Estate of Peterson v. Quillin

107 P.2d 580, 6 Wash. 2d 294
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1940
DocketNo. 27871.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 107 P.2d 580 (Estate of Peterson v. Quillin) 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
Estate of Peterson v. Quillin, 107 P.2d 580, 6 Wash. 2d 294 (Wash. 1940).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This is an appeal from orders striking objections to the final report df the administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lars Peterson, and from the decree and order approving the final report.

The estate is, or rather was, of considerable value. From the last of the three former cases concerning it, which reached this court, National Bank of Commerce *296 v. Peterson, 179 Wash. 638, 38 P. (2d) 361, we quote as follows:

“On September 20, 1924, Lars Peterson died in Seattle leaving an estate, the real property of which was appraised at $224,500 and the personal property appraised at $18,512.05, totalling $243,012.05. At the time of his death, there were mortgage and contract indebtedness against the property in the sum of $63,028.36.
“Notice to creditors was published October 7, 1924. The following claims were filed: Seattle National Bank, on a promissory note, unsecured, for $6,000; C. A. J. Taylor, unsecured, for $1,500; and BonneyWatson Co. for funeral expenses, unsecured, for $2,800. These were allowed and fully paid by the administrator L. A. Peterson. A claim for $234,666.66 by Neola Taylor Higgins was rejected by the administrator, was sued upon, the rejection sustained, the cause appealed and affirmed by this court on February 7, 1929. Higgins v. Peterson, 150 Wash. 620, 274 Pac. 186. In that and a preceding case, In re Peterson’s Estate, 137 Wash. 137, 241 Pac. 964, L. A. Peterson was successful in substantiating himself as the son and sole heir of Lars Peterson, and the claim of Neola Taylor Higgins for the whole estate was defeated.”

In that opinion, this court also took occasion to say:

“In passing, we wish to observe that our probate statute, Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1517 [P. C. § 9885], makes it the duty of every administrator to settle the estate in his hands as rapidly and as quickly as possible without sacrifice to the estate. We are powerless, as the trial judge in this case probably also felt, to compel more speedy action on the part of the administrator, as directed by the statute, within any specified time. He seems, however, to have been managing the estate as if he were the sole owner, or at least under a non-intervention will giving him sole authority. This last is, of course, not true. There seems to be no reason why the estate should not be settled.”

Although this rather pointed suggestion was made by this court on December 10, 1934, no final report and *297 petition for distribution was filed for nearly four years; and when it was filed on November 1, 1938, although the original administrator started out with net assets of about $180,000, and with little more than $10,000 in claims, and although the moneys received during the entire administration amounted to $326,978.90, and the expenses to $258,876.58, a difference of $68,102.32, the report showed that there was nothing at all left for distribution, and, in fact, that the attorney for the administrator would have to forego $3,568 of the fees which had been allowed him by the court.

To this report, Mina B. Quillin and Neola Taylor Higgins filed separate objections, to which demurrers were sustained, the objections stricken, and the final report approved. This appeal followed.

We are met at the outset of the case with a motion to dismiss the appeal. This motion was heard on motion day and passed to the merits. It is made on two grounds: First, that the transcript of record on appeal and appellants’ brief were not filed within the time prescribed by the rules of the court.

The transcript and brief were on file before the motion to dismiss was filed, and, as the matter is not jurisdictional and since it does not appear that any prejudice to respondent has resulted from the delay, the motion to dismiss on that ground will be denied.

The second ground is to the effect that it appears on the face of the record that the two appellants had no standing in law to file objections to the report. This is also the respondent’s major contention on the merits.

The opinion in National Bank of Commerce v. Peterson, supra, also recites:

“On September 23, 1931, the judge then sitting as probate judge made an order allowing the attorney for the administrator a fee of twenty-five thousand dollars in addition to an allowance of one thousand dollars made when the administrator’s first report was ap *298 proved, and allowed a like sum to L. A. Peterson, as administrator of the estate. This hearing was ex parte, and both the administrator and his attorney knew that the state inheritance tax had not been adjudged and paid. The administrator paid the Federal inheritance tax several years ago, but has never completed his report to the state inheritance tax department. All other steps in the administration of the estate were practically completed in 1929 or 1930.”

L. A. Peterson received $26,300 as administrator’s fees and, as the court remarked in the National Bank of Commerce opinion, seems to have managed the estate as if he were the sole owner, or, at least, under a nonintervention will giving him sole authority. After so managing the estate for thirteen years, he died in October, 1937, and C. A. J. Taylor, the present administrator, was appointed. He recites in his official report:

“That all monies received by said administrator [L. A. Peterson] and not expended by him for said estate as above-mentioned, amounting to the sum of $68,102.32, were used by him in his life time; that at the time the said C. A. J. Taylor was appointed as said administrator de bonis non of said estate the only property remaining therein was a small amount of furniture and fixtures of very little value, subject to four years’ taxes; that he filed herein a petition for the sale of said property; that on the 16th day of June, 1936, this court ordered the same to be sold and, although he has made diligent effort to do so, he has not been able to get any offer for it over and above enough to pay said taxes; that his attorney, James C. McKnight, has offered to take it, subject to said taxes, in payment of the costs advanced and to be advanced by him for said estate and he recommends that his offer be accepted.”

The income from the corpus of the estate is thus accounted for. What became of the corpus itself?

The inventory shows the personal property of the estate and the appraisal as follows:

*299 (1) “Household Articles $ 500.00
(2) “One Cadillac Automobile 1,000.00
(3) “One Watch, one Ladies Dinner Eing, set with small diamonds and one small Gold Eing and ' other small articles of Jewelry 200.00
(4) “One Gold Eing, set with a large Diamond, one Tie Pin, set with large Diamond, two Shirt Studs, each set with a small Diamond and one Gold Eing, set with small Diamond, 1,400.00

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Bluebook (online)
107 P.2d 580, 6 Wash. 2d 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-peterson-v-quillin-wash-1940.