Fitchard v. Estate of Hirschberg

274 P. 505, 272 P. 906, 128 Or. 317, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 353
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 274 P. 505 (Fitchard v. Estate of Hirschberg) 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
Fitchard v. Estate of Hirschberg, 274 P. 505, 272 P. 906, 128 Or. 317, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 353 (Or. 1928).

Opinions

BEAN, J.

Mr. Oscar Hayter, an attorney of Dallas, in that county, had been the attorney for Harold L. Fitehard in his lifetime and also for Mr. Hirschberg, and the First National Bank of Independence. Soon after Mr. Fitchard’s death Mrs. Fitehard consulted Mr. Hayter, who at her request came to her house on account of her illness. She was advised as to the general situation in respect to the property of the estate and the necessity of probate proceedings and guardianship relating to the care of her minor son’s share of the estate. Mrs. Fitehard first petitioned for the appointment of herself as administratrix of the estate and afterward withdrew her petition and requested the appointment of Mr. Hirsch *323 berg as administrator. This was apparently because of the intricacies of the estate and her inexperience in business.

After his appointment the administrator promptly published notice to creditors. On August 14, 1919, a report was filed setting forth the claims which had been allowed and requested payment of the same, and an order was then entered for such payment. On April 24, 1919, the administrator collected $10,000 of insurance money. This with the other receipts brought the estate funds on hand to over $16,000. By September the payment of the allowed claims was practically completed. The C. L. Fitchard disputed claim of $5,642, was presented on July 18, 1919, and the other claim of about $153 of Fitchard & Wolfe was presented at the same time.

Mr. Hayter, a trustworthy and experienced attorney, as a witness for the defendants, testified that investigation of these claims and the fact that they were pending undetermined, delayed the filing of the final account. Negotiations for settlement were going on and largely on account of these claims final account was not filed until September 22, 1920. In November, 1920, C. L. Fitchard and Fitchard & Wolfe, filed an objection to the final account, for the reason of the disallowance of their claims.

The trial involving these objections was commenced on December 16, 1920. On January 19, 1921, the County Court made findings of fact disallowing the objections and rendered a decree accordingly. The time for appeal from this decree expired on February 19, 1921. In March, 1921, a supplemental final account was filed and on'April 7, 1921, a decree approving the final account and supplemental account, and discharging the administrator, was entered by the *324 County Court. It is not shown that there was any unnecessary delay in the administration of the estate.

The first cause of suit consists of the plaintiff’s claim that the defendants should be charged with interest upon the funds of the estate amounting’ to between nine and ten thousand dollars, which were held on deposit by the administrator in a checking account in the First National Bank of Independence for a period of a year and ten months, during the close of the administration, and that a money decree should be awarded therefor.

The defendants pleaded, in effect, that this matter was settled and adjudicated by the decree of the Probate Court approving the administrator’s final account, which disclosed all of the facts and included no charge for interest.

In plaintiff’s complaint it was alleged that neither the bank nor Hirschberg disclosed to plaintiff the facts in relation to the matter of interest or the plaintiff’s rights thereunder, and that the plaintiff did not discover her rights until a month before institution of this suit. The answer of defendants first alleges facts tending to show that Hirschberg was not negligent in not closing the estate sooner and in not seeking an investment for the funds on hand, in that there were large claims which had to be determined or settled, and the determination of which dragged along without fault on Hirschberg’s part, and beyond the time reasonably anticipated by him.

It was also pleaded in the answer that Margaret Fitchard in her personal and also in her guardianship capacity, was barred by laches from the prosecution of this suit, having been in possession of all of the facts long prior to two years before the commencement of this suit. Plaintiff’s reply put in issue the *325 allegations of the affirmative answer, except as alleged in the complaint.

It is shown by the. record that the account of H. Hirschberg, as administrator in the First National Bank of Independence, on the last of April, 1919, disclosed that there was over $16,000 on hand. This amount was reduced by the payment of claims, so that in September, 1919, there was slightly over $10,-000 on hand. From October 7, 1919, until after the first of March, 1921, there was a balance of some over $9,000. These balances were kept by the administrator in a checking account, upon which no interest was paid by the bank. The bank did not have a savings department during that time. It paid no interest on any checking account,o except in case of the deposits of public moneys on which 2 per cent was paid; that certificates of deposit were issued upon which interest of6 from 3 to 4 per cent per annum was paid, depending upon the length of time of the deposit.

The final account filed by the administrator on September 22, 1920, is contained in the .record and sets forth fhe procedure in the matter of the estate with clarity and fullness, and indicates the moneys received and dates thereof and the disbursements made.

Notice of filing of the final account was regularly given as provided by law. The check which Mrs. Fitchard received for her individual share of the estate for $3,838.60, had thereon a notation, “my share of estate as divided by court. ’ ’ The check which she received on March 12, 1921, as guardian for her minor son, for his share of the estate, in the amount of $4,453.67, had written upon it, “in full to date.” She was appointed guardian of her son March 3d, 1921, upon her petition of that date. A complaint in *326 this cause was filed by Margaret Fitchard in her individual capacity alone on October 18,1924.

It is first contended by defendants that the order of the County Court of Polk County, in the matter of the estate of Harold Fitchard, made upon due notice, approving the final account of Hirschberg, as administrator and discharging him from his trust, is conclusive upon all adult heirs and parties in interest, in the absence of fraud, mistake or duress. They cite the case of State v. O’Day, 41 Or. 495 (69 Pac. 542). Let us take as a key to the situation the language of former Justice Bean, in that case, found on page 502 of the report (69 Pac. 545) as follows:

“The notice published in obedience to the orders of the county court updn the filing of Cooper’s final account was sufficient notice to it and all other parties interested to render the decree of distribution, which was necessarily a part of the final settlement of the estate, conclusive, until reversed or ¿et aside in some direct proceeding.”

The present suit is a direct proceeding attacking the decree of the County Court approving the account of the administrator and discharging him from his trust.

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Fitchard v. Estate of Hirschberg
274 P. 505 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 505, 272 P. 906, 128 Or. 317, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitchard-v-estate-of-hirschberg-or-1928.