State Ex Rel. Murphy v. District Court

267 P. 424, 38 Wyo. 382, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 56
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1928
Docket1516
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 P. 424 (State Ex Rel. Murphy v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Murphy v. District Court, 267 P. 424, 38 Wyo. 382, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 56 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

*386 Kimball, Justice.

This is an action original in this court in which the rela-tors ask us by mandamus to require the District Court of Sweetwater County and the judge thereof to approve or disapprove a petition for final distribution of an estate in probate. On the return of the alternative writ, it appears that the material facts are not in dispute, and the right to the peremptory writ may be decided by disposing of plaintiff’s demurrer to defendants’ answer.

*387 The undisputed facts, shown by the pleadings are these. Albert Edward Young died testate in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, in May, 1923. His will was probated and his estate administered in the defendant court. The residuary clause of his will reads thus:

“Of the residue of my estate, either real, personal or mixed, I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife Carrie Pickering Young, of Bock Springs, Wyoming. And I hereby request that my said wife, Carrie Pickering Young, give, devise and bequeath by her Will, and to take effect upon her death, any and all of my said Estate there remaining to my heirs and her heirs, share and share alike. ’ ’

By the decree of final distribution of the state of Albert Edward Young, made and entered in the defendant court on November 17, 1924, Garrie Pickering Young received the residue of the estate.

Carrie Pickering Young died testate in Sweetwater County; Wyoming, in February, 1926, leaving an estate in that county. Her will gave her estate to Robert D. Murphy, who is also executor of the will, and three sisters of the, deceased. This will also was probated in the defendant court, and the estate there administered, to and including the order presently noticed. The executor, on March 8, 1927, filed his final report and account and petition for distribution. March 23, 1927, William L. Young and nine, others, all of whom are residents and citizens either of Utah, Illinois or England, filed in the defendant court their written objections to the final account and petition for distribution of the executor of the will of Carrie Pickering Young. By the objections, it was made to appear to the defendant court that the heirs of Albert Edward Young claimed that the property received by Carrie Pickering Young under the residuary clause of the will of Albert. Edward Young was impressed with a so-called precatory-trust in favor of the heirs of Albert Edward Young and the heirs of Carrie Pickering Young; that Carrie Pickering *388 Young had only a life estate in the property; that on her death all that remained of the property belonged to the trust, and was not subject to distribution under the will of Carrie Pickering Young. Whether we have stated the claim with entire accuracy is not material. The important thing is that the objectors claimed under the will of Albert Edward Young a large part of the property in the possession of the executor of the will of Carrie Pickering Young. It also appeared from the objections that the objectors had set forth their claim in a bill in equity in a suit then and now pending in the District Court of the United States for the District of Wyoming. A copy of the bill in that suit, in which the heirs of Albert Edward Young are plaintiffs and Murphy, as executor of the will of Carrie Pickering Young, is defendant, was attached as an exhibit to the written objections. The bill alleges diversity of citizenship and an amount in controversy showing federal jurisdiction; states the facts relied upon in support of the plaintiffs’ claim, and prays, among other things, for a decree impressing a trust for plaintiffs’ benefit on property in the possession of the defendant.

In their written objections the objectors prayed that the final account and petition for distribution be by the defendant court rejected, and the final accounting and distribution of the estate held in abeyance until the decision of the case pending in the United States District Court.

The final report and petition for distribution filed by the executor of the will of Carrie Pickering Young, and the above-mentioned objections thereto, came on for hearing in the defendant court on April 25, 1927, and that court then made and entered an order approving the executor’s accounts, after reciting that no objections were filed thereto. With reference to the distribution of the estate, the order recites at some length the substance of the objections and the grounds thereof, and on that matter concludes thus:

*389 “And the court baying heard the objections filed herein, and being now sufficiently advised in the premises, it is ordered that the distribution of the remainder of said estate to the said devisees and legatees named in the last will and testament of the said Carrie Pickering Young, deceased, be held in abeyance until the further order of this court. ’ ’

Thereafter, on February 28, 1923, this action for mandamus was instituted on the relation of the executor of, and the legatees and devisees under, the will of Carrie Pickering Young.

This court cannot by mandamus control the judicial discretion of the defendants. That principle is declared in this state by statute (Sec. 6317, C. S. 1920), and, of course, conceded by counsel. The relators contend, however, that the defendant court had no right or authority to hold the petition for distribution in abeyance, but was required to make a final order disposing of it either by allowance or disallowance, and that we should command the making of such a final order.

It was shown without dispute to the defendant court that the property in the hands of the executor was the subject of litigation in a suit pending in the United States District Court. There has been no claim either in the defendant court or here that that suit is not being prosecuted with diligence, or that the decision will be unreasonably delayed. In the circumstances, we think the defendant court in the exercise of its discretion had authority to make the order of April 25, 1927, and that a writ of mandamus that would require at this time a final disposition of the petition for distribution would be a control of judicial discretion.

On questions of probate law not heretofore decided by this court we naturally look first to decisions of the courts of California, as our probate code follows generally the scheme of that of California, many provisions being identical. In the Estate of Ricaud, 57 Calif. 421, it appeared *390 that all of the real estate claimed to be assets of the state was involved in litigation by an action of ejectment which had been commenced against the decedent in his lifetime. The court said, among other things, that:

“If all debts and charges against the estate, including the expenses of administration, have been fully paid, and there is in the hands of the executor or administrator an ascertained balance of assets subject to distribution, the estate is ready for distribution, and distribution cannot be delayed. The court ‘must’ proceed to make distribution. The command of the law is, under such circumstances, peremptory.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 424, 38 Wyo. 382, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-murphy-v-district-court-wyo-1928.