In re Nelson's Estate

129 N.W. 113, 26 S.D. 615, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 233
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 129 N.W. 113 (In re Nelson'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 Nelson's Estate, 129 N.W. 113, 26 S.D. 615, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 233 (S.D. 1910).

Opinion

WHITING, P. J.

One Nelson died a resident of Clay county, S-. D., leaving a will in which appellant was named as executor. Such will was admitted to probate .and the appellant appointed executor. Said estate having been fully administrated upon, the appellant, as executor, presented to the county court his final report, together with a petition for distribution of the éstate. Date for hearing such final report arrived and no objection being filed thereto, such report was, by decree of the county court, in all things approved and allowed. Within a very few days and prior to final distribution of said estate, the -heirs of the deceased petitioned such county court to reopen the said decree allowing final report and to consider certain objections which they presented thereto. Order to show cause based upon such petition issued, and, upon the return thereof, the county court refused to open said decree;-the court, in its order, basing such order upon the ground, [617]*617“that the court is without jurisdiction to- open said decree, and that the allowance of the account of said executor on final settlement is conclusive, and that no cause is shown by said petitioners or any of them in said .petition for the opening of said decree and the reexamining of said account, and that said petition alleges no facts which would confer jurisdiction upon the court to open up said decree or grant the relief prayed for by said petitioners, or any of them.” The heirs of deceased appealed to the circuit court from such order of the county court, appealing upon questions of law only; and judgment entered in circuit court reversing the -order of county court, and this appeal is from such judgment of the circuit court.

The circuit court in its judgment found, “that the county court erred in each and all of its considerations and findings in its order, * * * and erred -in making said order; that sufficient cause is shown by said petitioners, Muriel Catinca Eeikvold and Margret Euella Leikvold, the minor persons above named, for opening said decree, allowing the final account of said executor and for re-examining said account.”

All the matters herein appear of record; there is, therefore, no dispute as to the facts. Appellant contends that the decree of the county court should have been affirmed for each one of the four reasons set forth in appellant’s objections to respondent’s petition interposed in the county court, and in order to understand the questions thus raised a brief recital of the facts is necessary.

The deceased, Erick Nelson, had, prior to making his will, executed several deeds describing tracts of land owned by him, such deeds running to different of his children as grantees, which deeds had not been delivered to said grantees, but had been left in escrow with appellant. In the year 1904, he made his will, which provided that all of his property -that had not been deeded away, “as hereinafter -mentioned,” should be divided among his children. The will further -called attention to the fact that deeds had been theretofore executed, and might thereafter be executed, covering testator’s lands, an-d that the same had been or would be -delivered to testator’s executor to hold in escrow, and to be by such executor [618]*618delivered. After making said will the testator executed another deed; the result being that all his real -estate was covered by deeds thus left in escrow and to be delivered upon his death. The will was left in -the possession of the party named as executor; said party being also a subscribing witness thereto. After the death of said Nelson, a petition was prepared, signed by the heirs, with the consent of appellant indorsed thereon, asking for the admission to probate of said will, and the appointment of appellant as executor. The order admitting such will to probate recites that the law firm of Gunderson & Gunderson appeared in support of such petition. This appellant is a member of said firm. The petition, as filed, listed all of said lands, but called attention to the fact that deeds had been left in escrow with appellant. The petition listed the personal property, showing the value thereof to be $2,500. An appraisement of this estate was made and the appraisement as returned described said real property as a part of such estate, and placed a valuation thereon of $29,120. An order of sale of personal property was obtained, and a sale of same had thereunder. Some nine months elapsed between the appointment of such executor and his final report filed. Such final report shows that the bulk of said personal estate came to appellant in the form of cash or certificates of deposit, and that, from the nature of the balance of said estate, the appellant as executor -could have been called upon to perform but very limited services. In said report there is no- -claim made of extraordinary services performed, and, in fact, under such report, it would be impossible to conceive of an estate with as much personal property calling for less services upon -the part of an executor. The report shows that the executor received some $2,600 from said personal property. Among the items for which he sought to be credited, and was by the county court credited, are $250, as attorney's fee allowed to- A. B. Gunderson, the other partner in the said firm of Gunderson & Gunderson; also $867.88, allowed as executor’s commissions upon said estate; such report claiming commissions based upon the full value of the personal property left by deceased, together with the value of all the real estate described in the said deeds left with appellant [619]*619in escrow. Two of the heirs, grandchildren of the deceased, were minors. The petition asking for opening of decree of county court was signed by their guardian and by all the adult heirs, and was sworn to by some of the heirs, but not by the guardian. The lands described in the several deeds were appraised and inheritance taxes paid thereon by appellant, as executor.

Appellant contends that he was entitled to the commissions claimed, but in support of such contention does not attempt to maintain that said lands were conveyed by the will and were a part of the estate. He claims that there was a trust imposed upon the executor in regard to the real property and the title thereof, and that it became the duty of appellant, as trustee, to have the property appraised for taxation purposes, under the inheritance tax law of this state. Appellant contends that, as a trustee of such property, he was, under the statutes of this state (no compensation being fixed by agreement), entitled to the same compensation as trustee that he would have been as executor, if the land had passed as a part of-the estate. The fallacy of these positions needs little argument to expose same. Appellant as executor had nothing to do with appraising the land. The appellant never became a trustee of said land, but merely the trustee or custodian of the paper deeds relating thereto. If a- mere deposit of title papers constitutes a repository the trustee of the lands described in such papers, and, as such trustee, entitled to the fees allowed an executor for handling an estate, it would be well for the public to be advised thereof lest they fall victims to the rapacity of banks and trust companies that are. accustomed to be made repositories for title papers in dosing land deals. Even if, under the statute, the appellant believed he was legally entitled to retain the unconscionable sum claimed by him, still he could not but recognize -the fact that such a sum was unconscionable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 N.W. 113, 26 S.D. 615, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nelsons-estate-sd-1910.