Cass v. Harder

58 P.2d 618, 153 Or. 637, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 142
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 618 (Cass v. Harder) 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
Cass v. Harder, 58 P.2d 618, 153 Or. 637, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 142 (Or. 1936).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

The plaintiffs, J. C. Cass and Gillie Cass, his wife, instituted this suit against B. E. Harder, both in his individual capacity and as executor of the estate of William A. Pointer, deceased, and the First *638 National Bank of Medford, Oregon, as defendants, to have set aside the final account of Harder as executor of the William A. Pointer estate, and for a complete accounting of his receipts and disbursements as such executor; to require him to file a definite and complete report as executor; to charge him as such executor with interest on all moneys that came into his hands in that capacity; and to require him to furnish and file receipted bills for all moneys paid by him. The prayer further asks that the foreclosure proceedings brought by the First National Bank against the plaintiffs herein as defendants in said suit be set aside and that the bank be-decreed to be holding the foreclosed land in trust for these plaintiffs. From a decree dismissing the suit the plaintiffs have appealed.

William A. Pointer died testate in Jackson county, Oregon, on or about January 30, 1929. On February 4, 1929, B. E. Harder was appointed executor of his estate and duly qualified as such. In his will the testator stated that the property of the estate amounted to about $20,000. One-half of it was devised and bequeathed to his only child, a daughter, Anna C. Nalley, and the other half was devised and bequeathed to the plaintiffs in the present suit. The will further recites that after the death of his wife the testator had executed an instrument in “form of conveyance”, which in terms conveyed to his daughter all his property except $1,000, and that this instrument of conveyance had never been delivered but was at all times retained by testator. It is further stated therein that Pointer thereafter executed another instrument in “form of conveyance”, giving to his daughter and his son-in-law, her husband, each one-half of all his property except $1,000, and that *639 the testator had retained said instrument in his possession and under his control.

Immediately upon the appointment of Harder as executor, P. E. Nalley, who had been divorced from the daughter of the testator, instituted a suit in the circuit court of Jackson county against the First National Bank of Medford, Harder as executor of the Pointer estate, and the present plaintiffs, to have himself declared the owner of one-half of the testator’s estate and to enjoin the executor of the estate from administering thereon or taking control of the property. Mrs. Nalley filed a cross-complaint asking that the reconveyance which it was alleged that she had made to her deceased father be set aside and that she be declared to be the owner of the other half of the estate. From an adverse decision in the circuit court Nalley appealed to the supreme court and on December 9,1930, this court reversed the decree of the trial court and held that the instrument referred to in the will as-conveying one-half of the property to said Nalley had been delivered and that Nalley was the owner of said property. Eehearing of this appeal was denied on March 3, 1931: Nalley v. First National Bank, 135 Or. 409 (293 P. 721, 296 P. 61, 76 A. L. R. 625).

In January, 1930, Anna C. Nalley filed a contest of the will of her late father, William A. Pointer. Before that matter was heard, Mrs. Nalley died and her heirs appeared and sought to continue the contest of the will. From an adverse decision in the lower court the matter was finally attempted to be appealed to this court, and in May, 1933, the appeal was dismissed.

The inventory and appraisement were filed on March 7, 1932, showing the appraised value of the property at $11,163.90. The final report and account *640 was filed on June 19, 1933, to which report objections were filed by the plaintiffs herein, through the attorney then representing .them. An order approving the final account was entered March 15, 1934, and the objections made by these plaintiffs to the final account were then .denied. The order closing the estate was entered July 26, 1934.

During the administration moneys were advanced by the executor to the plaintiffs herein, $750 on April 3, 1931, and $400 on February 29, 1932. The final order after distributing the cash on hand made provision for the assignment of the remaining assets, consisting of notes, Liberty bonds and interest in land, half to the- administrator of the estate of Anna C. Nalley, deceased, and half to these plaintiffs. The remaining cash to which the plaintiffs were entitled and the remaining assets assigned to them were delivered to the county treasurer for the plaintiffs, upon their refusal to accept the same.

Prior to the death of Pointer the plaintiffs had delivered to the Jackson County Bank a mortgage upon their real property in Jackson county, to secure an indebtedness of approximately $1,600. Later that bank went into liquidation and the note' and mortgage were transferred to the First National Bank of Med-ford, of which latter bank Harder was president. Upon the insistence of the waiver committee of the Jackson County Bank, which committee had direction of collection of the assets which had been delivered to the First National Bank, the latter bank foreclosed this mortgage and caused the property covered thereby to be sold.

One of the grounds of complaint on the part of plaintiffs herein is that Harder as executor of the *641 Pointer estate should have prevented such foreclosure and should so have administered the Pointer estate as- to make available to the plaintiffs herein funds in sufficient amount and in.time to prevent such foreclosure, according to their contention that said Harder was representing the plaintiffs in the administration proceedings and was acting in a sort of dual capacity as to plaintiffs, by which he was required to protect them against such foreclosure proceedings.

The only allegation in the complaint which could in any way be said to intimate fraud on the part of Harder is the averment that “the said B. E. Harder as executor and trustee of the property of the estate of William A. Pointer, deceased, has wrongfully handled the property of the said William A. Pointer estate, negligently, grossly and fraudulently permitting needless expenditure of large sums of money, by holding unnecessarily said estate, in the probate court of Jackson county, Oregon, for a period of approximately five years and six months, unnecessarily withholding from the plaintiffs funds justly due them, to the injury and damage of the plaintiffs”.

The record utterly fails to disclose any evidence whatever as to any fraud in the administration of the Pointer estate. The inventory and appraisement might have been filed at an earlier date, but could not have been filed until after the injunction which was issued in the suit of Nalley against the First National Bank was dissolved. No injury was suffered by the plaintiffs because of this delay.

The final report was filed shortly after the mandate of the supreme court in the will contest case was entered in the trial court. It was definite and complete. In it the executor accounted for all assets re *642 ceived and disbursements made by Mm.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 618, 153 Or. 637, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cass-v-harder-or-1936.