In Re Kresovich's Estate

97 N.W.2d 239, 168 Neb. 673, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 66
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1959
Docket34509
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 N.W.2d 239 (In Re Kresovich's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Kresovich's Estate, 97 N.W.2d 239, 168 Neb. 673, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 66 (Neb. 1959).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This appeal grows out of a proceeding in the county court of Lancaster County, Nebraska, for the appointment of an administrator or, as denominated, an ancillary administrator of the estate of George Kresovich, deceased.

Prior to his death George Kresovich was domiciled in Cook County, Illinois. On or about August 8, 1954, he was operating an automobile owned by him in Cherry County, Nebraska, and while so doing his automobile collided with an automobile owned by one Orval L. Cox, Sr., and operated by one Orval L. Cox, Jr. Kresovich died as a result of the collision. As further results it is claimed that Lois Leanne Cox, age 2, a *675 daughter of Orval L. Cox, Sr., was injured; that Lois Norma Cox, his wife, was injured; that Steven Cox, age 15, son of Orval L. Cox, Sr., was injured; that George Cox, age 14, son of Orval L. Cox, Sr., was injured; that Orval L. Cox, Sr., was injured; and that the automobile of Orval L. Cox, Sr., a resident of El Cajon,, California, was damaged. It is contended that the collision and alleged injuries and damages resulted from negligence of Kresovich.

At the time of the collision there was in full force and effect a policy of insurance wherein Kresovich was the named insured and the automobile he was driving was described. The policy was issued by Allstate Insurance Company. This policy provided for payment of all damages which Kresovich should become obligated to pay for bodily injuries or injury to or destruction of property. It provided further that no action would lie against the insurance company until after the liability of the insured should be determined by judgment after trial.

On July 27, 1956, Orval L. Cox, Sr., filed an application in the county court of Lancaster County, Nebraska, for the appointment of an administrator. In it he alleged the death of Kresovich in Cherry County, Nebraska. He alleged further that Kresovich was possessed of certain personal property including the insurance policy above referred to in Lancaster County, Nebraska. He alleged also that he was a creditor by reason of his claim for damages which has been mentioned herein. This was the basis for the application for the appointment of an administrator.

A hearing was had on the application and C. Russell Mattson was duly appointed administrator. Thereafter claims were filed by all of the parties who it was claimed were injured and damaged by the collision.

Thereafter Anne Marie Kresovich and Allstate Insurance Company filed petitions for revocation of the letters of administration and for abatement of the action or *676 proceeding. The stated grounds of the petitions are numerous but for the purposes of consideration here it was substantially alleged that the courts of Nebraska were without jurisdiction for the reasons that Kresovich was domiciled in the State of Illinois; that, proceedings were had for the administration of his estate in the probate court of Cook County, Illinois, and that the only courts having jurisdiction to entertain the causes of action asserted by Orval L. Cox, Sr., in his application for appointment of an administrator were the courts of the State of Illinois; and that there was no estate of George Kresovich to administer in Lancaster County, Nebraska.

Anne Marie Kresovich and Allstate Insurance Company filed objections to venue in Lancaster County, Nebraska, on the ground that there was no estate, property belonging to, or debts owing to George Kresovich in the county, and particularly that the policy of Insurance issued to Kresovich by the Allstate Insurance Company was not in the county.

A hearing was had and the county court sustained the petitions for revocation of the letters of administration and dismissed the proceeding. An appeal was taken from this judgment to the district court. The district court reversed the judgment of the county court and remanded the cause with directions to that court to set aside the order revoking the letters of administration and with further direction to hear and determine claims of creditors filed. From this judgment of the district court the appeal herein has been taken. The appeal is by Anne Marie Kresovich and Allstate Insurance Company.

It becomes clear from an examination of the record and the briefs that for the purposes of the consideration here no statement of facts is required in addition to the brief review already set out herein. As to those reviewed the parties are in substantial accord and they *677 furnish the basic background for the decision in this case.

The appellants, in their statement of questions involved say: “Does an automobile indemnity insurance policy create a debt which becomes an estate of the deceased insured sufficient to create a basis for administration of his estate in the absence of a judgment against the insured or his representative on behalf of a creditor for a risk covered by the policy?”

There are other points in the statement but whether or not they require consideration depends upon the proper answer to this question.

So that there may be no confusion, it is pointed out that the question of venue or of the institution of proceedings in Lancaster County, Nebraska, rather than Cherry County, Nebraska, where the collision occurred, is not presented by the briefs. The question is limited to that of jurisdiction in Lancaster County because the Allstate Insurance Company, though an Illinois corporation, is under proper authority conducting its business there.

The answer to the question propounded by the appellants depends primarily upon whether or not an automobile indemnity insurance policy creates an asset of a deceased insured who is charged with tortious liability for injury and damage to a third person or persons growing out of the use and operation of the automobile described in the insurance policy, prior to a trial and adjudication of liability and damage in an action based upon the tort; whether or not, if the domicile of the deceased is in a jurisdiction other than the one where the tortious act and the death of the insured occurred, administration may be had and action maintained against the administrator to recover for injury and damage in the jurisdiction where the alleged tortious act occurred; whether or not the insurance liability of the insurer is at that location an asset of the insured; and whether or not administration may be had and *678 action maintained where the insurer is properly carrying on its business.

These propositions have not in their entirety been passed upon in this jurisdiction. This court however is committed to the theory that a cause of action for wrongful death is a sufficient estate or asset to justify the appointment of an administrator. In Missouri P. Ry. Co. v. Bradley, 51 Neb. 596, 71 N. W. 283, in dealing with this question, it was said: “The authority of the county court did not rest alone upon the few articles of personal property already mentioned which the deceased had upon his person when he died, since the cause of action against the railroad corporation was sufficient estate to justify the appointment of an administrator, had there been no other estate to be administered.” No case has been found wherein there has been a departure from this pronouncement.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.W.2d 239, 168 Neb. 673, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kresovichs-estate-neb-1959.