Ferriter v. Estate of Blaney

607 P.2d 354, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 244
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1980
Docket5203
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 607 P.2d 354 (Ferriter v. Estate of Blaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferriter v. Estate of Blaney, 607 P.2d 354, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 244 (Wyo. 1980).

Opinion

ROONEY, Justice.

Appellant-plaintiff appeals from an order of the district court dismissing his replevin action against appellee-defendant, the administrator of the estate of Samuel D. Bla-ney. We reverse and remand.

The replevin action had for its purpose the obtaining of possession of certain guns and accessories (hereinafter referred to as guns). The possession of the guns was transferred to appellant by Samuel D. Bla-ney on or about Father’s Day in the summer of 1975. The guns were delivered as a surprise to appellant, and he considered the transfer as a gift. Samuel D. Blaney died May 2,1978. A holographic will dated May 24, 1976 was admitted to probate. It contained the following language:

“Walt and Mary Ferriter have a bill of sale for what I have given them.”

On appellee’s petition the probate court issued an order to appellant to show cause why the guns should not be delivered to appellee, the administrator of the estate. After a hearing 1 , the probate court ordered the guns to be so delivered, and such was done. Then on November 15, 1978, appellant filed a creditor’s claim for the guns in the estate. The notice to creditors was first published August 14, 1978. Pursuant to §§ 2-6-201 and 2-6-203, W.S.1977, creditor’s claims were therefore required to be filed on or before three months after August 14, 1978, or on or before November 15, 1978. On December 11, 1978, appellant’s claim was rejected: (1) as res judicata, (2) because appellant had no bill of sale for the guns, (3) because they were not listed in appellant’s divorce settlement with his wife, and (4) because it was not timely filed. The *356 record does not reflect notification to appellant of such rejection as is required by law. Appellant instituted this replevin action on June 11, 1979.

In dismissing the replevin action, the district court found:

“ * * * [T]he Plaintiff did not file his Creditors Claim in the Probate Court within the statutory limitation after the * * * Notice to Creditors had been published, and further finds that civil action was not started by the Plaintiff after the Defendants rejected the Creditors Claim in Probate Proceedings * * *, within the statutory limitation, and further finds that the said probate proceeding has been closed and the assets distributed to the devisee as indicated * * *, and without any objection from the Plaintiff herein.”

Appellant words the issue presented by his appeal as follows:

“ * * * [Wjhether the proper action for the recovery of property believed to be wrongfully taken by an Administrator of an estate is a creditor’s claim filed in the estate or an action in replevin separate from the probate proceedings.” '

Implied therein is the question of the relative jurisdictions of the probate court and the district court. To dispose of the issue and its related question, we address three items: (1) jurisdiction of the probate court to determine the contest over title and right to the guns; (2) alleged late filings by appellant of creditor’s claim and replevin action; and (3) effect of the closing of the estate on the replevin action.

JURISDICTION OF PROBATE COURT TO DETERMINE CONTEST OVER GUNS

The controlling rule is stated in 1 Bancroft’s Probate Practice 2d ed., § 27, pp. 70-71 (1950):

“ * * * It is thoroughly established that in probate proceedings title to property as between the estate, the heirs or devisees, and a third person [ 2 ] may not be tried. Thus a superior court, sitting in probate, has no jurisdiction or authority to determine disputed titles to the property of the estate of a deceased person. The rule extends to disputes as to the ownership of personalty as well as to title to realty. * * * ”

Part of the rationale for the concept of separate courts under the same judicial hat was set forth in Church v. Quiner, 31 Wyo. 222, 227, 224 P. 1073, 1074 (1924):

“ * * * Where, as in Wyoming, the same court that has jurisdiction in probate has also general jurisdiction, the separation of its powers exercised in probate from those exercised in actions at law or in equity might at first seem the result of a merely technical rule of no practical importance; but when it is borne in mind that the court in probate having jurisdiction of the estate can for many purposes acquire jurisdiction of the persons interested in the estate without any actual notice to them, the substantial nature of the distinction, as well as the importance of maintaining it in practice, becomes clear. We deem it unnecessary to refer to other reasons for confining the probate jurisdiction to ‘matters of probate,’ as defined by law.”

See In re Stringer’s Estate, 80 Wyo. 426, 345 P.2d 786 (1959).

We recently quoted from Church v. Quiner, supra, in the Matter of Estate of Frederick, Wyo., 599 P.2d 550, 555 (1979), to indicate that decisions and proceedings made by, or conducted in, probate courts on matters wherein there is an absence of jurisdiction are legally void and of no effect:

“ ‘While in this state the district court is the court of general jurisdiction, and the same court has by the Constitution (section 10, art. 5) jurisdiction “of all matters of probate,” yet, in the exercise of its probate powers, its jurisdiction is limited and special, and when its acts in probate *357 are without the limits of the special jurisdiction conferred, they have no binding effect “even upon those who have invoked its authority.” In re Black’s Estate, 30 Wyo. 55, 216 P. 1059, 1063. * * * ' "

Accordingly, the orders of the probate court for appellant to show cause and to deliver the guns to appellee were beyond its jurisdiction and were void and of no effect. A void judgment is not res judicata. Stroock v. Kirby Royalties, Inc., Wyo., 494 P.2d 197 (1972); 50 C.J.S. Judgments § 617 (1947).

To obtain proper possession of the guns, appellee, as administrator, could have brought his replevin action in the district court.

“ * * * Since, by statute [ 3 ] in most of the states, and likewise under the common-law rule, the executor or administrator has complete control of the personalty and is charged with the duty of reducing it to possession for purposes of administration, no extensive citation of authority is needed to demonstrate the existence of a right in him to maintain such actions as replevin or claim and delivery. * * * ” 2 Bancroft’s Probate Practice 2d ed. § 484, p. 612 (1950). See Windle v. Flinn, 196 Or. 654, 251 P.2d 136 (1952).

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Bluebook (online)
607 P.2d 354, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferriter-v-estate-of-blaney-wyo-1980.