming the account on February 20, 1917.

At the time of filing her final account, the administratrix filed a petition asking that the estate be partitioned among the heirs. The court, as it was then empowered to . do under the existing statutes (Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 1595, 1596) [P. C. §§ 7543, 9813], appointed commissioners to make the partition. The petition was, in form, that usually employed where a division of the property is sought. It contained no allegation that the property could not be divided without prejudice or inconvenience to the owners; nor did the order, entered by the court appointing the com *424 missioners, so indicate. The commissioners, however, concluded that the property could not be so divided) and they thereupon ascertained its true value, finding that the real property was of the value of $13,220, and that the personal property was of the value of $6,-071.19, and set apart the entire property to the widow, “subject, however, to the payment by her, for and on behalf of” each of the minor heirs, the sum of $1,-937.12. On March 12, 1917, the court entered a decree approving and confirming the report.

During the pendency of the foregoing proceedings, the widow was appointed guardian of the persons and of the estates of the minor heirs. On the confirmation of the commissioners’ report, she filed in the probate proceedings a receipt, signed by herself as such guardian, showing that she had received from herself as administratrix thé sums awarded the minor heirs, and the court thereupon entered a decree closing the estate and discharging the administratrix.

Two guardianship proceedings were instituted. The first involved the persons and estates of the children of Neis Truedson by his first wife; the second that of the children of the guardian. In each of these proceedings the guardian filed inventories, in which she listed as the property of her wards the sums they were entitled to receive as heirs of the estate of their father. These proceedings were wholly paper transactions. No actual funds were transferred, and it appears that the guardian never thereafter had in her possession, as guardian, any money or other property of her wards, other than such an indebtedness due from herself to the estates, as might arise out of the transactions.

On March 14,1917, the court entered in the guardianship proceedings the following order:

*425 “It is here ordered, adjudged and decreed, that until the further order of this court, the said Lorena Truedson be, and she is hereby authorized, directed and empowered to use the moneys of her said wards and that, for the use of the same, she shall account for and pay over interest thereon at the rate of five per centum per annum, and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said Lorena Truedson be and she is hereby allowed, out of moneys belonging to the said minors, the sum of thirty dollars per month from and after the 28th day of February, 1917, for the care, maintenance and support of the said minors, until the further order of this court.”

A like order was subsequently made in the guardianship proceedings of the other wards.

The ward Lena J. Truedson, herein called Lena J. Bradley, became of legal age on February 16, 1918. On April 8 of that year, the guardian filed in the guardianship proceedings a report to the effect that she had paid the ward, in cash and credits, the full sum due her, and filed therewith a written acknowledgment of the ward, verified before a notary public, acknowledging the receipt of the money. The real transaction, as it developed in the evidence, was that the guardian gave to the ward her promissory note for the sum due, taking it back from her for safekeeping. The other ward involved in these proceedings became of age on February 15, 1919, when a like proceeding was had as to him. Neither of these notes was ever paid. The evidence discloses, however, that, at the time of their execution, the guardian was considered solvent, and that the notes would then have been taken by banking institutions at their face value.

At the time the widow was appointed as guardian of the estate of Lena J. Truedson and George A. Truedson, she filed her bond as such guardian in the sum of $8,000, with the American Surety Company of New York as surety. At the time she was ap *426 pointed guardian of the other wards, she filed a like bond in the proceedings in the sum of $12,000, with the same company as surety. On June 8, 1918, the surety served on the guardian and filed in each of the guardianship proceedings a notice of its desire to be released from further liability on its bonds. The usual proceedings were had thereon, resulting in the substitution of the Aetna Casualty & Surety Company as surety, and the discharge of the first named company from further liability.

Of the real property of which Neis Truedson died seized, forty acres thereof was property, acquired prior to his marriage with his second wife, and was administered upon as his separate property. Under the statutes of descent of this state, Lorena Truedson, as his surviving widow, was entitled in her own right to one-third thereof. The remainder of the property of his estate, both real and personal, was community property, and of this the widow was entitled to one-half.

On July 20, 1921, the widow, Lorena Truedson, borrowed of the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company the sum of $7,000, to be repaid five years from that time, .and executed a mortgage upon practically all of the real property set apart to her by the decree of distribution entered in her deceased husband’s estate. The loan was not repaid. She also mortgaged the same property to secure others of her creditors, but as these present no controversy different from that presented by the mortgage of the insurance company named, they need not be further noticed.

In this suit, the heirs, Lena J. Bradley and George A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mood v. Mood
18 P.2d 21 (Washington Supreme Court, 1933)
Mood v. Mader
298 P. 329 (Washington Supreme Court, 1931)
Bradley v. Mayhew
148 Wash. 704 (Washington Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 P. 741, 146 Wash. 421, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-mayhew-wash-1928.