In Re Churchill's Estate

290 P. 218, 157 Wash. 640, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 623
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1930
DocketNo. 22461. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 290 P. 218 (In Re Churchill'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 Churchill's Estate, 290 P. 218, 157 Wash. 640, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 623 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Beals, J.

Alice Churchill died April 12,1927, and a few weeks thereafter Barbara Balletti, a daughter of Mrs. Churchill, was appointed administratrix of her estate, T. F. Mentzer acting as her attorney. Notice to creditors was regularly published, commencing *641 July 8, 1927, and an inventory of the property belonging to the estate was prepared and .signed by the ad-ministratrix July 8, 1927, the property being on the same day appraised by three appraisers who, it seems to be agreed, had theretofore been regularly appointed by the court. These appraisers valued the estate, which consisted of real and personal property, at $4,-439.50. This inventory and appraisement was filed August 9 following.

September 12, 1927, the administratrix filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court a notice bearing date August 10, 1927, to the effect that she had substituted P. C. Kibbe as her attorney, the record being-silent as to any service of this notice upon her former counsel. On the day of the filing of this notice, the administratrix also filed her affidavit to the effect that the estate .had been appraised,

“. . . but that said property cannot be sold for the amount of the appraisement, and that said ap-praisement is too high, and she asks for the appointment of appraisers for reappraisement.”

On the same date, there was also filed the petition of William F. Churchill, widower of the decedent and the father of the administratrix, alleging that no homestead had been claimed at any time out of said estate, “that the funeral expenses and expenses of last sickness have been paid and the costs of administration have been provided for, ’ ’ and asking that all property of said estate be set over to him “as his homestead as by law provided. ’ ’ 1STotice of hearing on the petition of William F. Churchill was filed, and the record contains an affidavit to the effect that copies thereof were posted as required by law.

September 26 following, the administratrix prepared a new inventory of the property of the estate, and, on the same day, three persons, who at that time were *642 entire strangers to the record, took the usual oath as appraisers of the estate and made an appraisement of the property thereof, valuing the same at the sum of $2,700. This inventory and appraisement was filed September 27, on which day the court made an order appointing the three men who had the day before appraised the estate, as appraisers thereof. The same day, September 27, the court made an order setting over all the property of the estate to William F. Churchill, as survivor of the community composed of himself and his late wife, the order providing that no further administration be had.

August 6, 1928, T. F. Mentzer filed his petition to set aside the order awarding the estate to William F. Churchill and to reopen the estate, alleging the facts hereinabove recited, and also that his compensation for services as attorney for the administratrix had not been paid, and that the estate was indebted to him for advances made to cover costs necessarily incurred in the course of the administration. The petition also alleged that the property of the estate was in fact of far greater value than $3,000, and that, September 27, 1927, William F. Churchill had conveyed all of the estate, which was that day awarded to him, to Barbara Balletti, his daughter, the administratrix of the Alice Churchill estate, and Lee Balletti, her husband, and that William F. Churchill had died a month or so thereafter.

On the same day was filed the petition of Viola Wallace, who alleged that she was a creditor of Alice Churchill and William F. Churchill, and that there was a considerable balance due petitioner from the estate of Alice Churchill. We do not find any further discussion of the petition of Viola Wallace necessary to a determination of the issues here presented.

Petitioner T. F. Mentzer also filed his affidavit, set *643 ting forth substantially the facts alleged in his petition, and Barbara Balletti, the administratrix, filed her answer to Mr. Mentzer’s petition, alleging that Mr. Mentzer had insisted upon having the property of the estate appraised at more than its real worth, and that she had become dissatisfied with the way Mr. Mentzer was conducting the administration of the estate; that the estate was indebted to her and her husband in the sum of $2,000; that she and her father, William F. Churchill, repeatedly tried to sell the property belonging to the estate for the sum of $3,000, but could not do so; and that to please her father, Mrs. Balletti agreed to buy the property for $3,000, which deal was consummated not long prior to her father’s death.

Mrs. Balletti further alleged that she offered Mr. Mentzer a check for $60, which he refused to accept, and that she was, and is, solvent, and admits her personal liability to Mr. Mentzer for any amount justly due him; that the charge made by Mr. Mentzer is exorbitant and had never been properly presented. Mrs. Balletti further alleged that she had made an agreement with her brothers and sisters concerning the distribution of the estate. She attached to her answer a copy of an agreement between her father on the one part, and her husband and herself on the other, concerning the property of the estate. Mr. Mentzer replied to Mrs. Balletti’s petition, Mrs. Balletti’s present counsel filing his affidavit in support of his client’s contention, and, upon the issues so made up, the action was tried to the court, being submitted upon the record, no oral testimony having been introduced.

After a hearing, the trial court, being of the opinion that the order setting aside all of the property of the Alice Churchill estate to William F. Churchill had been improperly made, that the expenses of administration of the estate had not been paid or arranged for, that *644 the property of the estate had been, in the first place, appraised in an amount exceeding $3,000, that a subsequent appraisement had been made fixing a lower valuation of the property, and that, as a matter of fact, the value of the property involved is in excess of $3,000, vacated and set aside the order of September 27, 1927, awarding the property to William F. Churchill, and reopened. the estate for further proceedings in the regular course of administration. From this order, Barbara Balletti appeals, the appeal being taken by her both as administratrix and as an individual.

Appellant contends that, as she admitted liability to her former attorney for any amount justly due him for services rendered and expenses incurred in connection with the administration of her mother’s estate, the trial court erred in setting aside the order distributing the estate to her father and terminating the administration thereon. In support of her contention that the order referred to should not have been vacated, appellant cites the law governing the awarding of the property of an estate to a surviving spouse under Bern. Comp. Stat., § 1473, which provides that the order or judgment of the court making the award “shall be conclusive and final, except on appeal and except for fraud,” together with certain decisions of this court which we shall now consider.

In the opinion of this court in In re Hamilton’s Estate, 108 Wash.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 218, 157 Wash. 640, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-churchills-estate-wash-1930.