In Re Estate of Bump

233 P.2d 478, 171 Kan. 442, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 3, 1951
Docket38,361
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 233 P.2d 478 (In Re Estate of Bump) 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 Bump, 233 P.2d 478, 171 Kan. 442, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 270 (kan 1951).

Opinion

*443 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This appeal arises from an order made in connection with the final settlement of a decedent’s estate construing the will of the testatrix and ordering distribution of the residue of the estate. For convenience the parties to the appeal, Ila Lavon Bonney, Frances Bump Parr, Grace Boyd Welshans and Margie I. Bauman, are hereafter referred to generally by their surnames.

The will of Mabel Furman Bump, which was duly admitted to probate, consisted of a series of unnumbered paragraphs in which she bequeathed articles of personal property and sums of money to certain named persons, the sums of money totaling $4,100. The will then provided:

“The property at #426 S. Main Street, is to be sold and after all cash bequests and bills are paid one half K of what is left is to go to my cousin, Grace Boyd Welshans of Los Angeles, Calif., and (&) one half to my cousin Margie I. Bauman of Los Angeles, Calif.
“If there is any other money left it is to be divided between Ila Lavon Bonney and my stepdaughter, Frances Bump Parr.”

The inventory filed listed the real estate valued at $4,000; the household goods and jewelry specifically devised valued at $2,656; certificates of stock in a savings and loan association valued at $3,000 and cash in bank of $750.

Although we are not concerned directly therewith, on July 20, 1948, one Mary K. Hall filed a claim against the estate for personal services rendered. At some undisclosed date she died and her claim was revived in the probate court on March 2, 1949. In the meantime and on December 23, 1948, Welshans and Bauman filed their petition in the probate court asking that the above quoted portions of the will be construed, and thereupon the probate court made its order setting the hearing for January 26, 1949, and that notice be given to Mrs. Hall, Bonney and Parr by mailing a copy of the order to them at their regular addresses or by mailing a copy to their attorneys, and that was done.

The journal entry bearing thereon discloses that on June 20, 1949, the claim of Mary K. Hall came on for hearing, Mrs. Hall’s estate appearing by attorney, the. administratrix (executrix) appearing personally and by her attorney and Bauman and Welshans appearing by their attorneys; that proof in support of the claim and in defense against it was received and the hearing was continued to July 27, 1949, on which date the motion to construe the will was *444 also set for hearing; that on July 27, 1949, the claim again came on for hearing, the claimant administrator and his attorney being present and Bauman and Welshans being present by their attorneys; that claimant introduced further evidence to which Bauman and Welshans demurred and the matter was continued to August 5, 1949, “as to the claim of Mary K. Hall.” The court further found as to the motion to construe the will that the first paragraph as quoted above gave all property including cash from the sale of real estate one-half to Welshans and one-half to Bauman, but in its order following it adjudged and decreed that one-half of all property remaining on hand and particularly all cash derived from the sale of the real estate after the payment of all bequests, court costs and other expenses of administration, be divided equally between Welshans and Bauman.

On February 24, 1950, Ila Lavon Bonney, the executrix, filed her petition for final settlement in which she prayed for an order of the probate court finding who was entitled to the estate and directing distribution.

On March 21, 1950, Welshans and Bauman filed their motion for' an order nunc pro tunc to correct the order of August 5, 1949 (July 27,1949?) to show that they were entitled to all of the property remaining on hand instead of only one-half.

The petition for final settlement and the motion for an order nunc pro tunc were heard on May 2, 1950, at which time the probate court found that the petition to construe the will was filed December 23, 1948, and set for hearing January 26, 1949, and that all parties were notified; that thereafter the matter was orally continued to March 2, 1949, and on that date was continued indefinitely; that Parr was not notified of any hearing date other than January 26, 1949, and was not present on August 5, 1949, when the order was made to which the motion for an order nunc pro tunc was directed. The probate court further found that the order made August 5,1949, was irregular in that the court was under a mistaken impression as to what issues were presented and without being fully cognizant of the issues relative to the construction of the will, and that, having acted upon an erroneous understanding of the facts, found that the order of August 5, 1949, did not express the real purpose of the court and was erroneous and irregular, and—

“The Court after having the matter of the construction of said will fully presented upon the hearing of the motion for order nunc pro time, finds on *445 its own motion that said paragraphs of said will should be construed as follows, to-wit: That all of the cash bequests, bills and expenses should be paid from the proceeds from the sale of the real property located at 426 S. Main Street, and if the cash bequests, bills and expenses, including court costs, executrix’s fees and attorney fees should exhaust said proceeds, then any other money should go to Ila Lavon Bonney and Frances Bump Parr.”

The probate court, after making allowances to the executrix for her services and allowances to attorneys, continued the hearing as to other matters and issues in the petition for a final settlement.

In due time Welshans and Bauman perfected their appeal to the district court. A separate appeal by .the executrix concerning her fees is noted but is not here involved.

In the district court it was stipulated that the probate court files in the estate of Mabel Furman Bump should be admitted as all of the evidence. That court, after considering those files and the briefs of the parties, affirmed and approved the judgment of the probate court excepting only the matter of attorney fees and rendered judgment accordingly.

From that judgment Welshans and Bauman perfected their appeal to this court.

Appellants contend that the district court, in affirming the orders and judgment of the probate court erred in two particulars: 1. In not holding that the probate court erred in attempting to construe the will at the time of final settlement on May 2,1950, after the time had elapsed in which the probate court retained control of its judgment, order and decree of August 5, 1949, and 2. In not holding that if the probate court possessed power to construe the will on May 2, 1950, its decision was erroneous and that its judgment affirming and approving the judgment of the probate court was erroneous.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 P.2d 478, 171 Kan. 442, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bump-kan-1951.