Kretsinger v. Brown

165 F. 612, 91 C.C.A. 450, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4789
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1908
DocketNo. 2,526
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 165 F. 612 (Kretsinger v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kretsinger v. Brown, 165 F. 612, 91 C.C.A. 450, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4789 (8th Cir. 1908).

Opinion

VAN DEVANTER, Circuit judge.

The facts necessary to an understanding of the controversy presented in this case are these: At her death Jane C. Brown, of Arapahoe county, Colo., was the owner in fee of a large amount of real property in that and other counties, all of which by her will was devised to her husband, Henry C. Brown, part in fee and part for the term of his life with a power to appoint those who should take the estate in remainder. The will also named him as executor. Included in the properly devised in fee were all of block 24-, and lots 15 to 21, both inclusive, in block 17, in H. C. Brown’s Eirst addition to the city of Pueblo, in Pueblo county. After the probate of the will, Brown, in his individual capacity and for individual purposes, mortgaged this specific property to the appellant, and thereafter, in his capacity as executor, sold and conveyed the lots in block 17 to the city of Pueblo, one of the appellees. The sale and conveyance were made under decrees of the county court in which the testatrix’s estate was being administered, and the immediate purpose for which they were made was that of raising money to pay taxes upon the other real property, levied after the testatrix’s death, so that it could ultimately be subjected to the payment of the just debts allowed against the estate. In a suit by the appellant to foreclose the mortgage, the validity of the decrees directing the sale and conveyance to tire city was drawn in question; the appellant insisting, and the city denying, that they were void. The Circuit Court held with Hie city, and refused to include in the foreclosure decree the lots in block 17. It is the purpose of this appeal to obtain a modification of the decree, so as to include them.

The controversy is somewhat simplified by these concessions on the part of counsel: (1) When the will was admitted to probate, the title to 1he lots in question vested in Brown, subject to the right to resort to it, as provided by law, for the payment of the just debts allowed against the estate. (2) The mortgage to the appellant gave him a ■valid lien upon the title, but subject to the right so to resort to it for the payment of such debts. (3) The conveyance to the city divested Brown of the title and the appellant of the mortgage lien, unless the decrees of the county court were void. (4) The validity of those decrees is here drawn in question collaterally, and must be sustained, unless they are shown to have been absolutely void; no mere irregularity being of any avail.

Some of the objections to the decrees are so plainly untenable, or so clearly in opposition to controlling decisions of the Supreme Court of the state, that particular mention of them is not necessary. Those upon which greater reliance is placed are as follows: (1) A sale to [614]*614pay taxes levied after the testatrix’s death was wholly unauthorized, even though its purpose was that of keeping other real property required for the payment of the just debts allowed against the estate available for that purpose. (2) The decrees directing the sale and conveyance were premature, and thereby shortened the appellant’s opportunity to be heard in opposition to them. (3) Notice of the sale was not given as required by law.

Before taking up these objections separately, it is important to notice some matters which bear equally upon all of them. The executor’s petition, upon which the subsequent proceedings were founded, did not stop with a statement of the unpaid taxes and the necessity for their immediate payment, but set forth substantially everything required to be shown in a petition for leave to sell real property to pay debts. The heirs at law were made parties defendant, and they, with the sole devisee, voluntarily appeared and consented to the sale. Nothing more was required to confer upon the county court jurisdiction to proceed in the premises. Nichols v. Lee, 16 Colo. 147, 26 Pac. 157. The appellant was not made a defendant, but that was not essential under the statute (Mills’ Ann. St. §§ 4751, 4760; Nichols v. Lee, supra; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Brown, 32 Colo. 365, 374, 76 Pac. 799), or independently of the statute (Beauregard v. New Orleans, 18 How. 497, 503, 15 L. Ed. 469; Florentine v. Barton, 2 Wall. 210, 216, 17 L. Ed. 783).

In support'of the first objection attention is directed to section 4750, Mills’ Ann. St., which provides that, if the personal estate be insufficient, resort may be had to the real estate of a decedent “to discharge the just debts allowed against his or her estate”; and it is contended that the term “debts,” as there used, includes only such obligations as may have been contracted or incurred by the decedent and cannot be held to embrace taxes levied after his death. Other parts of the same statute, however, make against the contention. Section 4761 provides that if, upon the hearing, it shall appear that the personal estate will be insufficient “to discharge the just debts and claims allowed against the estate, * * * and expenses of administration,” the court shall determine, as nearly as may be, the amount of such deficiency, and may thereupon direct that resort be had to the real estate; and section 4780, which classifies demands'against an estate, includes therein “all expenses of administration and settlement of the estate,” and then provides “that wherever it may be necessary so to do, in order to preserve the estate, real or personal, for the benefit of the heirs, devisees and creditors, the executor or administrator may pay any taxes due thereon to the state, or any city, county or town, and shall be allowed such payment in his account.” It is an admissible inference from these provisions that the term “debts” in section 4750 is intended to embrace expenses of administration (Personette v. Johnson, 40 N. J. Eq. 173, 178) and “any taxes” the payment of which by the estate is essential to the preservation of the realty for the benefit of creditors; and this inference is strengthened when it is reflected that the preservation of the realty can be of .benefit to creditors only by keeping it available for the payment of their [615]*615demands, that it is sometimes impossible to keep it available for that purpose, save bjr selling part of it to pay taxes on the remainder, and that in this respect there is no difference between taxes levied before and those levied after the decedent’s death.

Not unreasonably, therefore, it might be held that taxes, whether levied before or after the decedent’s death, may be regarded as debts, within the meaning of section 4750, when their payment by the estate is essential to the preservation of the property for the benefit of creditors. But, be that as it may, the question of whether or not such faxes may be regarded as debts, within the meaning of the statute, was presented to the comity court, and decided by it, when it directed the sale and conveyance in question. Being a court of general jurisdiction, and being particularly charged with the decision of all questions arising in the administration and settlement of decedents’ estates and in proceedings by administrators or executors to sell real estate to pay debts (Bateman v. Reitler, 19 Colo. 547, 550, 36 Pac. 548; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Brown, 32 Colo. 365, 373, 76 Pac. 799), its decision, whether correct or otherwise, is conclusive upon all other courts in which it is collaterally drawn in question (Florentine v. Barton, 2 Wall. 210, 17 L. Ed. 783; McNitt v. Turner, 16 Wall. 352, 364, 21 L. Ed. 341; Manson v. Duncanson, 166 U. S. 533, 545, 17 Sup. Ct. 647, 41 L. Ed. 1105; Mellen v.

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Bluebook (online)
165 F. 612, 91 C.C.A. 450, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kretsinger-v-brown-ca8-1908.