Hale v. Burford

214 P. 543, 73 Colo. 197, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 2, 1923
DocketNo. 10,352
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 214 P. 543 (Hale v. Burford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Burford, 214 P. 543, 73 Colo. 197, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 316 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

December 1, 1919, Lewis W. Burford was appointed, [198]*198and thereupon at once qualified as, the administrator of the estate of his deceased brother, Ben S. Burford. Decedent left surviving him his widow, Flora Burford, and four minor children, who, at the time of his death were, and for several years prior thereto, had been residing with him at the family home on his farm in Alamosa county, Colorado. On the day the administrator qualified, the court entered an order appointing three appraisers to estimate the value of the widow’s allowance, which the appraisers made, and returned their findings to the court on December 9th, whereby there were set aside and given to the widow certain specific articles of the personal property of the estate aggregating-in value $1800. This appraisement was approved by the court. The record does not show whether any formal application was made, either by the administrator or the widow, for the order appointing the appraisers, or the order approving their report, but none of the parties to this litigation questions the validity of the allowance, and no attempt has been made to set it aside. Indeed, all the parties rely upon it and recognize it. The effect of the order was to segregate from the estate the property included therein, of the value of $1800, and to vest the same in the widow as of the date of the approval order. Of this property none was turned over by the administrator, or received by the widow, as she contends, except two cows, two hogs, and a pony, which she says were of the aggregate value of $180. No other or further action concerning this order was had until July 8, 1921, when the widow filed in the county court her petition for a widow’s allowance, and 8 days later when she filed an amended -petition in which she alleged that she had received only the property just mentioned and had exercised her right of election under the statute to take the balance of the total award of $1800 in money, which amounted to $1620, and asked for an order of the court directing the administrator to execute the order by paying her this balance. To the amended petition there were filed two separate answers: one, by the administrator, the other, [199]*199by creditors of the estate whose claims had been approved, these answers being substantially the same. The objections urged, which fairly present the questions for determination, may be considered and disposed of in the following order:

1. The objectors say that, though Mrs. Burford was the widow of the intestate at the time when the court approved the order of allowance, she ceased to be his widow in April, 1921, when she married Marion Hale, about three months before the amended petition was filed. The argument is, that since the widow’s allowance is made only for one who is actually a widow, and as a widow ceases to be a widow upon her re-marriage, she is not entitled to the allowance which she asked in her amended petition. The exigencies of the present case do not require a decision as to when a widow ceases to be a widow. That may be a debatable question. While it has been held that re-marriage of a widow may bar her from any subsequent claim upon an estate, and while a previous order of allowance may thereupon terminate without any further order of the court, such re-marriage does not divest her, or her minor children, of allowances already vested before the re-marriage. 18 Cyc. p. 393, and cases cited. If this allowance to Mrs. Burford did not vest by operation of the statute immediately upon the death of her husband, as to which we express no opinion, it certainly did vest December 9, 1919, long before the re-marriage, when the court approved the estimate of the appraisers and set aside specific articles of property to her, subject, of course, to her right of relinquishment and an election of other kinds of property. Her rights under the order were not divested by her subsequent marriage.

2. Another objection is that no formal application for an order of allowance was made within the period of one year after letters of administration were granted. This ground of objection is based upon the erroneous assumption that the widow’s allowance is in the nature of a debt or demand of the fifth class against the estate, and, unless [200]*200presented within the year, the same is barred by the statute of non-claims. Compiled Laws of Colorado, 1921, section 5331. This Court has held that the widow’s allowance is not a debt or demand of that nature, that it is not a debt of, or an interest in, the estate, but a preferred claim, in the nature of costs of administration superior to claims of the fifth class, which are ordinary contract debts against the estate. Remington v. Remington, 72 Colo. 132, 209 Pac. 802; In re Madril’s Estate, 71 Colo. 123, 204 Pac. 483, in which previous decisions of this Court, to the effect noted, are cited. See also Grover v. Clover, 69 Colo. 72. The objection is wholly without merit.

Furthermore, if it be true, as contended, that the widow, within a reasonable time, must make a proper demand upon the administrator and the court for an order of allowance, that is not important here, for the county court made the order, which all the parties to this litigation have recognized as valid, and whether it was made with or without a request of the widow or the administrator is immaterial.

3. All the parties admit the order was, at least, in part, complied with by the administrator in turning over to the widow the two cows, two hogs and a pony. The objectors, however, say that other items of personal property of the estate, all aggregating about $300 in value, were also received by her, and that she was also given, and received, as the result of an agreement between the administrator and a Mr. Duncan, the purchaser of the lands of the estate, a lease of a portion thereof for five years, the value of which was $1500, and that by reason of the foregoing the widow already received, before her amended petition was filed, property of the value of $1800.

The court did make a finding that the widow had received, of the property awarded to her by the appraisers, certain articles of the value of about $300, and that she accepted, in lieu of the other articles awarded, the above mentioned lease which was of the value of $1500. If the evidence sustains this finding, the judgment should not [201]*201be set aside. There was evidence concerning the subject matter of this finding of the court. The administrator and the objectors have not appeared in this Court and for this reason we have not relied alone upon the abstract of the record made by counsel for the widow, who has sued out this writ, but have resorted to the transcript and carefully read the evidence. The finding and judgment below find no support in the record. Section 5347, Compiled Laws of Colorado, 1921, provides that where a decedent leaves a widow residing in this state, she shall be allowed to have and retain as her sole and separate property certain described articles, not to exceed, in any event, the sum of $2,000, in value, and section 5349, of the same compilation, provides that when an inventory shall have been made of the personal estate, the widow may relinquish her right to any, or all, of the specific articles of property allowed her by section 5347, and shall be entitled to other property or the value of the same in money, and that it shall be the duty of the administrator to set apart to her the money, if she elects to take money, to be paid in proper order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 P. 543, 73 Colo. 197, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-burford-colo-1923.