In Re Estate of Simon

245 N.W. 31, 187 Minn. 399, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 1035
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 9, 1932
DocketNo. 28,948.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 31 (In Re Estate of Simon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota 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 Simon, 245 N.W. 31, 187 Minn. 399, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 1035 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Wilson, C. J.

Appellant appealed from a judgment wherein an order of a probate court was affirmed.

Julius Thorson was the representative of the estate of John N. Simon, deceased. Appellant was the surety on his bond. While so acting, Thorson died March 8, 1928. • On November 30, 1928, J. A. Lee succeeded Thorson. H. S. Simons became the representative of the Thorson estate, which was insolvent.

*401 In October, 1928, H. S. Simons, as such representative, filed an account of the administration of said Thorson. Due notice for hearing thereon was given, and on December 6, 1928, the judge of probate made an order in reference thereto wherein, after the general recitals, it concludes thus:

“It Is Therefore Ordered, That said account, as adjusted and settled herein and shown by the summary statement thereof hereto attached and recorded therein, be and the same hereby is, allowed and that upon the delivery and payment to said J. A. Lee, the Administrator De Bonis Non of the John N. Simon estate of the balance of the property and estate of said estate as settled and allowed herein, and the filing of satisfactory and proper vouchers and evidence of said delivery and payment in this Court, the bondsmen and sureties of said deceased Julius Thorson, be, and they hereby shall be, discharged from any and all further liability in said matter. Excepting for the amount shown to be due from said Thorson to the said Simon Estate.
“Dated this 6.th day of December A. D. 1928.
“J. N. Edwards,
“Probate Judge,
“Swift County, Minnesota.
“Summary Statement.
Amount of property as per inventory $11,838.32
Increase of property above inventory $11,838.32
The Credit Side of Said Account
Expense of administration $2,633.56
Expense of last sickness
Funeral expenses
Paid to widow and children by order of court
The debts of said deceased 2,633.56
Balance due $9,204.76”

Of course the account then under consideration and which was so summarized by the court disclosed the transactions in detail.

*402 About May 1, 1980, J. A. Lee and H. S. Simons, acting presumably in their respective representative capacities, filed with the probate court a petition claiming:

“That by and through a mistake of fact, excusable inadvertence, oversight and neglect of said J. N. Edwards, Judge of Probate, the Order made by him under date of December 6th, 1928, * * * did not fix, decide or determine the sum belonging to the estate of said John N. Simon, deceased, which the said Julius Thorson had converted to his own use, or the sum or amount in which he was indebted to the estate of John N. Simon by reason of such conversion.”

The petition put the alleged mistake of fact at the door of the judge of probate. It prayed that the order of December 6, 1928, be amended and corrected, that the indebtedness of Thorson to said estate be ascertained and determined by the court, and that the order be corrected to show the true amount of such indebtedness.

The probate court made an order on July 23, 1930, wherein it found:

‘ “That through a mistake of fact, excusable inadvertence, oversight and neglect that the Order allowing the Final Account of Julius Thorson as such administrator did not definitely determine, shoiv or fix the amount due the estate of John N. Simon from Julius Thorson as administrator, or the amount of money or effects belonging to said estate converted and appropriated by Julius Thor-son, as such administrator.”

The court then charged Thorson with additional amounts and interest to that date. Exclusive of interest, the principal item involved is one of $700. Appellant appealed to the district court, which found that the order of December 6, 1928, was not correct or conclusive and that it did not have the force and effect of a judgment; that the court had not determined the amount Thorson had embezzled and had not determined the amount with which Thorson should be charged. The district court determined that Thorson owed the estate about $2,260 more than the order of December 6, 1928, determined, this additional amount being based upon the $700 *403 and interest on the full amount claimed to be due from the appellant.

The account so considered by the order of December 6, 1928, and filed by H. S. Simons was made the best he could. He did not know of any mistake or omission. To the best of his knowledge it was. a true account. No one else then thought otherwise. The order in form and substance was just what the probate court intended and what the parties wanted.

The principal item in controversy is a claim that there is an omission of an item of $700 which it is said Thorson embezzled. The basis for this claim was discovered by respondent in December, 1928. Mr. Lee, the respondent, knew of the order when it was made or at least within a period of 30 days thereafter, and until then the alleged true situation was not known to any one of the parties.

The account on its face was complete; also the order settling the account, which definitely shows that Thorson owed the estate $9,204.76. Of this $2,542.17 was turned over in the form of acceptable notes, which are not here in controversy, and appellant has at all times been ready, willing, and able to pay the balance of $6,662.59 as of December 6, 1928. Of the $2,542.17 it is conceded that $42.17 was cash included in the $9,204.76.

We pass the very doubtful question as to ivkether there is evidence to show that the $700 item, apparently embezzled by Thor-son as claimed, was not included in the property inventoried and therein charged to Thorson in the account allowed on December 6, 1928. The final account shows interest collected in the sum of $2,990.82, and the evidence is not dear that this does not cover and include all the interest with which Thorson should be charged. We will assume, however, that the $700 is an embezzled item for which there has been no accounting.

The order of the probate court of December 6, 1928, was a final order settling the account and determining the amount due from Thorson to the estate to be $9,204.76. No appeal was taken. That was the amount with which the representative was charged. Whether it was then in his hands or whether all or part of it had *404 been embezzled is not to the point. The court then and there determined the amount which he owed the estate.

Much is said about the last sentence in the order; but we think it merely an awlrward statement that Thorson and his surety were not discharged from liability for the $9,204.76, which the order contemplated was to be paid and the receipts therefor filed, until this was done.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 31, 187 Minn. 399, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-simon-minn-1932.