In Re Estate of Brasfield

214 P.2d 305, 168 Kan. 376, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1950
Docket37,546, 37,657
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 305 (In Re Estate of Brasfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas 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 Brasfield, 214 P.2d 305, 168 Kan. 376, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 340 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.:

These two cases, consolidated after being appealed to this court, originated as probate court proceedings. The all decisive issue in each requires judicial construction of the Kansas probate code.

The facts responsible for the proceedings as initially instituted are relatively unimportant to a decision of the appellate issues and need not be detailed. At the moment essential features of those facts and the primary issues involved can be joined in one statement thus:

Eight months after the death of Cecil L. Brasfield, who died on August 22,1947, a resident of Sedgwick county, the appellees as tort creditors of the decedent filed a petition in the probate court of that county fully setting forth the nature of their claims against him as an alleged negligent wrongdoer and asking for the appointment of a general administrator for his estate. Decedent’s father and mother answered stating their son left no property subject to administration and hence there was no legal basis for the relief sought by the petitioners. Thereupon the probate court denied the petition and refused to appoint a fiduciary as therein requested on the ground there was no estate requiring administration. Upon appeal the district court of Sedgwick county, on July 13, 1948, found the probate court’s action was erroneous, reversed its order, and directed it to proceed to appoint an administrator. Appeal No. 37,546, perfected on September 10,1948, by the father and mother, is from that order and judgment.

Within a few days after rendition of this district court judgment the tort creditors petitioned the probate court for, and obtained the appointment of, a special administrator to accept exhibition of and make defense to their demands against the decedent’s estate in the same manner as a regular administrator might do, if acting. There *379 after, and on August 21, 1948, -they filed petitions for the allowance of those demands in probate court. Later they procured their transfer to the district court for trial. There the special administrator demurred to all claims so transferred on the single ground they were barred because the petitioning creditors had failed to obtain the appointment of an administrator for the estate of the decedent Brasfield on or before August 22, 1948. This demurrer was overruled. Appeal No. 37,657, perfected by the special administrator, seeks a reversal of that order.

The foregoing brief factual statement should perhaps be supplemented by a statement relating to stipulated facts in both the probate and district courts. There the parties agreed decedent was a resident of Sedgwick county on the date of his death and that appellees were creditors within the meaning of the probate code, entitled to petition for the appointment of an administrator for his estate. They also stipulated, although the record with respect thereto is not clear and leaves much to be supplied by inference, that the known tangible assets of the estate of Cecil Brasfield, who was killed in the automobile accident giving rise to appellees’ claims, were of the approximate value of $25 and insufficient to defray funeral and administration expenses. However, it cannot be said, as appellants suggest, the stipulation purported to cover all assets of the estate or that the parties were in agreement respecting its intangible assets. As to them, we are constrained to hold, the record clearly discloses appellees contended the estate had certain rights under the omnibus clauses of an automobile insurance policy, covering liability incurred by decedent while he was driving his father’s automobile, involved in the accident, which constituted assets while appellants insisted, that notwithstanding and irrespective of such policy, the only assets consisted of the tangible property referred to in the stipulation.

Appellants specify two errors in the rendition of the judgment involved in the first appeal. , We now direct our attention to the first specification charging the district court with error in reversing the order of the probate court denying the petition for appointment of an administrator. They state the question involved under this assignment of error is whether it is proper, over the objection of heirs at law, who have paid a decedent’s funeral expenses, to appoint an administrator for his estate where it consists entirely of clothing and personal effects which do not exceed $25 in value. At the outset we *380 pause to observe this question, and.much of appellants’ argument dealing with it, erroneously assumes a situation where creditors, notwithstanding they have petitioned for administration of the estate of a decedent whose funeral expenses have been paid by his heirs, have positively stipulated there are no assets in the estate, tangible or intangible, exceeding the amount required to reimburse the heirs for advanced funeral expenses. Here, as we have heretofore pointed out, the petitioning creditors have made no such stipulation and are insisting to the contrary.

Thus, in view of the record, it appears the actual question involved, under the first specification of error, is whether admitted creditors of a resident intestate decedent are entitled to the appointment of an administrator for administration of his estate over objection of his heirs at law when the known tangible assets of his estate are conceded by the petitioning creditors to be less than the amount required to pay funeral expenses and costs of administration.

When analyzed the principal argument advanced by appellants in support of their position on the question just stated seems to be that the existence or nonexistence of assets is the test to be applied in determining whether administration of a resident intestate’s estate is required under our statute and that failure of a petitioning creditor on the hearing of his petition for letters of administration to establish assets in an amount more than sufficient to pay funeral bills and expenses of administration justifies, if it does not actually require, refusal of letters of administration, and administration of such an estate, by the probate court in the first instance and on appeal by the district court. On the other hand appellees’ position with a respect to this particular point is that where — as here — the sufficiency of assets to satisfy claims in whole or in part is controverted the tribunal having statutory authority to appoint an administrator for such an estate cannot inquire into the existence or value of those assets or make their existence or nonexistence a prerequisite to its administration but is required to appoint an administrator to the end that the exact value and extent of the estate can thereafter be ascertained in the course of its administration as contemplated by statute.

We find much in pertinent provisions of our comparatively new probate code, especially when they are considered together, indicating that administration of the estate of an intestate resident decedent, regardless of its known assets, is required if and when a creditor demands it.

*381 All statute references appearing hereinafter are to the 1947 Supplement to the General Statutes of Kansas for 1935 unless otherwise indicated.

Section 59-2221 provides that any person interested in an estate after the death of an intestate may petition for administration.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 305, 168 Kan. 376, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-brasfield-kan-1950.