Frazier v. Kutz

139 F.2d 380, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 241, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2293
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 13, 1943
DocketNo. 8428
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 F.2d 380 (Frazier v. Kutz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Kutz, 139 F.2d 380, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 241, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2293 (D.D.C. 1943).

Opinion

GRONER C. J.

This appeal arises, out of a judgment of the United States District Court sitting as a court of probate.

Appellant is the Administrator of the Estate of Vesle Crew, who died in the District of Columbia July 27, 1940, leaving an estate of approximately a thousand dollars. No proceedings for administration having been taken within a reasonable time, appellant as a creditor,1 filed his petition to [381]*381be appointed administrator. The petition stated that after diligent search and inquiry appellant was satisfied Crew died intestate and without surviving relations. Under the rule of the Probate Court, the clerk caused to be published in two newspapers the usual show cause order to “unknown heirs at law and next of kin.” No cause being shown, an order — without hearing — was passed February 17, 1941, appointing appellant administrator. Thereafter appellant, on July 14, 1942, filed his final account showing the receipt of about Nine Flundred and Fifty Dollars ($950.00) in money, the payment therefrom of court costs, commissions, funeral expenses of Five Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($550.00), and the deposit of the remainder of the fund into the Registry of the court “for the benefit of the unknown heirs at law and next of kin.” To this report the District of Columbia excepted, claiming under the escheat section as distributee, to be entitled to the entire estate, less costs of administration and Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00), the statutory allowance for funeral expenses.2

Appellant moved to strike the exceptions on the ground the District was without sufficient interest entitling it to object to the account. The court denied the motion, disallowed the administrator’s claim for funeral expenses in excess of Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) and ordered the difference between the amount claimed in that item and the amount allowed, together with the residuum, paid to the District of Columbia.

On this appeal appellant’s position is that before the District is entitled to claim as escheatee, there must be an adjudication by a court of competent jurisdiction that intestate left no heirs at law or next of kin, and appellant says there is no statute in the District conferring on the Probate Court jurisdiction to determine this question.

The claim of the District is founded wholly upon the elause of the Statute of Descents, which, after directing the manner of descent and distribution to kindred within the fifth degree, provides that if there are no such kindred, “the whole surplus shall belong to the District of Columbia.”3

The statute is silent as to the method of determining if there are next of kin who can inherit; and accordingly, as we view it, the question for decision is whether the Probate Court, under its general jurisdiction to superintend the administration of decedents’ estates, has that power and if it has, upon a finding that there are no relations entitled to take, to order payment of the whole net estate to the District of Columbia ; or whether, as at common law, and as appellant insists, an inquest of office is necessary. The precise question seems not to have arisen in this jurisdiction. The local statute, which it is claimed by the District authorizes the judgment appealed from, is as follows: 4

“It (the Probate Court) shall have full power and authority to take the proof of wills of either personal or real estate and admit the same to probate and record, and for cause to revoke the probate thereof; to grant and, for any of the causes hereinafter mentioned, to revoke letters testamentary, letters of administration, letters ad colligendum, and letters of guardianship, and to appoint a successor in the place of anyone whose letters have been revoked; to hear, examine, and decree upon all accounts, claims, and demands existing between executors and administrators and legatees, or persons entitled to a distributive share of an intestate estate, or between wards and their guardians; to enforce the rendition of inventories and accounts by executors, administrators, collectors, guardians, and trustees required to account to said court; to enforce the distribution of estates by executors and administrators, and the payment or delivery by guardians of money or property belonging to their wards: Provided, That the jurisdiction of said probate court shall not be exclusive of the jurisdiction of the said equity court to entertain suits by legatees or next of kin against executors or administrators, or by wards against their guard[382]*382ians for an accounting; and, except in cases provided for in section 11 — 520, any settlement of accounts in said probate court shall only be prima facie evidence as to the correctness of said accounts in any such suits, or in suits by creditors against executors or administrators, or against heirs or devisees, to subject the real estate of decedents to the payments of their debts.”

We have held as to the jurisdiction of the Probate Court that it has none to decide disputes concerning title to or possession of property as between the executor or administrator on the one hand and strangers claiming adversely on the other.5 But we have also held it does have jurisdiction to require an administrator to pay over to the next of kin personal estate of which a testator died intestate.6 We can see no difference between this power and the power, in the absence of next of kin, to order in a proper case the payment of the residuum to an escheatee, as the statute provides. Here the right asserted on behalf of the District is as statutory distributee. Obviously, the ascertainment of this right involves a determination by some court that there is a complete failure of heirs at law or next of kin. We think a fair reading of the Code section we have quoted impels the conclusion that Congress intended in clothing the Probate Court with jurisdiction “to hear, examine, and decree upon all * * * claims * * * between executors and administrators and legatees, or persons entitled to a distributive share of an intestate estate,” to include the duty of finding that there are or that there are not statutory heirs, and upon this finding to make distribution as the statute requires. See, also, Kenaday v. Sinnott, 179 U.S. 606-614, 21 S.Ct. 233, 45 L.Ed. 339. In the instant case, if on the death of intestate there were no kin within the classes named in the statute, the property after payment of debts eo instante vested in and became the property of the District of Columbia.7

In this view the status of the District is like that of a person claiming as heir, in which case it becomes the duty of the Probate Court to determine if he is within any of the classes named in the statute. This appears to us too plain for argument, for the object of the statute creating the court was to provide a tribunal in which it might be judicially determined who takes the property left by a deceased intestate. The position of the District, therefore, in such a proceeding as this is not that of an adverse claimant. The es-cheat section, obviously, is as much a part of the statutory scheme of distribution as the other parts in relation to heirs at law or next of kin. Considered in this aspect, it would logically follow that the Probate Court, upon a finding that there are no heirs, has ample powers to decree distribution to the District as escheatee. See Christianson v.

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Bluebook (online)
139 F.2d 380, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 241, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-kutz-dcd-1943.