National Surety Co. v. Matheson's Estate

7 Alaska 582
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMarch 3, 1927
DocketNo. 2385-A
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Alaska 582 (National Surety Co. v. Matheson's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Co. v. Matheson's Estate, 7 Alaska 582 (D. Alaska 1927).

Opinion

RFFD, ’District Judge.

Considering again the objections to the hearing of the petition that the court has no jurisdiction of the person of the administratrix nor the subject-matter of the claims, it is to be noted, first, that the administratrix has never been ’discharged; and, second, that by the decree itself she, until the order of the probate court is complied with, is not to be discharged. It is true that the probate court treated the report as final. Yet, as appears from the report, other and further matters supplemental thereto were to be presented to the probate court and approved. In other words, the estate has never been finally closed. The probate court retained jurisdiction over the administratrix and had authority to require such further accounting. In fact, further accounting is [586]*586necessary before the estate can be regularly closed, for the reason that the account submitted on April 18, 1923, does not pretend to state that the estate has been closed, but shows an estimate of expenses to be incurred by the administratrix subsequently to the amount of $925. Not only this, but there is no showing that the administratrix has ever paid the amounts allowed by the probate court to be paid to the creditors. It is further alleged in the petition that there was omitted from the final account items chargeable against the administratrix, or items of property to be credited to her which were omitted by mistake or through fraud or collusion. If this is so, the probate court is authorized to require a further accounting of those items under its general equity powers. It is urged also that there was a decree by the probate court, and that the decree is res judicata and cannot be discharged'or falsified by a motion for further accounting.

I do not agree with this contention. As was said in Woerner on Administration (3d Ed.) par. 506:

“It seems a self-evident proposition that the judgment or decree of a probate court, on the final settlement by an executor or administrator, is conclusive only on the matters therein embraced. That which has not been tried cannot be said to be adjudicated. Hence the decree does not conclude as to property incidentally or fraudulently withheld, but otherwise it is conclusive as to all items of property entering into the account though omitted. The probate court cannot divest itself of jurisdiction over an executor or administrator, by deciding that an account is final as to any matters not included in the account before it; nor is such decree conclusive of matters collaterally recited, but not directly adjudicated,” etc.

Again in paragraph 504:

“But, even were the accounting or settlement conclusive as to matters adjudicated, it cannot be conclusive as to matters omitted from the account, which may therefore be surcharged in subsequent settlements.”

It is urged further that the petitioner, the National Surety Company, being the surety of the administratrix, is bound by the decree, and cannot surcharge the account submitted by its principal. I have considered this question somewhat on the demurrer to the petition, and have again gone over the views expressed by me in overruling the demurrer, and see no reason to change my opinion. In the case of United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company v. Greer, 240 P. 343, the Su[587]*587preme Court of Arizona passed upon a similar question. The probate court in that case refused to allow certain items of the administrator’s account. The administrator refused to appeal from this decision, and dismissed the appeal started by his attorney. The surety company, the bondsman of the administrator, thereafter filed its petition, setting up its suretyship, that it had not been a party to the proceeding affecting the Greer estate, that certain portions of the judgment and order of the probate court unjustly affected its right and interest, and moved that such portions be modified and set aside. A demurrer to this petition was sustained by the lower court, denying the surety company’s rights to appear or question the judgment and order of the court. The Supreme Court, on appeal,' says:

“We are satisfied error was committed in denying the appellant the right to question by motion the correctness of the judgment and order against the outgoing administrator. The appellant was not a party to the proceedings concerning the allowance or disallowance of the administrator’s account, yet it had a vital interest in the result thereof, because under, the general rule any adjudication in such a proceeding, even though the surety be not a party of record, is as binding upon the surety as upon the principal. Doubtless the appellant could have intervened in such proceeding, and appealed from any judgment injuriously affecting its rights; but there would be no reason for its taking such a precautionary step as long as the principal on bond diligently and in good faith did what he could to prevent an unjust judgment from being entered against him and in favor of the estate.
“In this ease the administrator, in apparent good faith, insisted that his final account should be allowed as presented, but, when it was not allowed, and, on the contrary, judgment was given in favor of the estate against him, he refused to prosecute it further, and.dismissed the appeal started by his attorneys. If, in such exigency, the surety cannot, by motion, make itself a party of record in the case, and thereby secure a footing to demand protection, it is practically without remedy, and could be greatly harmed by the collusive or fraudulent co-operation of an administrator and those representing the estate. We do not mean to intimate that there is anything in this record tending to show collusion or fraud, but to set out what might occur if the law should be declared to be against allowing a surety, after judgment, from ever, for any reason, questioning it by motion filed in the case.”

In that case the probate court passed directly upon the item involved in the motion. The surety, after judgment against its principal entered by the probate court, and after its principal had acquiesced in the judgment, petitioned the court to set [588]*588the judgment aside and modify it as to certain items which had been passed upon by the probate court. The lower court sustained the demurrer to the petition. The Supreme Court upheld the petition on the ground that the surety was not a party to the judgment or proceedings antecedent thereto. While in a collateral proceeding, as, for instance, an action on the bond, the surety company would be bound by the judgment of the probate court, it is not so when the surety company comes in and petitions to falsify or surcharge the final account. It appears to me that the surety company can 'question the verity of its principal’s account before the court having original jurisdiction, even after the decree is entered settling the account, because it is not primarily interested in the estate, and as such had not been notified to appear on the settlement of the final account. To hold otherwise would foster collusion, if not fraud, between the distributees and the administratrix. To my mind, the petitioner is well within its rights in petitioning to surcharge the account of the administratrix.

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Related

Vance v. Estate of Myers
494 P.2d 816 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1972)
Matheson v. National Surety Co.
41 F.2d 155 (Ninth Circuit, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Alaska 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-mathesons-estate-akd-1927.