In re Estate of Blackman

120 N.W. 664, 143 Iowa 553
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 N.W. 664 (In re Estate of Blackman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Blackman, 120 N.W. 664, 143 Iowa 553 (iowa 1909).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

Prior to April 12, 1901, Charles R. Blackman, a merchant doing business in Ida County, Iowa, became indebted to Baxter, Reed & Co. to the sum of about $5,000. This sum being unpaid, and Baxter, Reed & Co. pressing him for his payment or security, Blaclc- . man made to said creditor a chattel mortgage upon his [555]*555stock of goods, constituting substantially all of the property owned by him.^ This instrument was executed and delivered to the creditor’s agent at about eleven o’clock on the night of the day above named. During that night, and before the mortgage was recorded, Blackman committed suicide. On the afternoon of the same day the mortgage was filed for record. On April 22, 1901, Anna Blackman, widow of the deceased, was appointed, administratrix of his estate. Prior to this appointment Baxter, Eeed & Co. took possession of the stock of goods and foreclosed their mortgage thereon, realizing from the sale the sum of $3,281.15, which the parties agree was their fair value. Soon afterwards, and within six months from date of the allowance of administration, Baxter, Heed & Co. filed their claim with the administratrix, showing the full amount of the indebtedness from Blackman at the time of his decease to be about $5,000, but stating the fact as to the subsequent foreclosure of their mortgage and of the amount realized therefrom, and that after allowing credit for such sum there remained an unpaid balance of $2,000. This claim was approved by the administratrix, and so. reported to the district court. More than six months after her appointment, the administratrix, at the solicitation of other creditors of Blackman, brought suit against Baxter, Reed & Co. to recover as for conversion the value of the goods sold by them under their mortgage, the claim being made on the theory that the mortgage not being recorded and the mortgagees not being in possession before the death of the mortgagor, the instrument was void as against the administratrix in her representative capacity as trustee for the creditors. She recovered judgment in the district court, and on appeal to this court her recovery was affirmed. Blackman v. Baxter, 125 Iowa, 118.

After said action was instituted, and before its decision, Baxter, Reed & Co. made and filed a written application in the probate proceedings referring to the claim [556]*556previously filed by them as above noted, and stated that the credit therein given represented the proceeds of the mortgage sale, that the validity of that sale was being attacked in an action brought by the administratrix to compel them to pay over the money so received as assets of the estate, and asked that in case the demand of the administratrix should be sustained the credit given on their said claim be cancelled. After the recovery by the administratrix had been affirmed in this court, the application aforesaid was called up before tire judge of the district court, who found that the credit on said account or claim represented money which the claimant had been adjudged to restore to the estate, and ordered that such credit be can-celled and the claim be allowed for the full principal sum. Later this order made in chambers was called up in open court, where the same was confirmed and the order reentered by the court. At a subsequent term the matter of said estate came on for hearing on the application of the administrator appointed to succeed the said Anna Black-man, for an allowance of attorney’s fees incurred in behalf of the estate in the litigation in which it had been involved, and upon the application of Baxter, Beed & Co. for an apportionment of the funds in the hands of the administrator to the payment of their claim; and the court found and ordered that the administrator’s claim for attorney’s fees be allowed in the sum of $600. It also found that the remaining funds in the hands of the administrator after payment of costs were insufficient to discharge the claims filed within the first six months of administration, and that Baxter, Beed & Co. should be allowed to share therein only upon the basis of their claim as originally filed; that is, upon the basis of the difference between the debt owing these claimants and the sum which they realized from the foreclosure sale of the goods. Erom these orders Baxter, Beed & Co. have appealed.

[557]*5571. Appeal: former decision: law of the case. [556]*556We give first attention to the assignment of error [557]*557■upon the allowance of attorney’s fees. It is proper at the outset to remind, counsel that, while the decision of the former appeal was announced by a divided . . _ court, it nevertheless constitutes the law o± . the case so far as the same or similar questions are involved in the matter now before ns, and we cannot properly reopen the discussion therein closed.

2.AdministraTION OF ESTATES: recovery of assets: costs: attorneys fees If we understand appellants’ contention, it is that while on the former appeal we decided that the mortgage sale was a wrongful conversion of the property as against other creditors, and that the administratrix as representative and trustee for the creditors could maintain an action to recover yg£ tJjig bolding does HOt imply that the part of the estate thus recovered can be subjected to payment of attorney’s fees. The argument is unsound. Assuming, as we must in this hearing, the correctness of that decision, Baxter, Need & Co. had in their hands a stock of goods, or its equivalent in money, which belonged to the estate of Blackman, and which the administratrix was entitled to recover. In that situation it was her duty to bring the action to compel restitution. Eailure or refusal to do so on her part would be good ground for her removal by the court. If, then, as seems to be the ease, the property or money thus recovered constituted all the estate of the deceased, it would be a most unreasonable and oppressive rule of law which would release the trust fund from the expense incurred in its recovery and east the burden as a personal charge upon the • administratrix. The effect of our former holding was to take away from Baxter, Need & Co. the preference or advantage which they believed themselves to have obtained by their mortgage and relegate them to the class of general creditors, and turn the property or money they obtained under said mortgage back into the estate, where it became a part of the common fund, in which all creditors of the [558]*558third class were entitled to a proportionate share. It needs no citation of authorities for the proposition that the costs and proper expenses of administration are a charge upon the estate prior to the claims of all creditors, save only those who may hold valid prior specific liens thereon. Nor should it require argument that attorney’s fees in proper cases are legitimate expenses of administration. The settlement of this particular estate has been the subject of long and tedious litigation, with a result which legally demonstrates the propriety of bringing the suit; and it was proper that the expenses thus incurred, including the reasonable fees of the attorneys for the estate, should be paid, even though it results in a reduction of the dividend apportioned among the creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.W. 664, 143 Iowa 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-blackman-iowa-1909.