In Re Estate of Willenbrock

290 N.W. 502, 228 Iowa 234
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketNo. 45019.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 502 (In Re Estate of Willenbrock) 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 Willenbrock, 290 N.W. 502, 228 Iowa 234 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Elsie Willenbrock died intestate, March 13, 1920, survived by her husband, Fred H. Willenbrock, and their only child, a daughter, Erma, bom July 24, 1917. On his own petition, which recited that the intestate left personal property of the value of $1,800, the husband was appointed administrator of his wife’s estate, on March 23, 1920, and qualified by taking and filing oath and giving bond for $3,600, with his brothers George and H. F. Willenbrock as sureties thereon. He published notice of his appointment, as ordered, in the issues of March 24th, 31st and April 1, 1920, of a Marengo newspaper. On March 24, 1920, he received $1,707.25, as the share of his deceased wife from the sale, in a partition action, of real estate *236 belonging to her father’s estate. But two claims were filed against the estate — one by Lane for $34.14, and the second, by Dr. Augustine for $177, for services rendered the deceased in her last illness. The funeral expenses, amounting to $207, were not filed as a claim. The administrator paid these three bills. He never filed an inventory, nor a report of a receipt or a disbursement, of any kind. The only item of cost entered was the publication fee of $5.40. E. J. Sullivan is noted on the probate docket as the attorney for the estate. The administrator died testate, February 9, 1928, without closing the estate, or filing anything further relative to the administration thereof. His brother, L. C. Willenbrock, qualified as executor of his estate. The only property he reported was $15 in cash, and the 40-acre homestead, mortgaged for' $7,927 and valued at $12,000. The homestead was not disposed of in the will, but was inherited by the daughter, Erma, as intestate property. She was the sole beneficiary and recipient of all of his estate. On the letters testamentary was indorsed the order of the clerk that notice of the appointment should be by posting one notice at the front door of the courthouse. Proof of the posting was filed. This order of posting is shown in the executors’ and administrators’ bond record, and in the probate docket is the following record: “Notice of appointment given of posting April 20, 1928.” We refer to these records because the appellees claim that the order was not entered of record in the probate docket as provided by section 11890, and that therefore legal notice of the appointment was never given, and that the statute of nonclaims never commenced to run. Claims were filed in this estate to the amount of approximately $200, included among them being the claim for $50 of E. J. Sullivan, for services as attorney for the deceased as administrator of the Elsie Willenbrock estate. The executor filed his final report and petition for discharge, December 26, 1929, reciting the payment of the court costs, and his inability to pay the claims because of lack of assets, which could be subjected to their payment. After giving notice as ordered the report was approved, the estate closed, and the executor discharged by order of court on Janu *237 ary 10, 1930. The executor made no report of anything done by him as the personal representative of the deceased, as administrator of the estate of Elsie Willenbrock, or of anything done by the latter as such administrator, or of any assets of said estate.

Erma was about 11 years old at her father’s death. She had lived with him until his death. L. C. Willenbrock, the executor, was then appointed guardian of the person and property of Erma, and took her to live with him at his home in Newton. He sold the homestead in March 1930 for $12,000, and after paying the liens on the property, he received for his ward $1,396.92 in cash and a note of $1,000 from the purchaser secured by a third mortgage on the land. Later in a refinancing of the farm by the purchaser, through the Federal Land Bank of Omaha, he compromised the amount due on the note for $200. His ward attained her majority by marriage on May 29, 1937. The final report .of her guardian was approved and he was discharged by order of court on September 8, 1937, and he delivered to his ward $1,032.98, in cash or its equivalent, in full settlement of her property rights.

Erma testified that she first learned of the property which she inherited from her mother, in December 1938. On January 31, 1939, she filed petitions in the estates of both her father and mother, setting forth the above-stated facts, and procured the appointment of Ole H. Olson, as administrator de bonis non of the estate of her mother, and the appointment of E. J. Yon Hoene, as administrator de bonis non of the estate of her father. The latter filed what he denominated a “report and accounting”, showing the receipt by his decedent of the $1,707.25, and his payment of the Lane claim and the funeral expenses, leaving a balance unaccounted for of $1,466.11, with interest from March 24, 1921. The report and accounting was set down for hearing, and the sureties on the administrator’s bond filed “answer, objections and exceptions” thereto, alleging no knowledge of the receipts and disbursements or their correctness and therefore denying the same.. They admitted their suretyship, and the administration of the two estates, but alleged that Erma *238 had acknowledged receipt in full of all property to which she was entitled in the guardianship, and that as heir or legatee she had received all property left by her father, that she had filed no claim against her father’s estate, and that any liability of the sureties on the bond was barred by the nonclaim statute, and the general statute of limitations. Thereafter Erma, and Olson, as .administrator de bonis non, joined in the report and accounting of Yon Hoene, administrator de bonis non, and prayed that the sureties and Yon Hoene, as administrator be adjudged liable to Olson, administrator, for the amount unaccounted for. The sureties then amended their original pleading, alleging that the administrator of the Elsie Willenbrock estate had paid all claims against it within the year for filing claims; that they had paid all costs taxed or taxable to the estate; that no creditors or anyone, other than Erma, had any interest in said estate; that she, as the only heir, had a right to demand an accounting from the administrator, at the end of said year for filing claims, and at the end of three years from the first publication of notice of the administrator’s appointment, as provided by statute (section 3394, Code of 1897, section 12044, Code of 1924), and at the death of her father; and that because of the matters alleged, Erma was the only person who might bring action against the sureties, and that the court had no jurisdiction to appoint the administrators de bonis non Olson and Yon Hoene, as administrators, and Erma, as the sole heir, joined in a reply, denying the allegations of the answer, and further alleging that the sureties in paying the court costs of $9.40 in the Elsie Willenbrock estate on March 18, 1939, had admitted their liability on the bond, and had estopped themselves from asserting that Erma was the only proper party to prosecute any proceedings against the sureties.

The court rendered judgment, finding, in general,'as alleged by the appellees, allowing credits for all claims filed, the funeral expenses, and court costs of $9.40, leaving a balance of $1,279.71 unaccounted for and owing the administrator de bonis non of the Elsie Willenbrock estate, by Fred H.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 502, 228 Iowa 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-willenbrock-iowa-1940.