In Re Carmack's Estate

233 P. 942, 133 Wash. 374, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1197
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1925
DocketNo. 18829. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 233 P. 942 (In Re Carmack's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Carmack's Estate, 233 P. 942, 133 Wash. 374, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1197 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Bridges, J.

case involves the story of the life of George Washington Carmack, the discoverer of the Klondike. He died in June, 1922. Marguerite Car-mack, claiming to be his widow, applied to the courts of this state for administration on his estate. She was appointed, took the oath of office, and gave bond and proceeded to the performance of her duties. Within a few weeks, Rose Curtis, claiming to be the sister of the deceased, and Grace Saftig, claiming to be his daughter by a former marriage, petitioned the court to remove the administratrix for various reasons, among others, that she was not a resident of the state of Washington. Upon this matter coming on to be heard, Mrs. Carmack admitted that she was not a resident of the state and expressed a willingness to resign and asked that a designated person be appointed. The court removed her and appointed as administrator with the will annexed, Hermon S. Frye, a person of his own selection.

Thereafter Mrs. Carmack, as administratrix, filed a final report, claiming that she was entitled to be allowed $697.22 for moneys paid out, and claiming that the only property in which the deceased was interested which had come into her hands was a small amount of personal property and lots 5 and 8 and the east % of the N. E. 34 of sec. 18, township 22, R. 11, E., in the state of Washington. Mrs. Saftig, Rose Curtis and the second administrator filed exceptions to the report *376 and claimed that a large amount of real and personal property in which the deceased was interested at the time of his death had come into the hands of Mrs. Carmack and had not been inventoried nor accounted for by her. Thereupon a citation was issued by the court, requiring Mrs. Carmack to appear and answer touching any property in her hands belonging to the estate. At this hearing a great deal of testimony was taken and the court ultimately entered a judgment finding that a large amount of additional property, particularly real estate of very considerable value, had come into the hands of Mrs. Carmack as adminis-tratrix, which property was either the separate property of the deceased or the community property of the deceased and Mrs. Carmack. The latter has appealed.

We abstract the following facts from the findings of the trial court: The deceased had long been a wanderer and a man of the world; he had prospected for precious metals throughout the United States; he finally drifted into the Dominion of Canada and to the Yukon district and there resided with a small tribe of Indians. In 1887, he and Kate Mason, one of the tribe, met, and thereafter for a number of years lived together as man and wife. Ultimately he discovered those gold pockets in the Klondike region which fired the spirit of the country and drew thither thousands of people. In 1898, he came to Seattle and California, bringing with him the Indian woman, who by that time was generally known as Mrs. Carmack, and her daughter, Grace, more commonly known as Graphie. He lived with them for a short while in California and then left them with his sister and returned to the Klondike. On his way north he stopped in Seattle and bought some real property. Early in 1900, he met the present Mrs. Carmack. She also had been a wanderer and had traveled in various parts of the world, and the dis *377 covery of gold in the Yukon attracted her thither. Within a few months after the meeting of these two persons, they came south on the same boat, stopped at Seattle for two or three days, and then continued to San Francisco. While there Carmack informed his so-called first wife that he would no longér live with her. Shortly thereafter he and the present Mrs. Carmack came north and were married in the city of Olympia in 1900. They lived together in Seattle thenceforward, accumulating a good deal of property and transacting much business.

The question to be determined here is an exceedingly narrow one. We are not interested in whether the first Mrs. Carmack was the lawful wife of the deceased, nor whether the second wife was lawfully married to him, nor whether Graphie Saftig is his lawful daughter. These are matters which may be determined in subsequent litigation, but which the trial court correctly refused to adjudicate in this action. The only question involved here is, what property did the deceased own as his separate property and what property did he and Mrs. Carmack own as community property, at the time of his death. His separate and the community property must, of course, be administered.

The appellant claims that practically all of the property belonged to her and that Mr. Carmack had almost nothing at the time of his death. She testified that at no time after she met him did he have in excess of $30,000, and that he soon lost this in various mining and business enterprises; that, during the nearly two years she was in Dawson, she operated a cigar store and made about $60,000, and that at all times she kept the money or gold dust in her possession and did not do any banking; that she brought all of her money with her on her person when in the year 1900 she came to the states. Concerning her testimony in this and other *378 respects, the trial court said: “The court gives no credence to this story. The many contradictions in her testimony, her apparent effort to conceal the facts, her reluctance to testify, her suppression of evidence, her demeanor upon the witness stand and the improbability of her testimony, all convince the court of its incredibility, and being uncorroborated, the court discards it as unworthy of belief. ” When we consider the unusualness of the facts to which she testified and that the trial court had the advantage of seeing and hearing her on the witness stand, we are not disposed to, nor will we, differ with the trial court in his findings concerning her credibility.

There is not much controversy over the findings of the trial court with reference to the personal property, in the hands of Mrs. Carmack and belonging to the deceased, and since it is of comparatively small value, we will say nothing more than that we heartily concur in that respect with the judgment of the trial court.

But the court found that there were five or six pieces of real estate, some of considerable value, which were either the separate property of the deceased or the community property of himself and Mrs. Carmack, and which had not been accounted for by her as adminis-tratrix, and directed that she surrender all such property into the possession of the administrator with the will annexed. The court also found that, after the death of Mr. Carmack, she had collected considerable sums of money in the way of rent from different real estate and that she should also account for that to the administrator.

To review the testimony in detail concerning these various properties would be to carry this opinion beyond a reasonable length. It would appear that, after the marriage of the deceased and Mrs. Carmack, business and property matters were handled in common. *379 They had one common box in a safety deposit vault, and for the most part they kept one common account at the bank and each had a right to draw thereupon. Deceased took gold of much value from his mine. Most of this was obtained before.his marriage to the present Mrs. Carmack.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 942, 133 Wash. 374, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carmacks-estate-wash-1925.