Cedercrans v. Prall

9 Wash. 2d 415
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1941
DocketNo. 27921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Wash. 2d 415 (Cedercrans v. Prall) 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
Cedercrans v. Prall, 9 Wash. 2d 415 (Wash. 1941).

Opinions

Robinson, C. J. —

Emma J. Tibbits died testate March 17, 1934, leaving surviving her, her husband, George [416]*416Tibbits, a son, Edward Tibbits, and three daughters, Addie Prall, Jessie Turner, and Ruby Bard. By her will, which was admitted to probate, Mrs. Tibbits devised all of her property, real and personal, to her husband for life, remainder in equal shares to her four children.

Edward Tibbits died October 14, 1935, leaving surviving him two daughters. Appellant Cedercra^gs, husband of one of his daughters, was appointed administrator of his estate. George Tibbits, husband of Emma J. Tibbits, died September 9, 1938. It appears from the court’s memorandum opinion — though this does not appear in the evidence — that he left a will making no provision for the two children of his deceased son Edward.

The inventory filed in the estate of Emma J. Tibbits listed among the assets, under the heading: “Bonds, Notes and Accounts Due Deceased,” the following:

“From Edward Tibbits by reason of his note, $1700.00 Interest on same........................ 2184.00”

Other indebtedness was claimed to be owing by Edward Tibbits, with which, the cross-appeal not being pressed, we are not here concerned.

J. T. Prall, as the administrator de bonis non of the estate of Emma J. Tibbits, filed a final report and petition for distribution praying that the alleged indebtedness of Edward Tibbits be set off or charged upon his share of his mother’s estate. August Cedercrans, as executor of Edward’s estate, filed objections. A trial was had before the court. The court found that Edward Tibbits, at the time of his mother’s death, was indebted to the community estate of his parents in the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, and accrued interest at eight per cent per annum from November 14, 1925, the date to which interest had been paid, and, as the amount exceeded the value of Edward’s share, [417]*417decreed that the estate be distributed, share and share alike, to Jessie Turner, Addie Prall, and the administrator of the estate of Ruby Bard.

In appealing, Cedercrans, as executor of Edward Tibbitts’ estate, makes four contentions, namely:

(1) That the statute of limitations had run;

(2) That, if Edward Tibbits at any time owed his parents seventeen hundred dollars, by reason of his father paying his note, the matter became res judicata in an action brought by the administrator of Edward Tibbits’ estate against George Tibbits and Ruby Bard, as the then administratrix of Emma Tibbits’ estate, in November, 1936, which action was compromised by the defendant paying a sum of money to the plaintiff;

(3) That, if the indebtedness existed as claimed, the parents of Edward were guilty of laches in the collection thereof;

(4) That, in any event, there was not sufficient proof that such an indebtedness existed at the time of -Emma Tibbits’ death to warrant the allowance of the offset.

There is no merit in the first of these contentions. This was not an action on a note, but a claim to offset an indebtedness. By the weight of authority, this may be done, even though the statute of limitations has run, since the running of the statute merely prevents the bringing of an action; it does not cancel the indebtedness. We have, on that theory, consistently allowed such offsets in the settlement of estates. The reasons for so doing are quite fully set out in the opinion in In re Smith’s Estate, 179 Wash. 417, 38 P. (2d) 244.

As to the second contention, we need only say that we have examined the files in that action, brought up as exhibits in this cause, as well as the testimony given by the attorneys who represented the parties therein. [418]*418We are satisfied that the court correctly ruled that there was no such adjudication in that case.

The third contention, re the doctrine of laches, brings into conflict two equitable doctrines; for the right to offset is itself an equitable doctrine. As the note, with respect to which the asserted indebtedness is claimed to have originated, is dated November 14, 1918, and the last interest payment was endorsed on it in November, 1925, and Emma Tibbits lived until March, 1934, and her husband George Tibbits until September, 1938, this contention might, perhaps, be sufficient to call for a reversal of the case; but we prefer to place our decision upon less debatable ground.

When this inquiry took place, the asserted obligation was very old. No enforcement had been attempted over a period of many years. The parties to the note were, in fact, all dead, and no direct evidence was obtainable. Although the court, in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction, could disregard the spirit of the statute of limitations and the doctrine of laches, it seems clear to us that it could only rightly do so upon very clear proof that the indebtedness actually existed. We do not find such proof in the record.

We shall endeavor to fully set out and, for the most part, quote, such evidence as there is.

A note for seventeen hundred dollars, dated November 14, 1918, interest at eight per cent per annum, payable to the order of J. W. Prall, but with the signatures torn off, was admitted in evidence after J. T. Prall, administrator of the estate of Emma Tibbits and the husband of one of the Tibbits’ daughters, testified that J. W. Prall was his father, and he had seen the note in his father’s possession a number of years before, and it then bore the signatures of Edward Tibbits and George Tibbits. He testified that, in 1934, at a time [419]*419when Edward Tibbits owed him some money, Tibbits, in volunteering an apology for not paying him, said:

“You know I can’t pay it. You know I have not. been able to pay my father the note he had to pay your father for me.”

This is relied upon as proof of an admission by Edward Tibbits that: (1) His signature was on the note introduced in evidence; (2) that it was his obligation; (3) that his father paid it for him; and (4) that he still owed his father the amount paid. But it in no way identifies the note. There may have been another note between the same parties. This testimony, if properly admitted, concerning which the trial court expressed grave doubt, is of little or no probative force.

Judge Charles W. Greenough, of the superior court of the state of Washington for Spokane county, was called as a witness. He had probated the estate of Emma Tibbits before his election to the bench, and had also been attorney for the defendants George Tibbits and Ruby Bard in the action brought by Cedercrans, hereinbefore referred to. He identified the note, and stated that it was brought to him when he probated the Emma Tibbits’ estate. He further testified that he had discussed the instrument and another note with Edward Tibbits, and Edward had admitted that he had signed them. We quote:

“Q. What, if anything, was said as to who paid them — by Ed Tibbits? A. He said that his father paid them, and that was George Tibbits.”

This is evidence of an admission by Edward Tibbits that the seventeen hundred dollar note was his obligation and that his father had paid it. It is no admission, however, that he, therefore, owed his father seventeen hundred dollars. We quote from the further examination of Judge Greenough:

[420]*420“By the Court: Q.

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9 Wash. 2d 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedercrans-v-prall-wash-1941.