Speckart v. Schmidt

190 F. 499, 111 C.C.A. 331, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4453
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 1911
DocketNo. 1,908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 F. 499 (Speckart v. Schmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speckart v. Schmidt, 190 F. 499, 111 C.C.A. 331, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4453 (9th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

GILBERT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] The ground upon which it was held that there was no equity in the bill, which was that the appellant was under the influence of and was dominated by another, cannot be sustained. If, in fact, the appellant was dominated by another person to such an extent that she was not free to exercise her will, and was rendered incompetent to look after her property, and her property was in danger of being wasted, the case was one for the appointment of a guardian of her estate, and the duty was imposed upon Her relatives to see that that was done. The person whose baneful influence is so adverted to in the opinion of the court is a female physician, whom the appellant met at a private hotel [503]*503in Portland in the fall of 1905. An ardent friendship grew up between them. A month later the appellant went to San Diego, and while there, during the next four months, she almost daily received letters from the physician and answered them. The appellant was eager to return to Portland to be again with her friend. In letters ■which she wrote to others about that time she made frequent references to her friend, and of their mutual devotion. After the appellant returned to Portland in 1906, her mother found in her room a package of 106 letters written to her b}r her friend within a period of 125 days. What the contents of the letters were is not disclosed, but they caused the mother great distress. Almost immediately thereafter the appellant left her mother, and has since, and up to the time of taking the testimony in the case, been with her friend. The evidence indicates that, whereas the relation between the mother and daughter up to that time had been of the most friendly and affectionate nature, the daughter became estranged from her mother and her brother, and changed in her demeanor toward all her relatives. But the facts as they are disclosed in the record are not sufficient to justify a court of equity in denying the appellant an accounting and a decree for the possession of her property, and upon this appeal it is not seriously contended that they are.

[2] Nor do we find merit in the contention that the appellant was not justified in bringing the suit. The issue that a suit was not necessary -was not raised in the pleadings, nor was it alleged in Mrs. Speck-art’s answer that she had ever made a statement of account, or had offered to turn over to the appellant any particular ■ property as her share of the estate. In her answer to the first bill Mrs. Speckart made for the first time a statement of the account as she claimed it to be.

[3 | The fact that the first suit was dismissed, however, creates no equities in her favor. The appellant was not bound to accept that statement of the account. She was entitled to the judgment of the court upon the issues in the case, and the evidence to be adduced thereunder. Mrs. Speckart’s attitude to the accounting is forcibly exhibited in the memorandum of deposit which she made at the time when she paid $67,535.74 into the registry of the court, in which she plainly stated her own want of knowledge as to the amount due the appellant on the accounting, and submitted the question to the decision of the court. Instead of accounting or offering to account upon the first demand of the appellant in the spring of 1906, Mrs. Speckart went to Olympia, Wash., and almost immediately after her arrival there, on May 16, 1906, she assented to an application which was filed in the superior court at Olympia for the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed of the Speckart estate. In June, 1906, Schmidt was appointed such administrator. He sought and obtained an order of the superior court that the estate was community property, and that the testator could dispose of but one-half thereof by will. That position was subsequently abandoned by his counsel on discovering that no community property law was in force in Montana at the time of the testator’s death, but the order was not set aside, and it still remained in force until December 20, 1907, when, on a writ of [504]*504review from the Supreme Court of Washington, on the relation of Harriet Speckart, the order appointing the administrator and admitting the will to probate were set aside, the court holding that there was no’ justification for administration with the will annexed 13 years after the death of a testator who died in Montana where the widow was appointed administratrix, and where notice to creditors had been duly given, and where her accounts had been approved, and nothing remained to be done except to distribute the estate according to the law of that state, vesting the same in the devisees. Said the court:

“If the final account of the administrator should he approved as rendered, the cost of administration will approximate $20,000. By reason of its pend-ency the relator is deprived of the use and enjoyment of her portion of the estate for an indefinite period, and is compelled to contribute $6,000 or $7,000 towards the expenses of what is at best an idle ceremony. Against such a proceeding under the forms of law, we think she has ample grounds to complain.” State ex rel. Speckart v. Superior Court, 48 Wash. 141, 92 Pac. 942.

Before the date of that decision, and on March 29, 1907, the appellant’s counsel wrote to the attorney for Mrs. Speckart, saying:

“For almost one year we have been endeavoring without litigation to procure for Miss Speckart her interest in what your people have been pleased to term .her father’s estate. * * * If you desire to confer with us here either Monday or Tuesday of next week, please notify me upon the receipt of this letter. Otherwise I am authorized to state that action will be instituted without any further delay by her to obtain what we believe to be her interest in the estate, which has been used by Mr. Schmidt for more than 14 years.”

Nothing seems to have been done in response to this demand. Six months later the appellant filed her bill in equity for an accounting. The weight of the evidence indicates that up to the spring of 1906 she was never informed of her rights under her father’s will, but that she supposed that all the property had been left to her mother during her lifetime, and that, upon her mother’s death, the children would come into a share of the estate. There is evidence of disinterested witnesses that the mother made in the appellant’s presence statements to that efifect. On the other hand, there is evidence of other disinterested witnesses that on at least two occasions Mrs. 'Speckart made statements in the' presence of the appellant indicating that the latter on coming of age would come into a large property. Those statements, however, in view of the language used, may in the main be harmonized with the appellant’s understanding that she' was not to come into her property until her mother’s death, and that her mother had a life estate in all the property left by her father. It is probable that information as to the appellant’s property rights was withheld from her by the mother, for in her own testimony it appears that she feared that, if it were known that her daughter at 18 years of age would come into a large estate, she might become, the object of the pursuit of fortune hunters. The evidence clearly indicates, also, that after the appellant had demanded an accounting her mother was reluctant to give it, and reluctant to relinquish the daughter’s share in the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
190 F. 499, 111 C.C.A. 331, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speckart-v-schmidt-ca9-1911.