State ex rel. White v. Superior Court

18 Wash. 2d 824
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1943
DocketNo. 29118
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Wash. 2d 824 (State ex rel. White v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. White v. Superior Court, 18 Wash. 2d 824 (Wash. 1943).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

Bertha White filed in this court her petition for a writ of certiorari to review an order of the superior court for King county discharging certain proceedings instituted by the petitioner in a probate matter pending in that court. Upon the filing of the petition here, the chief justice issued an order directing the superior court and the administrator in the pending probate matter, as respondents, to show cause why the prayer of the petition should not bé granted. The respondents appeared in response to the petition and made full return to the order to show cause. Petitioner moved to strike certain portions of the return and at the same time made answer thereto admitting certain allegations thereof and denying generally the remainder. The cause was then argued and submitted for decision upon all its phases.

The history of this case, as shown by the record be[826]*826fore us, is as follows: E. C. Million, whose estate is here involved, died in Seattle on April 8, 1932, leaving a nonintervention will in which an executor was nominated to act without bond. The will was admitted to probate and the named executor duly appointed on April 14, 1932. On November 6, 1933, a decree of solvency was entered in that proceeding.

The executor failed and neglected to administer the estate properly, and after a lapse of eight years petitioner herein, the principal creditor of the estate, and another creditor, a corporation, on or about March 7, 1940, filed their petitions in the probate cause asking that the executor be removed for malfeasance and nonfeasance in office. After a hearing upon those petitions, the executor resigned, and on June 26, 1940, the court entered an order finding that the executor had wrongfully neglected the interests of the estate, adjudging the estate to be insolvent, accepting the executor’s resignation, and directing him to make full and final report of his administration.

July 23, 1940, respondent James A. Laughlin was appointed and qualified as administrator of the Million estate, with the will annexed, giving bond in the sum of five thousand dollars. He has acted in that capacity ever since.

On or about October 19,1940, the final account of the former executor was settled, showing money of the estate in his hands amounting to $954.56, which was paid over to the administrator. On the same day, the administrator verified and filed his first report showing the condition of the estate. The report set forth an inventory of the estate property consisting of (1) nine parcels of real estate located in King, Kitsap, Skagit, and Snohomish counties; (2) various securities, the principal items of which were fourteen shares of capital stock of Highland Timber Company and twenty-two shares of capital stock of Skagit Mill Company, the two companies being allied corporations; and (3) cash [827]*827amounting to $6,724.56, of which $4,480 represented recently received dividends from Highland Timber Company. The report also showed delinquent taxes and assessments against the real properties in the amount of $1,005.73. Other matters were therein set forth, upon which the administrator sought instructions from the court.

April 23, 1941, the administrator filed in verified form his second report, showing total receipts to that date of $12,709.36, with possible additional receipts to be realized before hearing on the report, and expenditures amounting to $2,020.14, leaving a balance on hand of $10,689.22. The report also listed eleven approved claims against the estate totalling $36,703.70, inclusive of interest to April 22nd; of these, petitioner’s claim was by far-the largest, amounting to $21,503,40, including interest. The report further advised the court that the administrator had received two bids for the twenty-two shares of capital stock of Skagit Mill Company, the highest of which bids was for three thousand dollars, but that the administrator, deeming the bids disproportionate to the true value of the stock, had rejected both bids. The report concluded with a request for permission to make partial distribution of the cash on hand to the creditors. Upon a hearing before the court, the report was approved on May 6, 1941, with direction to the administrator to make a partial distribution to the extent of twelve thousand dollars upon the eleven claims referred to above. The administrator and his attorney were each allowed a fee of seven hundred fifty dollars. The distribution was made as ordered, and petitioner received her just proportion of the amount distributed.

April 1, 1942, the administrator filed his third verified report, showing the then condition of the estate. That report showed total receipts to date thereof amounting to $23,174.97 and disbursements totalling $15,698.94, leaving a balance of $7,476.03 cash then [828]*828on hand. The report further recited that the principal remaining assets of the estate were the fourteen shares of capital stock of Highland Timber Company and the twenty-two shares of capital stock of Skagit Mill Company; that both of those companies were then in process of liquidation, but periodically had paid the administrator substantial liquidating dividends; that the administrator had endeavored to sell the thirty-six shares of stock but not having received any fair offer therefor was unwilling to sacrifice them by sale at a price unduly below their true value.

Thereafter, nothing of moment occurred until March 5, 1943, when petitioner herein filed in the pending probate cause a petition for a special allowance of $2,345.50, as a preferred claim, for services alleged to have been rendered and expenses claimed to have been incurred by petitioner in effecting the removal of the former executor in June, 1940, and in uncovering assets belonging to the estate. On April 1, 1943, Mary Egan Finley, holder of an approved general claim amounting to $4,861.11 against the estate, filed an answer and objections to the petition, alleging that she herself and her attorneys had participated with the petitioner in effecting the results claimed by the latter and that, in any event, the final order entered by the court upon former proceedings involving the matters set forth in the petition for special allowance was res judicata of all such matters, including petitioner’s alleged preferred claim.

The next step in the chain of events presents the matrix of this controversy. On May 10, 1943, petitioner procured from the superior court an ex parte order directing the administrator (1) to be in court on May 21, 1943, (2) to file his report as administrator and his answer to the petition for special allowance, or (3) to show cause why he should not be ordered (a) to comply with the foregoing commands, (b) to apply the money in his hands to the payment of the [829]*829claims against the estate, and (c) to file a final report and petition for final settlement and distribution of the estate.

Prior to the return day fixed by the order to show cause, the administrator on May 18, 1943, filed a verified report showing a balance of cash then on hand amounting to $11,741.31.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Wash. 2d 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-white-v-superior-court-wash-1943.