Brown v. Stephenson

137 P.2d 289, 171 Or. 239, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 40
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 289 (Brown v. Stephenson) 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
Brown v. Stephenson, 137 P.2d 289, 171 Or. 239, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 40 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Ethel McGreer and Warren Brown, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lee C. Stephenson, deceased, from an order nf the circuit court which disallowed many items of the final account of Milton T. Stephenson, who is the removed administrator of the estate, and surcharged his account .$1,538.43. In addition, the order directed Brown to pay to George L. Bernier, who was attorney *241 for the removed administrator, $125 as compensation for his professional services. The appellants contend upon this appeal that the surcharge is insufficient and that the order for the attorney fee is erroneous.

Lee C. Stephenson died November 3, 1937. Surviving him were, among others, the aforementioned Milton T. Stephenson, a son, who qualified as administrator of his deceased father’s estate December 28, 1937. He was removed from that office August 20, 1940, but before his removal he assigned his interest in the estate to Ethel McGreer, one of the two objectors; hence, her interest. Upon the removal of Stephenson, the aforementioned Warren Brown was appointed administrator de bonis non.

A document, which purports to be an inventory and appraisement, indicates that the deceased’s estate consisted entirely of personal property and that it was valued at $3,350. The principal asset was a promissory note secured by a real estate mortgage. The other items were livestock and some tools and machinery useful upon a farm.

The removed administrator, to whom we shall hereafter refer as the respondent or Stephenson, filed no reports whatever until he submitted the final account which we shall shortly review. Immediately upon his appointment, Stephenson proceeded to sell the tools, machinery and livestock which belonged to the estate, but in so doing he neither applied for nor received an order from the probate court. After he had made the sales he made no report of them, nor did he make any entries in account books or other papers. He did not deposit in any bank the proceeds of the sales, but, to the contrary, put the proceeds in his pocket and spent them for his own purposes. One of the participants in *242 the ease described Stephenson as a “hill-billy fellow.” Evidently his failure to measure up to the required standards was not due to dishonesty, but to inaptness for any duties which required record keeping and an observance of the distinction between “thine” and “mine.”

After Stephenson’s removal as administrator and Brown’s appointment, the cause was transferred to the circuit court. April 1, 1941, the latter entered an order which directed the respondent to appear in that court not later than April 28 and render an accounting. Upon the appointed day he appeared, but submitted no accounting. At that juncture the court entered an order which adjudged Stephenson guilty of a contempt of court, but permitted him to purge himself of the offense by filing an accounting on or before May 26, 1941. May 27, 1941, Stephenson submitted the account which we have already mentioned. Shortly the objectors filed their objections and thus was precipitated the controversy which is now before us. After the circuit court had received the evidence which the parties offered, it entered the order from which this appeal was prosecuted.

Parts of the order of the circuit court in which the objectors acquiesce and which they do not attack (1) held that the administrator during his incumbency received a total of $4,290.67 ($72.50 more than his final account acknowledged); (2) charged him with the receipt of $662.50 from the sale of livestock, tools and machinery ($72.50 more than his account acknowledged) ; (3) disapproved a claim against the estate presented by one Fred Payne in the amount of $380.05 which Stephenson had paid, and charged him with its *243 amount; (4) disapproved Stephenson’s payment of $44.73 of the claim of the Portland Loan Company, and charged him with that sum; (5) disapproved to the extent of $4 two minor disbursements made by Stephenson for the care of the livestock; and (6) disapproved disbursements amounting to $447.15 for most of which Stephenson could give no explanation whatever, and charged him with that sum. The additional sums mentioned in items 1 and 2 are not two sums, but the same money. That sum, when added to items 3, 4, 5 and 6, totals $948.43.

The first assignment of error is predicated upon a contention that the respondent should have been charged with interest upon moneys belonging to the estate which he converted to his own use. The appellants contend that he should have been charged interest upon not less than $1,400, beginning with at least January 1, 1939.

The circuit court found from evidence, which, we believe, warranted the conclusion, that (a) Stephenson received in December, 1937, a payment of $365.02 upon the aforementioned note; (b) in December, 1938, he received .upon the same instrument $527.35; and (c) he received in the early part of 1938 $662.50 from the sale of tools, machinery and livestock. Those receipts total $1,564.87, and seemingly constituted all of the sums received by him prior to January 1,1939.

Stephenson deposited to the credit of the estate in a Prineville bank the aforementioned sum of $365.02, which he received in December, 1937, and the aforementioned sum of $527.35 which he received in the next year, but made no further deposits until five months before his removal.

*244 The circuit court found from evidence, which warranted the finding, that Stephenson properly made the following disbursements:

November, 1937, Filing fees in probate court $ 16.50

December, 1937, Payment upon charges for

burial of deceased.......... 150.00

January, 1938, Premium upon administrator’s bond........................ 42.40

January, 1938, Hay for livestock.................. 31.10

February, 1938, Hay for livestock.................. 13.00

February, 1938, Hay for livestock.................. 25.00

March, 1938, Care of livestock.................. 6.00

March, 1938, Hay for livestock.................. 13.00

April, 1938, Care of livestock.................. 6.00

Total..........................................$303.00

The disbursements just enumerated when deducted from the amount which Stephenson received prior to January 1, 1939, ($1,564.87), leave a balance of $1,261.87 which, therefore, was the amount of money belonging to the estate which Stephenson should have possessed January 1, 1939. As we have seen, he deposited to the estate’s credit only $892.37 of his total receipts. He made all of his disbursements by check, and there should have been in the bank to the credit of the estate January 1, 1939, $589.37. On that day, however, the balance was $481.43. The discrepancy was due to the fact that Stephenson, besides making the above-mentioned proper withdrawals, made others. The circuit court found that he was not entitled to credit for the additional disbursements, and Stephenson does not challenge the court’s conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 289, 171 Or. 239, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-stephenson-or-1943.