In Re Ward's Estate

292 P. 737, 159 Wash. 252, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 1021
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1930
DocketNo. 22613. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 292 P. 737 (In Re Ward'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 Ward's Estate, 292 P. 737, 159 Wash. 252, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 1021 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

R. Ward and Axsiah Ward, his wife, had six children who survived them, including the plaintiff Gertrude Miller and the defendant Ida Beck. Axsiah E. Ward died May 10, 1910, leaving no estate save an interest in a small tract of land in the city of Seattle. The expenses of her funeral were paid by her son Eugene S. Ward.

R. Ward died August 31, 1929, aged ninety-two years. Shortly after his death, his daughter Gertrude Miller was appointed administratrix of her father's estate, and soon after her appointment she caused to be served upon the defendants Ida Beck and Henry Allen Beck, her husband, a citation requiring defendants to appear in the superior court and answer concerning certain property belonging to the estate of R. Ward, which the administratrix alleged defendants had in their possession and were withholding from her. The administratrix filed a complaint setting forth the facts upon which her claim that defendants had in their possession property belonging to the estate was based, to which complaint defendants filed separate answers.

Certain proceedings having also been instituted in connection with the estate of Axsiah E. Ward, the two matters were consolidated, and the issues raised therein tried to the court sitting without a jury; the court, after a lengthy hearing, adjudging that defendants deliver *Page 254 to the clerk of the court within five days, for the benefit of plaintiff, as administratrix of the estate of R. Ward, the sum of $3,251.04, and that, in the event of the failure of defendants to comply with the foregoing provisions of the judgment, defendants be adjudged in contempt of court. From this judgment, defendants have appealed.

The judgment appealed from is based, inter alia, upon an express finding made by the trial court to the effect that the money which appellants were by the judgment ordered to pay into court was, at the time of the entry of the judgment, in the possession and under the control of appellants, and that the same was the property of the estate of R. Ward, deceased.

The following facts pertinent to the issues to be adjudicated herein appear from the evidence: Mr. Ward, a Union veteran of the Civil War, was the recipient of a pension from the government in the sum of $72 per month, and for two years prior to January, 1927, was an inmate of the soldiers home at Orting; that he then had on deposit in a savings account in a Seattle bank the sum of $3,750, representing the proceeds of his pension; that shortly after January 1, 1927, appellants took Mr. Ward to their home in the city of Seattle, where he remained until his death; that January 3, 1927, appellant Ida Beck withdrew from her father's savings account all the money standing to his credit and deposited the same to her own credit in a savings account which she opened with the same bank.

The money so withdrawn from her father's bank account by Mrs. Beck amounted to $3,738.28, and of this money Mrs. Beck, February 7, 1927 (from her new account) withdrew $738.28, and on the 25th of the same month $3,000, leaving in the account one dollar only, with which the account was credited on the same *Page 255 day as the last withdrawal. At this time Mrs. Beck had a savings account in the Greenwood National Bank of Seattle, in which she deposited the $3,000 which she withdrew from her father's savings. This money remained in Mrs. Beck's savings account until September 4, 1929, shortly after her father's death, when she withdrew all the money standing to her credit in this account, together with the interest which had accrued thereon.

It is important to note that Mrs. Beck withdrew no money whatsoever from this account from the time she deposited the $3,000 therein until she closed the account September 4, 1929, after some of her father's heirs had asked her concerning what money he had left. It appears beyond question that, during the time Mr. Ward resided with appellants, Mrs. Beck received his pension money in the sum of $72 per month, and expended the same as in her judgment seemed best.

The trial court found that appellants had received in cash belonging to Mr. Ward, including the withdrawals from his savings account above referred to, from January 1, 1927 up to the date of Mr. Ward's death, the sum of $6,077.28, the court allowing appellants credit against this sum as follows: Ambulance hire, $35; funeral expenses, $750; medical care, $50; board, lodging, care and other expenses, $2,304; total, $3,139. Deducting this amount from the sum which the court found appellants received, and adding to the difference interest from January 3, 1927, the court reached the balance which appellants were directed to pay into court for the benefit of the estate.

It appears that Mr. Ward, during the month of December, 1926, while an inmate of the soldiers' home, fell, injuring his hip. He was blind and, due to his physical infirmities and weakness incident to his great *Page 256 age, was, of course, unable to care for himself and required constant attention. Appellants contend that, when they took him from the soldiers' home, or shortly thereafter, it was agreed between Mr. Ward and appellant Ida Beck that appellant would care for her father during his life and see that his funeral was held according to his wishes, and that in consideration thereof appellant should receive his property and retain the same as her own.

Appellants assign error upon the action of the trial court in propounding certain questions to witnesses at the trial; upon rulings of the trial court rejecting evidence offered on behalf of appellants; in denying appellants' challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence; in refusing to make findings of fact in appellants' favor; in overruling appellants' motion for a new trial; and in making the findings which were entered, and in entering judgment against appellants.

[1] In such a proceeding as this, presenting many direct issues of fact, the trial judge has a large discretion in propounding questions to witnesses in order that he may gain all the information possible to aid him in correctly determining the bitterly disputed questions presented by the respective parties. We do not find that the trial court, in questioning any of the parties or witnesses, committed error, or in any manner violated the rules of evidence applicable to such a situation as was presented for determination.

[2] Appellants complain of rulings of the trial court in striking and rejecting evidence. The testimony in this proceeding was oftentimes in direct conflict. Considerable bitterness was shown by the parties, and it is evident that the statement of the trial court in his memorandum decision to the effect that some of the witnesses must necessarily have committed perjury is correct. Some of the relatives of Mr. Ward having *Page 257 testified that Mrs. Beck had told them on several occasions during her father's illness that he would not recognize them if he saw them, Mrs. Beck, while testifying as a witness on her own behalf, was asked whether or not during this time her father did see one of her brothers and her sisters and recognize them, to which she answered in the affirmative. On respondent's motion this testimony was stricken from the record. In view of respondent's testimony, Mrs. Beck's evidence was properly admitted and should not have been stricken, but being in the record the erroneous ruling of the trial court does not constitute reversible error, and on this appeal the testimony which was stricken is considered as part of the record before us.

[3, 4] Appellants also complain of the ruling of the court refusing to allow Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 737, 159 Wash. 252, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wards-estate-wash-1930.