Miller v. Martin

478 P.2d 874, 93 Idaho 924, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 279
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1970
Docket10409
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 478 P.2d 874 (Miller v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Martin, 478 P.2d 874, 93 Idaho 924, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 279 (Idaho 1970).

Opinion

SPEAR, Justice.

The appellants, under the firm name of Red Mountain Lode Mining Company, initiated an action to contest the will of Robert L. Chandler, who was indebted to them. From a judgment of the district court holding that the appellants as mere creditors lacked standing to contest the Chandler will under I.C. § 15-210, which allows “interested persons” and creditors to contest a will, this appeal was perfected.

Robert L. Chandler, a resident of Love-lock, Nevada, died in Boise, Idaho on February 12, 1967. At the time of his death, Chandler’s estate included real and personal property in Nevada, and real property in Idaho consisting of an approximate 60 per cent ownership interest in certain mining claims in the Yellow Pine Mining District of Valley County.

The last will and testament of the decedent, which was executed by him on February 8, 1967, was offered for probate in Pershing County, Nevada, and was admitted to probate without contest.' Shortly thereafter, the respondent, Hubert Martin, an attesting witness to the will and a legatee and devisee under the will, filed a petition for probate of the will and issuance of letters of administration with the will annexed in the probate court for Valley County, Idaho. Filed with the petition was a duly authenticated copy of the probate proceedings in the State of Nevada. The appellants filed a contest to the probate of the will, alleging an interest as creditors by virtue of a lease and option to purchase certain mining claims owned by the deceased, and by virtue of an alleged cause of action against the estate for actual or constructive eviction from the mining property and for damages to mining equipment owned by them. In the contest, they asserted that the purported will was not executed and witnessed according to the law of the State of Idaho since one of the attesting witnesses, Hubert Martin, was a devisee named in the will.

Respondent thereupon filed a general and special demurrer and motion to dismiss appellants’ Second Amended Contest, and supporting briefs were filed by both parties. 1 After a hearing, the probate court found that appellants were creditors having substantial claims for damages and interested in the estate of the deceased in that the appellants’ leasehold interest in said mining claims and the appellants’ operation of the mining property would be affected by the administration of the decedent’s estate and by the devolution of the decedent’s interest in such mining claims. The court then concluded that appellants were entitled to contest the probate of the will, and that the will was invalid because one of the attesting witnesses was a devisee under the will.

*926 Upon appeal to the district court, respondent filed his motion to dismiss the Second Amended Contest. Briefs were filed by both parties and the case was heard de novo. The court concluded that although the appellants were creditors of the estate, they were not “interested” creditors of the «state as required by I.C. § 15-210, and therefore had no standing to contest probate of the will. The court further held that the fact that a witness to the will is also a devisee would not automatically defeat the will, but would merely be a factor to be considered regarding the credibility ■of the witness’ testimony. The court thereupon remanded the case to the pro-hate court with directions to dismiss the appellants’ contest and to admit the will to probate upon proper showing of all juris-dictional requirements. From that decision, appellants bring this appeal.

Appellants’ specifications of error concern mainly the two points in contention in the lower courts: (1) Whether the appellants as creditors have standing to contest probate of the will; and (2) whether a will duly admitted to probate in another state is void in Idaho where one of the attesting witnesses is also a devisee.

The first question, concerning standing, is controlled by I.C. § 15-210, which states:

“Any person interested may appear and contest the will. Devisees, legatees, heirs or creditors of an estate may contest the will through their guardians, or attorneys appointed by themselves or by the court for that purpose; but a contest made by an attorney appointed by the court does not bar a contest after probate, by the party so represented, if commenced within the time provided in this chapter; nor does the nonappointment of an attorney by the court of itself invalidate the probate of a will.”

The interest indicated in the first sentence of § 15-210 concerns the actual operation of the will and the devolution of the property of the estate. Ordinarily a contestant is interested when he shows he could take property under the decedent’s will, or, by somehow defeating a will, take by intestate succession.

Creditors of an estate would seemingly, under most circumstances, not be affected by the mechanics of the distribution of property from the estate. Creditors have a prior claim on the estate’s property and no will provisions can prevent creditors from having their debts paid first. Monroe v. Cooper, 235 Mass. 33, 126 N.E. 286 (1920); 2 Page on Wills, § 618 at p. 170.

An examination of the second sentence of § 15-210 shows that creditors of an estate are given a right to contest the probate of a will. This court cannot conceive of the occasion where a creditor would have an interest in the operation of the will. However, the statute is clear and must be applied to this case. 2

An inherent duty of any court is to inquire into the underlying interest at stake in a legal proceeding. Doing so ensures the rational operation of the legal process. Therefore, in every lawsuit there must be what is called a justiciable interest cognizable in the courts as a precondition to any party maintaining a lawsuit. 67 C. J.S. Parties § 6a, p. 899 (1950). As pointed out above, it would seem as a general proposition that these creditor-appellants are not asserting the typical justiciable interest contemplated by § 15-210.

Indeed, this is borne out by the findings of the trial court. In his Memorandum Decision the district judge concluded that the interest asserted was really an interest in the administration of the estate. This conclusion by the district judge *927 is substantiated by the record and contestant’s pleadings. Thus, the appellants seem not to have been interested in the will itself nor its operation but rather in the efficient management of the estate and full satisfaction of their claims. This view squares with the general rule that creditors do possess the type of interest necessary to object to the handling of the estate in the proceedings for administration. See 33 C. J.S. Executors and Administrators § 57b, p. 966 (1942).

An interest in the administration of an estate is not protected by contesting a will. If a creditor is to get satisfaction of his claim, he must rather promote the speedy administration of the estate. Thus, here, appellants pursued the wrong remedy under the statutes available.

Interests in the proper administration of an estate are protected under a separate group of statutes in the code (see I. C. §§ 15-301 et seq.), and thus appellants are not necessarily left without a remedy under the terms of this decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
478 P.2d 874, 93 Idaho 924, 1970 Ida. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-martin-idaho-1970.