Maury v. Gow

248 P. 362, 76 Mont. 476
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1926
DocketNo. 5,930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 248 P. 362 (Maury v. Gow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maury v. Gow, 248 P. 362, 76 Mont. 476 (Mo. 1926).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by bidders at administrator’s sales from an order made, on recommendation of the administrator, vacating the sales without directing that another sale, or other sales, be had. The following is a synopsis of the history of the estate up to the time the order appealed from was made:

Charles D. McLure died testate on May 20, 1918, leaving an estate consisting of shares in mining corporations- and a large number of patented mining claims. His will was duly admitted to probate on June 18, 1918, whereupon certain heirs named as executors qualified and entered upon the discharge of their duties. They employed Lowndes Maury, of Butte, as their attorney. Inventories were filed appraising properties in several counties; these appraisements totaled in excess of $600,000. Claims against the estate, filed and approved, amounted to more than $150,000, and in addition to these claims many of the properties listed were mortgaged to secure indebtedness in amounts not apparent from the record. Many of the properties owned by the corporations in which stock was [479]*479beld were likewise mortgaged or bonded to secure debts. The appraisements made placed values upon the properties listed without regard to whether they were mortgaged or not. One of the assets of the estate was a block of stock in the ‘ ‘ Cascade Silver Mines & Mills Company,” then operating on a large scale on its properties at Neihart, in Cascade county. This stock was appraised at $50,000.

In 1920 a part of this stock was sold for $53,750 and an offer of $240,000 was made for the balance thereof. Had this offer been accepted, the receipts from the sale would have discharged all of the indebtedness of the estate and left a substantial balance on hand. The executors, however, rejected the offer and, (after twenty-nine months of service, Maury was discharged without payment in full of his fees. Thereafter the executors were removed by the court, and Paul A. Gow was appointed administrator with the will annexed. The outgoing executors having filed their final account without making provision for the settlement of Maury’s claim for attorney’s fees, objections were filed by the law firm of Maury & Melznei’, and proceedings were had which resulted in a judgment in their favor in excess of $20,000, with direction that the judgment be included in a supplemental account. An appeal was taken and the judgment affirmed. (In re McLure’s Estate, 68 Mont. 556, 220 Pac. 527.)

For four years the administrator had endeavored to dispose of the property of the estate by private sale without success; no other property was ever sold and no income derived from the estate property. The administrator became involved in litigation with the Cascade Silver Mines & Mills Company (Gow v. Cascade Silver Mines & Mills Co., 66 Mont. 488, 213 Pac. 1092); operations were thereafter discontinued by the company on its Neihart property; shafts filled with water and tunnels caved; and finally the mill was destroyed by fire.

None of the debts of the estate having been paid and costs of administration having accumulated, on March 27, 1924, the holders of the Maury & Melzner claim petitioned the court for an order of sale of all property of the estate in satisfaction of [480]*480its debts. This petition set forth that the claim of petitioners then amounted to more than $26,000; that the principal on unpaid approved claims against the estate amounted to $169,874 on which interest was unpaid to the extent of $69,449.60; and that in addition thereto fees were owing to the administrator, delinquent taxes had accumulated, the administrator had not paid for a stenographer’s transcript furnished in 1922 at. a cost of $506, and that the present attorneys for the estate or administrator had a claim for an unestimated amount, which, on the hearing hereafter referred to, was shown to be $16,500. The petition alleged that the estate was insolvent and steadily growing more so and estimated the value of the property of the estate at $150,000.

Seven 'months after the petition was filed, the court made an order directing the sale of the property of the estate at public auction, after notice and within six months from date, but later postponed to July 1, 1925, on which date, and after due publication of notice in accordance with the provisions of the statute in each of the counties in which property of the estate was situated, sales were conducted in the said several counties.

For the purpose of bidding upon the property, Maury associated himself with one James E. Murray and as to ¡all of the property so offered for sale, with the exception of the “Hope Hill” group in Granite county, became the highest and best bidder therefor, either in his own name or in the name of one Stevenson, as trustee for Maury and Murray. The Hope Hill group was bid in by one James Piatten, who did not join in the appeal and does not appear, tó have been in any manner connected with the appellants. Appellants’ bids aggregate approximately $2,000.

The ¡administrator made due return of these sales to the court, but therein represented to the court that the bids were wholly disproportionate to the value of the property sold, and prayed that the sales be not confirmed. Thereafter the’ bidders, with the exception of Patten, filed their petition praying [481]*481that the sales be confirmed. No objections to confirmation were filed by parties interested in tbe estate. The only request for a hearing on the return was contained in the petition of the bidders for confirmation, on which the court duly noticed the hearing. This hearing lasted, with continuances, for three months, and on December 15, 1925, the court made the order appealed from, in which order the court declared that the sales were “fairly and legally conducted,” but that, with the exception of a $10 bid upon one claim on which foreclosure had been had and the period of redemption had expired, all sums bid were disproportionate to the value of the property, and thereupon, as heretofore stated, refused confirmation without reference to a resale.

On the hearing, Lowndes Maury, appearing for himself and his cobidders, explained the condition of the several properties of the estate, both physically and with reference to liens thereon, and in argument contended that by reason of the fact that the bidders would have to discharge prior liens upon the properties, and, as all of the properties were abandoned so far as mining operations were concerned, such bids were equal to or in excess of the value of the properties. Referring to the stock in the Cascade Silver Mines & Mills Company, mentioned above, the witness detailed the financial condition of the company and the physical condition of its property and explained that the stock had been listed on the Boston Curb for years, where “wash sales” were put through each month in order to keep it there, and that the stock “has not only no market value but no intrinsic value,” but that, with the expenditure of $100,000, it might again be made valuable; that the bid of $250 was not disproportionate to the value of the property, “except that it is in excess thereof.”

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Related

Maury v. Gow
3 P.2d 1056 (Montana Supreme Court, 1931)
In Re McLure's Estate
3 P.2d 1056 (Montana Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 362, 76 Mont. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maury-v-gow-mont-1926.