In Re the Estate of Bodvin

226 P.2d 878, 37 Wash. 2d 872, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 388
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1951
Docket31417
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 226 P.2d 878 (In Re the Estate of Bodvin) 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 the Estate of Bodvin, 226 P.2d 878, 37 Wash. 2d 872, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 388 (Wash. 1951).

Opinion

Hamley, J.

The principal beneficiaries under the will of Peter Bodvin, deceased, filed a petition in this probate pro *873 ceeding, asking in effect that the executor be required to include additional assets in the inventory of the estate, that he be discharged as executor, and that he be required to show cause why this relief should not be granted. An order to show cause was duly issued. The matter came on for hearing, at the close of which the trial court announced that the relief prayed for would be denied. Petitioners then filed a motion for reopening and continuance, and argument was had on this' motion. The trial court thereafter entered an order denying the motion for reopening and continuance, and denying the relief prayed for in the petition. Petitioners have appealed.

The petitioners are four sons and daughters of Peter Bod-vin. The executor, Leo Bodvin, is also a son of the decedent.

The pertinent facts, as alleged in the petition, may be summarized as follows: Peter Bodvin had been of unsound health for many years prior to his death on June 22, 1949. He required constant care by his sons and daughters, with whom he resided. Arrangements were made in March, 1949, for him to move from the home of his daughter, Margaret Binns, to the home of his son Leo. On March 15,1949, Peter transferred to Leo all of his interest in a certain contract to sell real estate, upon which there was then an unpaid balance of approximately thirty-eight hundred dollars.

In consideration of this transfer, Leo, on that day, signed a contract under which he agreed to pay all expenses for Peter’s care, including board and lodging, hospital expenses and doctor bills during the remainder of Peter’s life, and to see that Peter was “well cared for in every respect.”

This contract, which is set out in the petition, also provides:

“I Further Agree that in the. event of your death before said money is all used up, allowing a liberal amount for the expenses above enumerated, that I will pay the unpaid balance on said contract as you may direct, or in equal shares among your children, including myself.”

Pursuant to the agreement referred to above, Peter moved in with Leo, and, except for the time Peter was in a hospital, lived with Leo until the former’s death on June 22, 1949. *874 Leo sold the real-estate contract which had been transferred to him, for approximately $3,400. He also came into possession of cash and savings deposits belonging to Peter, in the sum of $1,461.90, making a total of at least $4,861.90 of Peter’s property which came into Leo’s possession. The inventory which Leo filed in the estate lists cash in the sum of $1,412.90 This leaves a balance of $3,449, from which should be deducted such expenses as Leo incurred between March 15, 1949, and June 22, 1949, in caring for Peter. Since these expenses could not have equaled $3,449, petitioners urged that Leo should show cause why the additional assets have not been included in the inventory, and why he should not be discharged as executor.

This concludes the allegations of the petition. The executor presented evidence at the hearing, to the effect that the contract of March 15, 1949, between Peter and himself, had been rescinded or abandoned, and a new contract, in substitution of the original agreement, had been entered into. The executor asserted that, under this new arrangement, he, Leo, was to retain the real-estate contract which had been assigned to him, without being required to make any distribution of the proceeds remaining at the time of Peter’s death. The new arrangement, according to Leo, also contemplated that he would pay for Peter’s normal living expenses for the rest of the latter’s life. Since Leo was being given outright ownership of the real-estate contract, it was also agreed, according to Leo, that he should be eliminated as one of the beneficiaries of Peter’s life insurance policy and of his will.

The evidence shows that Leo was thereafter eliminated as a beneficiary of the life insurance policy. The evidence also shows that Peter thereafter revoked a will in which Leo had been named as one of the beneficiaries, and made a new will under which Leo received no bequest or devise. This new will, dated June 9, 1949, is the one being probated in this estate proceeding, and under which petitioners gain their standing as beneficiaries. It provides, in part:

“First: I hereby provide that all debts owed by me be paid as soon as possible including reimbursement to my son, *875 Leo Bodvin, for all expenses incurred by him in taking care of me from the time I came to his home, with the exception of board and room and normal living expenses, provisions having already been made by me for those expenses. . . .
“Third: I have provided for my sons, Raymond Bod-vin and Leo Bodvin, by devise of real estate and make no other provision for bequest to them.
“Fourth: I give, bequeath and devise all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, whether real, personal or mixed and wheresoever situated, in equal shares to my remaining children, whose names are: Georgia Heywood, Margaret Binns, Edward Bodvin, and Lawrence Bodvin.”

Petitioners developed some testimony tending to show that Peter may not have had the mental capacity to enter into the contract of March 15, 1949, with Leo; to assign the real-estate contract to Leo; to rescind or abandon the contract of March 15, 1949; to enter into a new oral agreement with Leo; or to execute the will of June 9, 1949, under probate in this estate. However, petitioners were not challenging the contract of March 15, 1949, or the assignment of the real-estate contract, and they were not contesting the will. They were, in fact, claiming under both the contract and the will. The testimony as to Peter’s mental capacity, therefore, was material and relevant only with respect to petitioners’ attack upon the rescission or abandonment of the contract of March 15, 1949, and the purported subsequent oral agreement.

The order of the trial court appealed from incorporates several findings of fact. These are, in substance, that, on March 15, 1949, Peter and Leo entered into a written contract, as described in the petition; that this contract was rescinded and destroyed on or about March 16, 1949; and that under the new arrangement then entered into, Leo had no obligation to pay back into Peter’s estate any proceeds of the real-estate contract remaining at the time of Peter’s death.

All but one of appellants’ assignments of error attack, on various grounds, the trial court’s finding that the contract of March 15, 1949, was validly rescinded or destroyed. In support of these assignments, appellants argue that rescission of the original contract was not established by the *876 necessary degree of proof; that the rescission was ineffective because Leo did not restore the status quo

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Bluebook (online)
226 P.2d 878, 37 Wash. 2d 872, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-bodvin-wash-1951.