Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Meldrum

50 P.2d 570, 46 Ariz. 295, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 162
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1935
DocketCivil No. 3560.
StatusPublished

This text of 50 P.2d 570 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Meldrum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Meldrum, 50 P.2d 570, 46 Ariz. 295, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 162 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, C. J.

— This is a proceeding by Jess Meldrum, as administrator of the estate of Emmett West, deceased, against Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, a corporation, hereinafter called defendant, to recover on the bond of Esther E. West, as administratrix of said estate. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $1,500 and $32.25 costs, and from said judgment this 'appeal was taken. The facts of the case may be stated as follows:

Emmett West died on the 7th day of February, 1931, and on the 15th day of April, Esther E. West, his wife, was appointed administratrix of the estate and filed her bond with defendant as security thereon in the sum of $1,500,- letters of administration being issued to her the next day. On the 5th of May she filed an inventory and appraisement which showed the following items: A claim for compensation from *297 the United States government appraised at $300, two horses appraised at $50, certain household furniture, farm implements and an automobile appraised at $175, and an equity in 20 acres of land appraised at $1,200. The horses and farm implements which the administratrix returned as belonging to the estate, aforesaid, had been sold by her a few days before her appointment for the sum of $150, and shortly after her appointment she received from the United States government the sum of $327 in payment of the claim for compensation. She had thus received from the appraised assets of the estate the sum of $477 in cash, and presumably still had in her possession the automobile and household furniture appraised at $125 and the equity in the land which had been appraised at $1,200. Shortly after her qualification, three claims against the estate were filed and were approved by her, these being: (a) Claim of the plaintiff for funeral expenses in the sum of $382.50; (b) claim of Dr. L. M. Tompkins for expenses of last illness $205.50; and (c) claim of Southside Community Hospital for expenses of last illness $10. None of these claims were paid. On September 19, 1932, plaintiff, being one of the creditors of the estate, filed a petition setting forth that his claim for funeral expenses had not been satisfied, although the administratrix had received sufficient money from the estate to pay it, and asked for an order requiring her and her bondsman to show cause why the claim should not be paid. Such an order was issued and served on the attorneys who had appeared for the administratrix, and upon defendant. The hearing on the petition was continued from time to time, and before it was heard Dr. Tompkins had also filed his petition for a similar order regarding his claim. A hearing was had on the petition of plaintiff, but no order was *298 made thereon by the court, and apparently the petition of Dr. Tompkins was dropped. Thereafter the three creditors filed a joint motion praying for an order requiring the administratrix and defendant to pay their claims. The matter was continued from time to time and several hearings had, and in May, 1933, the court made findings that the claims had not been paid; that the administratrix had received sufficient money to pay them, but had failed to do so; and that cause existed for her removal as an administratrix, but made no Order based on such findings.

Plaintiff immediately filed a petition alleging that the administratrix had made no accounting since her appointment, and had absconded from the state, and prayed that she be removed, and that he be appointed as administrator in her place. Apparently this petition never came to a hearing, for a new petition to a similar effect was filed on the 21st of June, and an order for a citation to the administratrix was made the same day. The order directed that service be made by publication once a week for two weeks and personal service on the attorneys for the administratrix. Service was made in accordance with the ordfer by publishing the citation for two weeks, and by serving it on the attorneys. No notice of this citation was ever given to defendant unless the publication and service on the attorneys be considered as such. The matter came on for hearing on the 8th day of July, and the court found that the administratrix had failed to account for any of the assets of the estate; that she had converted them to her own use and dissipated them so that they were entirely lost, and had absconded and removed from the state, and following such finding, revoked the letters of administration, and ordered as follows, “That said Esther E. West be and she is hereby adjudged liable *299 to said estate in the sum of Seventeen Hundred Twenty-five and no/100 ($1725.00) Dollars, the appraised value of the assets of said estate, and that said Esther E. West be and she is hereby ordered to pay said sum to her successor in office,” whereupon plaintiff was appointed as administrator of the estate of Emmett West, and immediately filed this action against the defendants, setting up the appointment of the administratrix, and filing of the bond, inventory and appraisement, and claims, the failure of the administratrix to pay the claims, the revocation of her letters, and the order of the court holding her indebted to the estate in the sum of $1,725, and that by reason of her failure to execute her duties, the estate had been damaged in the sum of $1,725 property loss through her neglect of duty, and praying judgment against the defendant for the full amount of the bond of $1,500.

Upon the trial plaintiff offered in evidence the entire record in the probate proceedings. This was strenuously objected to by defendant, but was finally admitted. Oral testimony was also introduced showing the sale of the team and farm implements for $150, and the receipt of the compensation claim. The owner of the realty, the equity in which had been inventoried as an asset of the estate, also testified. The substance of his testimony was that the land in question, 20 acres, had been sold to Emmett West, under a conditional contract of sale for the sum of $2,000, of which approximately $1,600 had been paid, and that by the terms of the contract a default in the remaining payments would authorize the owner to terminate the contract upon giving nine months’ notice of his intention to the purchaser, during which nine months, of course, the latter might pay the remaining sum of between $400 and $500 and take .title *300 to the land. The owner also testified that the administratrix at one time told him she would pay out the contract, but never did make any further payments, and had left the land in question, and that he had never given notice of forfeiture of the contract to anyone. This, in substance, is the record upon which the court rendered judgment against defendant for the full penalty of the bond and costs.

There are four assignments of error which we will discuss as seems best from the standpoint of the issues of law raised thereby. The first question is whether or not the order of the probate court fixing liability against the administratrix was valid so as to bind the defendant. It is the contention of the latter that the citation issued, upon which the order fixing the liability of the administratrix is necessarily based, was never legally served upon her or upon it, and for that reason the probate court was without jurisdiction to make its order fixing such liability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 570, 46 Ariz. 295, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-of-maryland-v-meldrum-ariz-1935.