In Re Horseman's Estate

1934 OK 30, 29 P.2d 942, 167 Okla. 355, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 23, 1934
Docket21744
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 30 (In Re Horseman's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Horseman's Estate, 1934 OK 30, 29 P.2d 942, 167 Okla. 355, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 514 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

WELGI-I, J.

On March 24, 1920, A. C. Bickell was appointed administrator of the estate of Nancy Horseman in the county court of Grady county. The estate, so far as material here, consisted of $1,9SS.86 on deposit in the Farmers Exchange Bank of . Lindsay, and $50 on deposit in a bank at Blanchard. The administrator was then, and had been for about 18 months, the • cashier and active manager of the Farmers Exchange Bank. Upon his appointment he transferred said deposits to his credit In that bank. Thirty days after his appointment as such administrator, the said A. C. Bickell participated in a meeting of the board of directors of said bank, at which time it was decided that the bank should go into voluntary liquidation. The bank was thereupon closed and placed in the hands of the State Banking Department for final liquidation. A small percentage payment was made to the depositors, but the closing'1 of the bank, and its inability to pay depositors in full, resulted in the loss of $1,741.40 of the funds of the estate. The question in this case is whether the administrator is responsible or liable to account to the estate for this money.

Our statutes provide as follows:

Section 1327, O. S. 1931. “Every executor or administrator is chargeable in his account with the whole of the estate of the decedent which may come into his possession, at the value of the appraisement contained in the inventory, except as provided in the following sections. * * *”

The following section 1328, O. S. 1931, provides in part:

“He shall not * * * suffer loss by the decrease or destruction, without his fault, of' any part of the estate.” •

The administrator in his report admitted having received said money as administrator, but asked or claimed credit for said sum of $1,741.40. Upon a bearing in the county court, that court found as follows :

“The court further finds that the said A. C. Bickell at the time' of his appointment as such administrator was the cashier of the Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay, Okla., and was in active charge thereof and so remained until the 25th day of April, 1925, at which time said bank was closed and placed in the hands of the Bank Commissioner of the state of Oklahoma; that said administrator knew or by .the exercise of ordinary prudence should have known that it was unsafe to deposit in said bank (sic) belonging to said estate and that it was unsafe to allow any money to remain in said" bank belonging to said estate, but notwithstanding said knowledge said administrator well knowing that said bank was in a failing condition deposited moneys belonging to said estate in said bank and allowed deposits ; to remain therein, which sums were lost by the reason thereof to said estate, and that said administrator thereby mismanaged said estate and caused it to suffer a loss for which said administrator is responsible and which said sums should be charged to said administrator.”

And the county court charged said sum to the administrator.

On appeal to the district court, that court found as follows:

“The court finds that said administrator has in his hands certain monies belonging to said estate, which were on deposit in the Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsays, Okla., and were subject to his control; that said bank was at all times under the charge and control of said A. C. Bickell, who was its cashier, that said A. C. Bickell was appointed as the administrator of the estate of Nancy Horseman on the 24th day of March, 1924, and that at that time there was on deposit in said bank, to the credit of Nancy Horseman estate, the sum of $1,-988.86 and that immediately after his appointment as such administrator, that said account was transferred on the books of said bank to his credit as such administrator and that he also drew the sum of $50 out of the First National Bank at Blanchard, Okla., and deposited that sum in said account in said bank.
“That for a period of 18 months prior to his appointment as such administrator, that the said A. O. Bickell was the cashier and in active management and control of said Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay, Okla., and knew .its condition, or by the exercise of ordinary diligence ascertained the same:
■ “That said A. O. Bickell by allowing sums to remain on deposit in said bank was careless and negligent, and through his carelessness and negligence said money was lost to said estate and that said A. O. Bickell is therefore liable to said estate for said moneys so lost.”

And the district court .charged said sum tq the administrator.

On appeal to this court the administrator, as plaintiff in error, now contends that he is entitled to be relieved of this charge by virtue of the quoted portion of section 1328, supra, but the record discloses that he failed to show that the loss to the estate occurred ¿‘without his fault.” It is only in cases where the administrator suffers a .loss of the estate of the decedent, without his (fault, that ho is relieved of liability for the *357 loss. Otherwise it is the plain duty«f- an administrator to account for all of-the es.tate coming into his hands.

The cause was submitted to the triarcourt upon an agreed statement of fact without any further evidence. That agreed statuof the administrator; that the administrator for about a year and a half had been ment showed in substance the appointment , „ .. . .. and was the cashier and active mana^.r the Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay; that.upon his appointment he transferred to his own credit, as administrator, the money theretofore in that bank to the credit Ttf the decedent, and that he removed the balance to the decedent’s credit in the bank at Blauchard and placed it also on deposit «m his own bank to his credit as administrator ; that the administrator at all times had access to-the books and accounts of the.bank, and that 30 days after his appointment as administrator he participated with the other ... . 4. . . , .. . directors 111 -a meeting 111 wlucli the volundecided tary liquidation of the bank was upon, and that the bank is still in the1 hands of the State Banking Department. And it was specifically stipulated further thq¿.the administrator’s report should be approved as filed, that is, giving the administrator credit for the sum lost by the bank failure, or that the administrator should be chatgertr with the money lost by being on deposit in that bank when it failed, as the court should determine. .

- This stipulation disclosed that the loss had occurred and the manner of the loss, that is, by reason of having been deposited in a bank which subsequently failed, but no showing- whatever was made that the loss occurred without fault of the administrator. Under the statute it was necessary for the administrator to show that he was without fault before he was entitled to be .,,,, j. , . -k relieved of liability for loss of the moneys of the estate J

In Montana the statutory provision, section 10283, Bev. Codes 1921, is identical with (lie above-quoted portion of section 1328, 0. S. i§31. The Supreme Court of Montana, in Re Connolly’s Estate, 235 P. 408, considered the liability of an executor for an uncollected debt due the decedent. That court held that the burden is on an executor to show facts from which the court can s*iythat loss was not suffered because of his failure to collect.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 30, 29 P.2d 942, 167 Okla. 355, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-horsemans-estate-okla-1934.