Lego v. Olson

136 P.2d 277, 110 Colo. 508, 1943 Colo. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 22, 1943
DocketNo. 15,256.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 P.2d 277 (Lego v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lego v. Olson, 136 P.2d 277, 110 Colo. 508, 1943 Colo. LEXIS 186 (Colo. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Goudy

delivered the opinion of the court.

John F. Olson died intestate and defendant in error was appointed administratrix of his estate October 26, 1935, in the county court of Phillips county, Colorado. October 8, 1936, one Jim Jorgensen filed a claim against said estate, the original claim being introduced in evidence as exhibit A at the trial in the district court. We quote therefrom:

“One written promissory note in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, which note has been lost, misplaced, or removed from its usual place, but which is past due and' has never been transferred by the owner $1500.00
One written promissory note in the sum of one hundred sixty dollars, which note has been lost, misplaced or removed from its usual place, but which is past due and has never been transferred by the owner
160.00
1660.00”
*510 “1660.00 allowed by the Court, as of fifth Class, this 8th day of Oct. A.D. 1936.
“Avery T. Searle,
Judge
“This claim is correct
“Sarah M. Olson,
Administra........”

June 21, 1940, the claimant Jorgensen died, and his estate, in the county court of Washington county, Colorado, was closed November 10, 1941. Plaintiff in error is the sole legatee under Jorgensen’s will. October 27, 1941, more than five years after the claim had been allowed and after decease of the claimant, defendant in error filed in the county court a petition to set aside the allowance of said claim; November 10, 1941, the executor of the Jorgensen estate assigned the claim to plaintiff in error, who thereafter filed an answer to the petition. The petition alleged, inter alia, the following: (1) That no claim on behalf of Jorgensen ever has been filed in the probate court as required by statute; (2) that the probate court had no jurisdiction to allow said claim October 8, 1936, or at any other time, for the reason that no claim was pending on behalf of Jorgensen which authorized the allowance of said claim or the taking of any action except to disallow said claim; (3) that the statements made in the pretended claim filed, that the notes upon which said claim was based have been lost, misplaced or removed from their usual place, were false at the time said statements were made, and were known to be false by claimant at the time said claims was filed; that the only notes held by claimant which did constitute a claim against said estate were in existence, easily accessible to claimant, and could have been filed as a part of the claim at the time said claim was made, all of which was well known to claimant at the time said claim was filed. The judge of the county court who had allowed the claim had retired from the bench, and his successor, after hearing argument of counsel, found that *511 the claim should not have been allowed; ordered that the prior judgment of allowance be ‘set aside and held for naught,’ and entered judgment that the claim be ‘disallowed and dismissed’.”

After the order of the county court disallowing the claim, the matter was appealed to the district court where hearings were had thereon, at which considerable testimony was taken, the greater portion of which concerned the question of whether or not any proper statutory notice of the filing of the claim was given to the admistratrix before October 8, 1936, and whether or not she had approved the claim before or after it was allowed by the county court, the contention of counsel for defendant in error being that in the absence of such notice the county court had no jurisdiction to hold a hearing on the claim or to allow the same; and that if the claim was approved after the county court allowed the same, that the administratrix had no authority to make such approval, because the statute of limitations had run against the claim before it was approved by her.

It seems unnecessary to consider these questions further for the reason that the district court, at the conclusion of the evidence, made findings which recite that the claim was filed October 8, 1936; that it was based on two promissory notes, which were not filed with the claim, or at all; that the claim was filed more than six months after letters were issued; that no notice as required was served on the administratrix of the time when the claim would be presented for allowance; that no action was taken on the claim until after January, 1938, when the administratrix appeared in court, signed her name on the back of the claim, under the words, “This claim is correct”; that the county judge then marked the claim as allowed, and dated his allowance back to October 8, 1936; that the oral evidence showed that in January, 1938, there was no record of any allowance of this claim, and at that time the administra *512 trix had not signed her name on the claim indicating that it was correct; and although the county judge said that he never allowed a claim that was not first approved by the administrator, administratrix, or other fiduciary representative, that he had no recollection as to anything that was done in this case except what the record shows; that the record showing that the claim was filed October 8, 1936, and allowed on the same date, is incorrect. The Court then stated that he was, however, not holding the judgment of the county court void for any of the reasons hereinabove recited. No cross specification of points have been filed by defendant in error to this, and it will not be further noticed. The District Judge further found, and he expressed the opinion, that the statements in the claim itself were insufficent to give the Court jurisdiction to hear, determine and allow the claim; that he was unaware of any authority in this state that sanctions the allowance of a claim based upon a promissory note without the filing of the note; but that in a case where the note is lost or destroyed, and it is impossible to produce it, he felt, regardless of the mandatory provisions of the statute, that a case might arise in which one could recover upon a promissory note where the note was not filed. He then disallowed the claim for the reason that claimant failed to file the notes as required by the statute, and had filed a misleading claim, due to the fact that the notes were not lost, and were not misplaced, but had been removed from their usual place by claimant, who had left them with the administratrix for safekeeping, directing her to keep them, not to deliver them to any other person, and if she did not pay them while he was living, not to pay them at all.

The only questions to which we give attention are as to whether the county court had jurisdiction to allow the claim as filed, and whether the district court had properly before it the question of the knowledge of *513 claimant as to the whereabouts of the notes at the time the claim was filed.

Claimant Jorgensen did not file the original notes with the claim as required by section 201, chapter 176, ’35 C.S.A. We have frequently passed upon that requirement. In re Hobson’s Estate, 40 Colo.

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586 P.2d 238 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1978)
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Bluebook (online)
136 P.2d 277, 110 Colo. 508, 1943 Colo. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lego-v-olson-colo-1943.