State Land Board v. Portland Trust & Savings Bank

90 P.2d 484, 161 Or. 503, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 65
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 484 (State Land Board v. Portland Trust & Savings Bank) 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
State Land Board v. Portland Trust & Savings Bank, 90 P.2d 484, 161 Or. 503, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 65 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

The state land board has appealed from an order of the circuit court for Multnomah county, department of probate, overruling the objections filed by the state land board to the final account of the administrator of the estate of Fritz Braun, deceased. In that order the court decreed that the decedent left surviving him as heirs at law two brothers and two sisters, all residents of Germany, and denied the land board’s petition requesting that the administrator of the estate be ordered to transmit to the state treasurer the clear proceeds of the estate, on the ground that the decedent died without heirs. The land board also appealed from another order of that court in this proceeding, which will hereinafter be discussed in detail.

Fritz Braun died intestate July 26, 1937, while confined as an inmate of the state hospital in Salem, Oregon. At the time of his death he was about 67 years of age. His estate was appraised at $3,048.30. For more than 10 years preceding his death, the Portland Trust & *506 Savings Bank had been acting as the guardian of his estate. Upon Braun’s death that bank filed a petition to be appointed administrator of his estate, in which it was alleged that, as far as the petitioner had been able to ascertain, the decedent “left no wife, children, father or mother surviving him, nor has petitioner been able to ascertain the names, places of residence or relationship of any other heirs of said decedent”. Thereafter the bank was duly appointed and qualified as administrator of the estate.

Shortly after the appointment of the bank as administrator Mr. Irelan, its assistant trust officer, who was actively in charge of the estate, discovered in the files in the guardianship proceeding a letter addressed to him as assistant trust officer and signed by Dr. J. C. Evans, acting superintendent of the Oregon state hospital, in which Dr. Evans stated that he had been instructed by Dr. Steiner, superintendent of the state hospital, to “enclose to you certain addresses of relatives in the case of Mr. Braun”. The letter further stated that those relatives had been informed in letters of the details of Mr. Braun’s condition. The enclosure gave the names and addresses of the following as relatives of Fritz Braun: Mary Cronk, sister, Peekskill, New York; Anna Perger, sister, 340 Perger street, Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany; August Braun, brother, Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany.

On July 28, 1937, Mr. Irelan addressed letters to all the three above named as relatives, informing them of the death of Fritz Braun, stating that it was the understanding of the administrator that they were the decedent’s only surviving relatives, and asking them to state whether that information was correct. Answers were received from all three of those individuals. *507 Mary Cronk wrote that she was unmarried and therefore the decedent could not have been her brother, and that she was not otherwise related to him. August Braun replied that he was a brother of the decedent and that Fritz Braun left surviving him, in addition to August, a brother named Ernst Braun, a sister, Sophie Braun, and another sister, Mrs. Anna Bingemer, residing at 340 Berger street, Frankfort-on-the-Main. In this letter it was stated that there had been a mistake and the latter sister’s name was not Anna Perger. The addresses of all these alleged relatives are set forth in the letter of August Braun, and the ages of all of them except Anna Bingemer. A letter was also received by the bank from Anna Bingemer, in which she stated that there had been an error in regard to her name, and she confirmed the statement of August Braun as to who were the heirs of Fritz Braun, giving their addresses and ages. In both letters the writers stated that they did not know Mary Cronk. Further correspondence was had between the bank officers and some of the alleged heirs of the decedent residing in Germany.

The above mentioned letters from the alleged heirs of the decedent were written in German and at the instance of the administrator were translated into English by Robert G. Clostermann, the German consul in Portland. These letters and the English translations thereof were introduced in evidence and made a part of the record.

After being advised by the administrator that the only possible heirs of the decedent were citizens and residents of Germany, the German consul in Portland communicated with the supposed heirs in Germany and procured from August Braun what is denominated a *508 declaration in proof of heirship, which document appears to have been properly sworn to before a judge of a court of record and duly authenticated by a judge of a higher court. It is further given authenticity by the certificate of the United States consul at Frankfort. This declaration of August Braun sets forth the names of the surviving heirs of the decedent, in accordance with the statements contained in the letters of August Braun and his sister, Anna Bingemer. The German consul also procured a certified copy of the marriage record of Anna Bingemer to Carl Bingemer, and another statement by August Braun in the form of an affidavit sworn to before the United States consul at Frankfort, setting forth the names of the living heirs of the decedent. Mr. Clostermann further procured what is apparently a photostatic copy of part of a record, designated by him in his translation as “extract from the family register at Pforzheim, No. 1011”. This excerpt, which is not certified, purports to contain biographical data concerning the family of Jakob Frederick Braun, including the date of the latter’s marriage, the birth of eight children to that marriage, one of them named Jakob Frederich, and the deaths of three of the children in 1869,1879 and 1918, respectively.

The originals of all these documents, except the affidavit of August Braun, with translations into English, were turned over to the administrator of the estate by the German consul and attached by the administrator to its final account as part of that account. The affidavit of August Braun, which was written in English, was attached to the power of attorney given by the alleged heirs to Clostermann, and both were by bim filed in the probate proceedings.

In the final account the administrator sets forth that the decedent died leaving as his sole heirs at law *509 the following: Sophie Braun and Anna Barbara Bingemer, nee Braun, sisters, and Karl August and Ernst Braun, brothers. The respective places of residence in Germany of these purported heirs are also therein designated.

To this final account the state land board filed objections, stating therein that the proof of heirship contained in the final account is insufficient, and alleging affirmatively that it appears from the record that the decedent died intestate and without heirs, and that therefore the proceeds of his estate should escheat to the state of Oregon for the benefit of the common school fund. The land board asks that an order accordingly be made escheating to the state of Oregon the net proceeds of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 484, 161 Or. 503, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-land-board-v-portland-trust-savings-bank-or-1939.