In Re Hebert's Estate

14 P.2d 6, 169 Wash. 402, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 764
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1932
DocketNo. 23754. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 6 (In Re Hebert's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Hebert's Estate, 14 P.2d 6, 169 Wash. 402, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 764 (Wash. 1932).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is a controversy of equitable cognizance arising in the probate proceedings for the administration of the estate of Leon Hebert, Sr., deceased, pending in the superior court for King' county.

Lena Hebert, the widow of deceased, filed in the probate proceedings her petition praying for an adjudication that the property of the estate was, at the time of the death of the deceased, the community property of herself and deceased, and that it be administered and distributed accordingly. Leon Hebert, Jr., the executor *403 under the will of the deceased, administering the estate, having inventoried and claimed the property as the separate property of the deceased at the time of his death, answered the petition of Lena Hebert accordingly. The issues so made proceeded to trial upon the merits, resulting in a judgment decreeing- the property to have been the separate property of the deceased at the time of his death, and that it should be administered and distributed as such in accordance with the terms of his will, which was admitted to probate in the administration proceedings. From this disposition of the matter in the superior court, Lena Hebert has appealed to this court.

We do not find in the record before us any room for serious controversy over the controlling facts. We think they may be fairly summarized as follows: In May, 1910, the deceased and W. H. Olin, both residents of Seattle, duly organized the Northwest Ice Machine Company as a corporation under the laws of this state. The capital stock was by the articles of incorporation fixed at twenty thousand dollars, divided into 400 shares each of the par value of fifty dollars. Deceased and Olin each then subscribed for two hundred shares. Soon thereafter, deceased paid upon his subscription twenty-five hundred dollars, and Olin paid upon his subscription fifteen hundred dollars.

Deceased was a skilled mechanic, and also possessed considerable business ability. He was then made general manager of the business at a salary of $125 per month. He continued in that position up until 1926, when he sold his stock and received in payment thereof the property here in question, as will presently appear. His salary was increased from time to time, all of which he withdrew as it accrued.

In 1917, deceased purchased Olin’s stock, and for a time thereafter was the owner of all of the stock of the *404 corporation. In 1920, he gave twenty shares of his stock to his son Leon, Jr., the present executor under his will, who was then, and continued for many years thereafter, an employe of the company, being since the year 1920 the secretary of the company and having a considerable part in the management of the business. Because of the business prospering and the increase of the value of its properties up to 1926, the stock of the company had then become actually worth its par value, though the stock subscriptions were not paid other than by the increase of the business and properties.

On November 25, 1919, deceased married appellant. At that time, his property consisted largely of his stock in the Northwest Ice Machine Company. At that time, she possessed property of the total value of but a few hundred dollars. Thereafter, deceased continued in the employ of the company until 1926, as general manager at a salary of $250 per month, which he withdrew from month to month as it accrued. This money was used to pay the family expenses of himself and appellant, and for other purposes wholly apart from the business of the corporation. The community received the benefit of this earned money during his lifetime, and appellant’s present separate possessions are in a large measure fruits of those earnings, none of which are now claimed by Leon, Jr., as a part of the estate for purposes of administration.

In 1926, deceased sold his stock in the Northwest Ice Machine Company to the Baker Ice Machine Company, receiving in payment therefor the promissory notes of that company, since then renewed by other notes, and also one hundred shares of stock in the reorganized Northwest Ice Machine Company, it then becoming a subsidiary corporation to the Baker Ice Machine Company. This is the property now claimed by appellant to be the community property of herself and deceased *405 at the time of his death. Deceased’s employment and active management in the affairs of the Northwest Ice Machine Company then ceased. Thus, there can be readily traced and clearly identified the property here in controversy as being the same property, in changed form only, as that possessed by deceased in the form of his stock in the Northwest Ice Machine Company at the time he married appellant in 1919, when that stock was his separate property.

While deceased, np until 1926, was the general manager and owned the larger part of the stock of the Northwest Ice Machine Company, its business was at all times carefully preserved as a separate, legal entity, apart from the personal affairs of the deceased. The business was at all times conducted in the name of the company. Neither his nor the community’s credit was ever pledged to aid the business. Numerous bank loans were made to the company upon notes signed only by the company’s name. He at all times received a salary for his services rendered to the company, and it is not claimed but that the amount of salary paid him from time to time was in amount fair in all respects for the services rendered by him to the company. Indeed, we see no room for the making of any such claim.

In August, 1926, shortly after the sale by deceased of his stock in the original Northwest lee'Machine Company to the Baker Ice Machine Company, he made his will, in due form, leaving substantially all of his property in the state of Washington to his son Leon, Jr., a considerable portion of which, however, was left to Leon, Jr., to hold in trust by him and pay the income therefrom to appellant during her lifetime, and upon her death or her remarriage to become his sole property.

On January 11, 1931, deceased died, still being a *406 resident of Seattle. Soon thereafter, his will was duly admitted to probate, Leon, Jr., being thereupon confirmed as executor, when he duly qualified and entered upon the administration of the estate. Thereafter, this controversy arose and proceeded to trial and judgment, as above noticed. It may be noted here that, according to the record before us, no one is interested in the estate other than Leon, Jr., and appellant, the widow of deceased.

As we understand the principal contention here made in behalf of appellant, it is that the much larger part of the value of the stock of the Northwest Ice Machine Company sold by the deceased to the Baker lee Machine Company in 1926 accrued after his marriage to appellant in 1919, solely as the result of his personal efforts, and hence solely as the result of the personal efforts of the community; and that, thereafter, at least the larger part of the proceeds of that sale, consisting of the notes and the one hundred shares of stock here in question, is in any event community property.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 6, 169 Wash. 402, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-heberts-estate-wash-1932.