In Re Smith's Estate

37 P.2d 588, 179 Wash. 287, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 758
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1934
DocketNo. 25047. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 P.2d 588 (In Re Smith'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 Smith's Estate, 37 P.2d 588, 179 Wash. 287, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 758 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Anton Smith died a resident of Seattle on April 18, 1932, without a will and leaving estate in King county. Upon the petition of a creditor, Louis T. Silvain was appointed, and on May 10, 1932, qualified, as administrator of the estate. An inventory was filed showing that the property of the estate consisted of cash, upon the filing of which an order was entered May 11, 1932, declaring an appraisal to be unnecessary.

Thereafter, no further proceedings were had of record in the estate until November 16, 1933. On that date, which was more than eighteen months after letters of administration were issued, the state of Washington, by its supervisor of the inheritance tax and escheat division, filed in the probate proceedings a duly verified petition for an order declaring the net estate to be escheated to the state of Washington, alleging in the petition that Anton Smith died without a will, a resident of King county, on September 18, 1932; that letters of administration had regularly been issued to Silvain; that the deceased left money in one of the banks of Seattle, and that

". . . no heirs have appeared and established their claims thereto, and your petitioner is informed and believes, andtherefore alleges the fact to be, that no heirs can be found toestablish claim of heirship. That a period of more than eighteen months has expired since the issuance of letters of administration herein, and that the estate of Anton Smith and the whole thereof has escheated to the State of Washington." *Page 289

It does not appear that the petition was served on anyone, nor does it appear that any notice of any kind was given of the filing of the petition.

Thereafter, December 5, 1933, the administrator filed his duly verified final account and petition for distribution. It does not appear to have been served on anyone, nor was any notice given of it by order of court, or otherwise.

Thereafter, January 9, 1934, a verified petition on behalf of three persons alleged to be residents of Yugoslavia and heirs of the decedent, asking that the estate be awarded to them, was filed in the matter of the estate. This petition was not served on anyone, nor was any notice given of it by order of court, or otherwise.

Neither time nor notice was fixed or given for a hearing upon the final account or any of the petitions. However, on January 30, 1934, the administrator by his attorney, the supervisor of the inheritance tax and escheat division and his assistant, and the attorney for the petitioners claiming to be the heirs of the deceased, appeared in the probate department of the superior court and were given a hearing. Evidence was introduced with respect to the final account and petition of the administrator for a distribution of the property, and also the petition of those claiming to be the heirs of the deceased. The state offered no proof.

For the purposes of this appeal, the testimony given at the trial, in substance, was: That, early in the fall of 1932, the attorney for those claiming to be the heirs notified the administrator that he represented them, without giving their names, and asked that the filing of the final account be delayed pending further investigation on the part of the attorney. *Page 290

On behalf of those claiming to be heirs, one Frank Perusich testified that he knew, and for sometime lived with, the decedent in this country, and that he came from the same section of Yugoslavia or Austria that the decedent came from; that decedent's old country or family name was Rezek; that some years ago, he wrote several letters (one of them a business letter) for the decedent to the decedent's relatives back in the old country; that decedent spoke to him quite often of his relatives. He further testified that he had seen two brothers of the decedent in Colorado.

For the purpose of identifying the decedent, and somewhat of his nativity and family tree, there was introduced in evidence, over the objections of the state, an original instrument designated a "Protocol," written in a foreign language, a correct translation of which is as follows:

"DISTRICT COURT IN METLIKA "February 28, 1933

"Present: "Chief Justice Dr. Ivan Sirko "Recorder: Miss Drobniceva

"PROTOCOL

made in the hearing of deposition of Marko Petric from the village Bojanje House No. 34 concerning the identity of Anton Rezek from the village Bojanje House No. 6, who died in Seattle, Wash. on April 18, 1932 under the name of Anton Smith.

"Appears Marko Petric, 72 years old, of Roman Catholic faith, born and residing in the village Bojanje House No. 34 and upon being duly warned about the sanctity of oath, deposes and says:

"`I have known Anton Rezek during his childhood days, when he lived in Bojanje in the house No. 6. I also knew well his brother Martin, who died last year in their house No. 6 in Bojanje.

"`Said Martin Rezek told me, that some years ago he was with his brother Anton in Pueblo, Colorado, *Page 291 and that one night his brother picked up all good clothes of his roommate with whom he lived and disappeared from there, after which he took i.e. adopted another name of Anton Smith. Under that name he lived mostly among the Germans and avoided the contact with his relatives.

"`Also one Joze Rezek, who died some years ago in the village Bojanje at house No. 41, had told me that once he saw and recognized Anton Rezek in San Francisco, when Anton Rezek was working in some hotel and he spoke to him, but Anton Rezek would not admit his real identity and pretended that he was not Anton Rezek even though Joze Rezek recognized him positively, because they were cousins and they knew each other very well.

"`I, too, was personally in America from 1894 to 1896 in Sunnyside, Utah, where I lived in the home of my relative Janez Vuksinic from Bozakoveg, and said Janez told me that before I came there he had one Anton Rezek from the village Bojanje at house No. 6 live in his house in Sunnyside and at that time he went under the name of Anton Smith and signed himself with that name using the name of Smith before his relatives, who knew him under his old name.

"`In view of the above there is no doubt but that Anton Rezek from the village Bojanje house No. 6 is identically the same person as Anton Smith.

"`As further proof of the foregoing is the fact, which is personally known to me, that about three years ago Anton Rezek wrote to his now deceased brother Martin Rezek from the village Bojanje house No. 6, to procure for him his (Anton's) birth certificate and at the time he wrote from Seattle, Wash.

"`My foregoing statement, I confirm under oath.

"`Read and approved. (signed) Marko Petric.'

"It is hereby certified that the above Marko Petric was duly sworn under oath that his above statement is true.

"(signed) Drobniceva (signed) Dr. Ivan Sirko Recorder Chief Justice. "(Seal of Dist. Court in Metlika) *Page 292

"No. Preds. 145/26/33-1

"The authenticity of the signature of Dr. Ivan Sirko, chief justice in Metlika is hereby certified.

"The Presidency of Dist. Court in Novomesto "March 15, 1933

"(Seal of Dist. Court) in Novomesto

"The authenticity of the above verified by the Emigration Bureau in Zagreb August 18, 1933.

"(Seal of Emigration Bureau) (signed) Quinz."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P.2d 588, 179 Wash. 287, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smiths-estate-wash-1934.