In Re Fisher's Estate

4 N.W.2d 797, 68 S.D. 484, 1942 S.D. LEXIS 59
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1942
DocketFiles Nos. 8444 and 8451.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 N.W.2d 797 (In Re Fisher's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fisher's Estate, 4 N.W.2d 797, 68 S.D. 484, 1942 S.D. LEXIS 59 (S.D. 1942).

Opinion

This action involves the final account of Louis J. Warkenthien, the executor of the estate of Charles Fisher, deceased, who died in Clark County on March 23, 1925. The executor qualified on April 28, 1925, by filing a bond signed by the Western Surety Company in the penal sum of $75,000. This bond remained in effect until December 11, 1926, at which time the Western Surety Company was relieved as surety and a new bond furnished by the executor. The final report was filed by the executor on January 26, 1935, and objections were filed by heirs of the deceased. The report came on for hearing. The executor, the various heirs, and the Western Surety Company all appeared and were represented by counsel. The County Court, following the hearing, surcharged the executor with the sum of $26,271.70 and the executor and the Western Surety Company appealed to the Circuit Court of Clark County. After a hearing in Circuit Court the judge filed an opinion wherein he indicated that it was his judgment that the amount charged to the executor by the County Court should be greatly reduced and found that the Western Surety Company was not liable on its bond, it being the opinion of the Circuit Judge that the liability of the executor was incurred following the time the Surety Company bond *Page 486 was released. The Surety Company presented to the Circuit Court findings of fact and conclusions of law which were signed and filed and thereafter judgment was entered absolving the Surety Company from all liability. However, no judgment was entered by the Circuit Court determining the liability of the executor. Hon. W.N. Skinner, the judge before whom the action was heard, died shortly thereafter and as a result there was never any judgment entered in this action determining the liability of the executor. From the time of the hearing before Judge Skinner and after the entering of the judgment absolving the Surety Company, no further action was taken until the 15th day of August, 1939, at which time the objecting heirs filed an application in the Circuit Court of Clark County asking that the action be restored to the calendar for retrial upon the merits on the grounds that Judge Skinner had died without ever determining the liability of the executor. The action was then retried and reheard before Hon. W.W. Knight commencing on the 29th day of October, 1939. Appearances were noted on behalf of objecting heirs and the executor. Judge Knight thereafter entered his findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment which surcharged the executor with $27,566.76, and concluded as a matter of law that the judgment absolving the Western Surety Company entered by Judge Skinner, was of no force or effect. The executor and the Surety Company have now appealed to this court from the judgment entered by Judge Knight and from his order denying an application for a new trial which application was made by the Western Surety Company.

The liability of the executor, found by the Circuit Court, is predicated upon findings of fact substantially as follows:

Mr. Fisher, the deceased, was a stockholder and Vice President of the Security State Bank of Willow Lake. At the time of his death he had on deposit in that bank the sum of $37,820.00 represented by certificates of deposit. Paragraph 9 of the Fisher will provided:

"Now all the balance of my property which is personal property and consists at this time of over $30,000.00, is to be *Page 487 created into a Trust Fund and I so create it as a trust fund to be handled by the Security State Bank, of Willow Lakes, as Trustee, and I hereby appoint it as trustee to handle said personal property, and it is required to execute a sufficient bond as trustee. And said trust fund is to be administered by them and is considered to be in four equal parts and each of my four sons above named are to be the recipients in equal parts of said trust fund, to be given to them twenty years after they arrive at the age of twenty-one years, that is, each is to receive his equal part twenty years after he becomes twenty-one years old, but the income of each of said parts is to be paid to each of them each year or to their guardian. And said trustee must make annual reports to the County Court of Clark County, South Dakota, and such trustee is also to be trustee over the land that each of said sons are to receive the same as over the personal property."

The executor, Warkenthien, was the cashier and managing officer of the Security State Bank of Willow Lake. At the time of the appointment of Mr. Warkenthien as executor of the estate, there was entered by the County Court, an order purporting to authorize the executor to continue on deposit in the Security State Bank, the monies belonging to said estate, which order is as follows:

"Louis J. Warkenthien, having been named in the will of said deceased as the Executor thereof, and he having been appointed as such executor by this court and having duly qualified as such by taking the oath of office and presenting and filing in this court his bond as such Executor in the sum of $75,000.00 same having been executed by the Western Surety Company of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, as surety, and said bond having been approved by this Court on the 28th day of April, 1925.

"And it appearing from the petition presenting said Will for probate that there was considerable money cash on hand belonging to said deceased, and it also appearing from the testimony produced in the hearing thereon that there was monies and securities aggregating $40,000.00 or more *Page 488 belonging to said estate, and there would likely be about that much in the hands of the Executor during his administration thereof, and that said monies and securities were now and had been for several years deposited in the Security State Bank of Willow Lake, South Dakota, of which the said deceased was a stockholder and it also appearing from the testimony that said bank is now and has been through the long-time depression prevailing throughout the Northwest in good financial condition and sound.

"Therefore it is hereby ordered that said Executor continue on deposit in said Bank the said monies and securities belonging to said estate, and said Bank is hereby designated as a depository for said funds and any other funds that may come into the hands of said Executor for said estate, from time to time."

The Security State Bank had never qualified to act as a trustee under the laws of the state of South Dakota and there was no attempt made to qualify it as such trustee or to comply in any manner with the provisions of the will regarding the appointment of a trustee. The executor continued to carry the money on deposit in the Security State Bank in its original form until January 19, 1926, at which time he surrendered the original certificates and had issued to himself as executor of the estate, five other certificates of deposit of the Security State Bank, which totaled $35,020 and placed on checking account, for the benefit of the estate, the sum of $4,582.61. The certificates were due in six or twelve months. On April 30, 1927, the certificates of deposit were surrendered to the bank and four savings accounts carried in the name of the Fisher Estate and the four sons of the deceased, were set up in the bank and these accounts were carried in that form by the executor until the Security State Bank was merged with the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Willow Lake on October 1, 1929, at which time similar accounts in favor of each of the four sons were carried in the Farmers and Merchants Bank. The Farmers and Merchants Bank failed in July, 1931, at which time there remained on deposit in that bank, the sum of $16,129.31. The difference between this latter figure and *Page 489

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Related

Sampson v. Exon
22 N.W.2d 734 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1946)
Fisher v. Warkenthien
10 N.W.2d 761 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1943)
In Re Fisher's Estate
10 N.W.2d 761 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.W.2d 797, 68 S.D. 484, 1942 S.D. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fishers-estate-sd-1942.