Putnam v. Jenkins

285 P.2d 532, 204 Or. 691, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 309
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 285 P.2d 532 (Putnam v. Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Jenkins, 285 P.2d 532, 204 Or. 691, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 309 (Or. 1955).

Opinion

WARNER, C.J.

This suit was begun for the purpose of quieting the title of the plaintiffs George W. Putnam and Gladys Putnam, brother and sister, who claim to be the owners of the following described real property:

“The north half of the southwest quarter, and the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter, and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter, all in section 20, township 24 south, range 1 west of the Willamette Meridian, Douglas County, State of Oregon.”

The foregoing is a description of the same parcel described in the inventory filed in the matter of the probate of Mrs. Lilla G. Putnam’s estate, instituted in Douglas county in August 1947. For convenience we will hereinafter refer to it as the “inventory description”. The inventory also included the northwest quarter of said section 20 in which we have no interest and which we assume to have been the homestead entry of Mrs. Putnam occasionally referred to as having been adjacent to the timber entry of John F. Pettingill, *694 now deceased, and husband of the intervenor, Katherine A. Pettingill.

The suit was initially brought against the heirs of Irvena Jenkins, deceased (a sister of Lilla G. Putnam), as claimants of interests adverse to the title of the plaintiffs Putnam. Thereafter, Katherine Pettingill, the respondent, filed her complaint in intervention in which she prayed that said real property be sold and the proceeds from said sale distributed as directed in the will of her sister Lilia. We will later give particular attention to this provision.

Prior to 1913 the property above described was owned by the said John P. Pettingill. It was mortgaged that year by Mr. and Mrs. Pettingill to secure a loan made to them by L. A. Moore. In 1914 this mortgage was satisfied of record by Moore after receiving a warranty deed to the land from the Pettingills. In February 1915 Lilia Putnam, a sister of Katherine Pettingill and the stepmother of the appellants George and Gladys Putnam, paid Moore $400 for the above described property. Moore thereupon conveyed it by warranty deed to Mrs. Putnam, who thereafter held title until she died in 1933.

From a decree dismissing the complaint of the plaintiffs and directing a sale of the real property and a distribution of the proceeds in accordance with the directions of Lilia Putnam’s will, the plaintiffs George and Gladys Putnam appeal.

The Monarch Door & Manufacturing Co. was another plaintiff in intervention but shortly after the initiation of this appeal withdrew as an appellant. Its interest is, therefore, no longer a matter for our inquiry.

This appeal presents no issue of fact. We have only to treat here with issues of law which are presented by undisputed facts. However, before we pro *695 ceed further it is necessary to have a fuller understanding of these facts whence the legal issues are derived.

Mrs. Pettingill’s sister Lilia died in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on June 14, 1933. Prior to that date, on June 18,1927, she had executed her last will and testament wherein she devised and bequeathed all her real and personal property to her husband George H. Putnam (father of the appellants) in language as follows:

“All my property * * * with the exception of the following property:—
“The North half of the South West Quarter (N %SW%) and North West of the South East Quarter (NW % SE 14) and South West of the South West Quarter (SW 14 SW 14) of Section twenty (20) Township twenty four (24) Range One (1) West. When this is sold, the proceeds over and above the indebtedness to us shall be paid to my sister Katherine A. Pettingill. And of the indebtedness accruing to us from this property I will and bequeath five hundred dollars to my daughter Dorothy and the same amount to my sister Irvena R. Jenkins and the remainder to be divided among Gladys Putnam, George William Putnam and Dorothy Putnam as my executor deems best.”

George H. Putnam was also nominated as executor. We hereinafter refer to the description found in the will as the “testamentary description”.

It is well to observe that it is the above quoted portion of the will that furnishes the crux of the controversy which this appeal seeks to resolve. We note, too, that the testamentary description of the real property above excepted from the gift to the testatrix’ husband is wanting in reference to a given meridian and makes no mention of the county or state in which it is located. Otherwise, the description of the 160 acres *696 comprising the testamentary description is identical with the inventory description of the property which is the subjeect of this suit and was the parcel which the Pettingills mortgaged to Moore in 1913 and later conveyed to him and which Moore in 1914 deeded to Lilla Pntnam.

Notwithstanding that Mrs. Putnam died in 1933 and that she owned property in this state adjacent to that first herein described, her will was not probated in Oregon until after her husband’s death. He died intestate in 1946. Nor was it probated elsewhere prior to the filing in Douglas county in 1947, 14 years after her death. The probate of Mr. Putnam’s estate was begun in 1946 and closed in April 1947. The final order in Mrs. Putnam’s estate was entered in April 1948.

Mrs. Pettingill had no knowledge of the existence of her sister’s will or the provisions it made for her until sometime after July 1948.

The final order in Mrs. Putnam’s estate attempted to confirm title to the subject property in the appellants as heirs of George H. Putnam, deceased, because, as therein stated, “under the terms of said Will of said deceased, all of the property, real and personal, was given and bequeathed unto George H. Putnam, her husband, except certain properties which does not include the property located in Douglas County, Oregon, and described in the inventory and appraisement on file herein”.

Because of the incomplete description of the 160 acres referred to in the will, the probate court evidently treated the property first above described as a different parcel concerning which Mrs. Putnam had made no testamentary disposition and held that the title to the fee passed to her surviving spouse and upon his death to his son and daughter, the appellants Putnam.

*697 We are not interested in or controlled by any declaration of the probate court concerning the appellants purported title in and to the Douglas county parcel. It avails them naught for the reason that probate courts are without authority to determine and decree title to real property. Arnold et al. v. Arnold, 193 Or 490, 496, 237 P2d 963, 239 P2d 595; In re Estate of Ott, 193 Or 262, 273, 238 P2d 269; Harrington v. Jones, 53 Or 237, 239, 99 P 935.

We refer to it, however, as an interesting bit of the factual history herein involved and because the appellants very apparently rely on the probate court’s order of April 1948 in Mrs. Putnam’s estate as one of their props for their allegations of ownership and right to possession.

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Bluebook (online)
285 P.2d 532, 204 Or. 691, 1955 Ore. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-jenkins-or-1955.