Kohler-McLister Paint Co. v. Rafferty

283 P. 1097, 41 Wyo. 189, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 1
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1930
Docket1575
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 283 P. 1097 (Kohler-McLister Paint Co. v. Rafferty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kohler-McLister Paint Co. v. Rafferty, 283 P. 1097, 41 Wyo. 189, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 1 (Wyo. 1930).

Opinion

RinbR, Justice.

This ease is before the court by direct appeal from an order made by the District Court of Natrona County, in probate, directing the sale of certain real property owned by the Estate of Hannah M. Demorest, deceased. The order of sale was made upon written application of the respondent, The Kohler-McLister Paint Company, and over the objections of the appellant, M. W. Rafferty, as Administrator of said estate.

The respondent, in its application for the order of sale, alleged its status as a creditor of the estate whose claim *192 Rad been allowed, and Renee, under Section 6931, Compiled Statutes of Wyoming 1920, insisted it was entitled to Rave tRe order in question made. Appellant denies respondent’s standing as a creditor of tRe estate, liis contention being substantially tRat tlie respondent’s claim against tRe estate was never presented to tRe administrator for allowance as required by law and was never allowed by Rim.

Respondent filed a motion to dismiss tRe case in tRis court, urging tRat tRe record Rerein does not sRow tRat tRe order appealed from was entered on tRe journal of tRe trial court, nor tRe date of sucR entry. Previous decisions of tRis court dismissing cases Rere wRere sucR a condition prevailed are invoked. We Rave carefully examined tRis record, Rowever, and are of tRe opinion tRat sufficient is disclosed by it to enable us to reacR tRe conclusion tRat tRe facts are not as relied upon by tRe motion, and it must therefore be denied.

Turning to the principal point in dispute between the parties, i. e. whether or not respondent’s claim was presented and allowed by the administrator, the question arising under Section 6887, Compiled Statutes of Wyoming 1920, before its subsequent amendment (Laws of 1925, c. 93) and Section 6889, it appears that the trial court, before entering the order complained of, conducted a hearing and received evidence concerning the objections interposed by appellant to the granting of such order. Among the proofs submitted were the original claims of respondent, which seem to Rave been fastened with clips to the file of the estate in the clerk’s office of the District Court of Natrona County, but apparently not marked filed, said claims possessing endorsements on the back thereof showing the county, the name of the estate, the name of the claimant and the blank forms reciting presentation and allowance filled in with the date October 4, 1922 — all written out in the handwriting of the attorney *193 for the administrator, George W. Ferguson. The blank spaces appearing under these endorsements for the signature of the administrator were, however, unused.

The record shows also, that letters of administration were granted appellant November 25, 1921, and that a notice to creditors was published, wherein it was stated that “all persons having claims against the said estate are hereby required to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers for allowance, to the undersigned at the office of Geo. W. Ferguson, rooms 22-23, Townsend Bldg., Casper, Wyoming, ’ ’ within the time required by law.

Testimony was given at the hearing that sometime after November or December, 1926, at various conversations between representatives of respondent and Mr. Ferguson, the latter told them that he (Ferguson) had the claims of The Kohler-MeLister Paint Company, and that they were claims against the estate. Mr. Ferguson, called as a witness by respondent, testified that these claims had been in his possession in the past, but that he was unable to recall the date of such possession. He did not deny that the claims had been presented and allowed by the administrator.

Further, there were received in evidence and appear in this record, a report of the administrator M. W. Rafferty, filed in court March 20, 1926, and a petition by him for authority to mortgage real estate of the Hannah M. De-morest Estate, which was filed August 30, 1926. The first of these documents, among other statements, contains the following:

‘1 That there are unpaid claims against the estate of said deceased, which have been approved by this administrator with the will annexed, and which are valid and existing claims against said estate, as follows, to-wit: * * * “The Kohler-MeLister Paint Co., Indebtedness of John A. Demorest, guaranteed by deceased, $664.00”

*194 This report is signed by M. W. Rafferty, • as Administrator, and verified by him in the following language:

“that he is the administrator with the will annexed of the estate of said deceased; that he has read the foregoing report and account, and knows the contents thereof; and that the same and the statements therein contained are true. ’ ’

The petition for authority to mortgage the real estate incorporates therein a statement to the following effect:

“That the indebtedness against said estate, the expenses of administration and the legacy provided for in the will of said deceased are as follows, to-wit: # * * “The Kohler-McLister Co., Guaranteed for John De-morest, $664.00”

This document likewise bears Mr. Rafferty’s signature as Administrator, and is also positively verified by him in the form above quoted. The administrator did not, at the hearing, deny the presentation of these claims or their allowance. In fact he did not testify at all.

The court, upon the conclusion of the hearing, found that a sale of the real estate belonging to the estate, was necessary for the payment of petitioner’s claim and other debts against the estate and expenses of administration, that the petition should be granted, and the order of sale now under consideration was consequently made.

Por the appellant, the cases of O’Keefe v. Foster, 5 Wyo. 343, 40 Pac. 525; Delfelder v. Farmers State Bank of Riverton, 38 Wyo. 481, 269 Pac. 418, 270 Pac. 1081, and decisions of similar purport, dealing with the necessity of presentation of claims to the executors and administrators of estates, have been cited at length. However, the real question now presented is, we think, whether the trial court correctly interpreted the evidence before it when it concluded that a due presentation and allowance of re *195 spondent’s claim had been made — an inference necessarily flowing from the fact of making the order of sale attacked.

It has been held under statutes similar in phraseology to those in force in this state which govern this matter, that where a certain place is designated for the presentation of claims to the personal representative, presentation at that place is sufficient, although the representative is not there to receive the claim. Roddan v. Doane, 92 Cal. 555, 28 Pac. 604, 605; and see Douglass v. Folsom, 21 Nev. 441, 33 Pac. 660.

In the California ease cited above the notice to creditors required them to present their claims against the estate at the office of one McG-raw, who was then the attorney for the administratrix of the estate. The claim involved was left by claimant at his office with the attorney’s clerk, neither the attorney nor the administratrix being present. Holding this to be a sufficient presentation, the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 1097, 41 Wyo. 189, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kohler-mclister-paint-co-v-rafferty-wyo-1930.