In Re Denisson

84 P.2d 1024, 197 Wash. 265
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1938
DocketNo. 27254. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 84 P.2d 1024 (In Re Denisson) 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 Denisson, 84 P.2d 1024, 197 Wash. 265 (Wash. 1938).

Opinion

In the course of a guardianship proceeding, the former guardian, who is the husband, of an incompetent person filed his final account, incorporating therein a petition for a monthly allowance to himself out of his wife's estate. The matter came on for hearing before the court and was resisted by the substituted, and present, guardian. The court, after taking evidence, made its findings and entered a decree settling the account and directing payment of a monthly allowance to the husband out of the estate. The present guardian has appealed.

A.C. DeNisson, respondent herein, and Fern P. DeNisson, the incompetent, have been married to each other three times. The first marriage took place in 1925, the last in 1936. During the period between those years, they were twice divorced. At the time of the hearing of this case in the court below, Mr. DeNisson was eighty-eight years of age, Mrs. DeNisson was forty-seven.

Most, if not all, of the property involved in the guardianship proceeding was at one time community property which had been earned by the husband. This property was, however, awarded, in the first divorce action, to the wife, and ever since that time it has been her separate estate. The bulk of the property consists of real estate, the value of which, according *Page 267 to the appraisement, is $8,300. It has produced practically no income.

On August 16, 1937, Mrs. DeNisson having been found to be mentally incompetent, Mr. DeNisson was appointed guardian of her person and estate. He duly qualified and, subsequently, served in that capacity until October 27, 1937, when he was removed, and the National Bank of Commerce was appointed in his stead. In the meantime, on September 4, 1937, Mrs. DeNisson was adjudged insane and was committed to the Northern State Hospital. During the period of her incompetency, and until her commitment, Mrs. DeNisson was in the custody of her husband, who gave her every required care and attention.

Mr. DeNisson began the administration of his wife's estate with the sum of $2.46 cash. With leave of court, he negotiated a loan, from which he realized $147. He collected two monthly installments, aggregating $39.50, upon a real estate contract belonging to the estate. His total receipts amounted to $188.96. He expended for the care, support, and maintenance of his ward and her property the sum of $158.85. He expended upon one of the houses of the ward personal labor, for which he asked to be reimbursed in the sum of $261. The court approved the money expenditures and allowed Mr. DeNisson $150 for his personal labor, $100 as guardian fee, and $87.18 for attorney's fee and costs.

The evidence showed that, at the time of the commencement of the guardianship proceeding, Mr. DeNisson himself was penniless and destitute; wherefore, in his final petition, he asked the court to allow him, out of the estate, the sum of fifty dollars a month for his living expenses. At the hearing, it appeared that he had, in the meantime, been granted state old-age assistance in the sum of twenty dollars a month. *Page 268 In its decree, the court ordered that he be paid, out of the estate, the sum of thirty dollars per month, beginning January 1, 1938.

[1] Upon this appeal, appellant takes the position that, in any event, the decree is not binding on the ward because no guardian ad litem was appointed to represent her at the final hearing.

Rem. Rev. Stat., § 188 [P.C. § 8269], provides:

"When an insane person is a party to an action in the superior courts he shall appear by guardian, or if he has no guardian, or in the opinion of the court the guardian is an improper person, the court will appoint one to act as guardian ad litem. . . ."

The appellant bank, which was at the time of the hearing the qualified and acting guardian, appeared, with its attorney, on behalf of the ward and throughout the proceeding vigorously resisted respondent's petition. A guardian ad litem could have done nothing more.

Appellant relies upon the case of Mathieu v. United StatesFidelity Guaranty Co., 158 Wn. 396, 290 P. 1003. In that case, it appeared that the guardian of an insane person had filed his final account and petition for discharge. Upon a hearing, the final account was disapproved, and the guardian was removed, and a successor appointed. In the meantime, the former guardian had secured, in California, the appointment of himself as guardian of the insane person. After his removal from office in this state, he appeared in the California court, filed his final account, which was approved, and obtained his discharge. At the final hearing in the California court, the ward was not represented by a guardian ad litem "or in any other way." In the case which came to this court on appeal, it was contended that full faith and credit should be given to the decree of the California *Page 269 court. In rejecting that contention, we held that, in rendering his final account and asking for a discharge in the California court, the former guardian was acting in an adversary capacity in so far as the interests of the ward were concerned.

The situation in this case is quite different. At the hearing in question, the ward was actually represented by a guardian who, in resisting respondent's petition, was the active champion of the ward and a jealous protector of her interests. The court had complete jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and all the parties were before it. The decree is, therefore, binding on the ward, unless it is erroneous upon some other ground.

The most important, as well as the most serious, question in the case is, as asserted by appellant, whether the court erred in awarding respondent husband a monthly allowance out of the insane wife's estate.

[2] It appears to be a generally accepted principle that a court having the power of our probate court may, in a proper proceeding, allow a wife support and maintenance out of the estate of her incompetent or insane husband. In re SenateResolution, 12 Colo. 340, 21 P. 485; Tiffany v. Worthington,96 Iowa 560, 65 N.W. 817; In re Leech, 45 La. Ann. 194, 12 So. 126; Lemly v. Ellis, 146 N.C. 221, 59 S.E. 683; Reynolds v.Reynolds, 208 N.C. 254, 180 S.E. 70. See, also, Booth v.Cottingham, 126 Ind. 431, 26 N.E. 84; Hallett v. Hallett,8 Ind. App. 305, 34 N.E. 740; In re Burgin, 191 Iowa 917,183 N.W. 801.

Whether, in this state, a similar provision may be made for the husband out of the estate of his incompetent or insane wife depends, primarily, upon the meaning of the term "expenses of the family," as used *Page 270 in Rem. Rev. Stat., § 6906 [P.C. § 1431], which reads as follows:

"The expenses of the family and the education of the children are chargeable upon the property of both husband and wife, or either of them, and in relation thereto they may be sued jointly or separately."

We have had occasion, a number of times, to construe or refer to this statute.

In Russell v. Graumann,

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.2d 1024, 197 Wash. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-denisson-wash-1938.