Taylor v. Burns

12 Wash. 2d 686
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1942
DocketNo. 28550
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Wash. 2d 686 (Taylor v. Burns) 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
Taylor v. Burns, 12 Wash. 2d 686 (Wash. 1942).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This case involves, first, an appeal, in the estate of Lars Peterson, deceased, from an order (a) sustaining objections to the final report of the then acting administrator de bonis non; (b) vacating former allowances of fees to the attorney and to the original administrator of the estate; (c) making a considerably smaller allowance of fees to the attorney- and allowing no fee at all to the administrator; (d) setting aside certain transfers, assignments, and sales of property of the estate which had theretofore been made to the attorney and accepted by him in part payment of his original fees; (e) commanding the return to the estate of all property so acquired by the attorney; (f) directing the [692]*692attorney to make an accounting of all income received and all disbursements made by him in connection with the property which had come into his possesion; (g) removing the acting administrator de bonis non and appointing another person in his stead; and (h) making a certain additional allowance to.the attorney for his services in caring for the property of the estate while in his possession and under his control. The case also involves a cross-appeal, in the same estate, by the substituted administrator de bonis non and by the objectors to the final report, from so much of the final order as allowed the attorney any fee or compensation whatsoever. And finally, the case involves an appeal, in the estate of Lars Albert Peterson, deceased (son of Lars Peterson and hereinafter referred to as L. A. Peterson to distinguish him from his father), from an order (a) incorporating as part thereof the previous order made in the estate of Lars Peterson, and (b) removing the administrator of the estate of L. A. Peterson and appointing in his stead an administrator de bonis non.

Subsequent to the giving of the notices of appeal and cross-appeal, the two probate proceedings, which are intimately connected with each other, were consolidated for hearing and disposition by this court. The appellants herein are C. A. J. Taylor, former administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lars Peterson and former administrator of the estate of L. A. Peterson, and James C. McKnight, his attorney in' both estates. The respondents and cross-appellants are Mina Quillin, the assignee of a creditor of L. A. Peterson’s estate, Neola (or Neaola) Taylor Higgins, an heir at law of L. A. Peterson, and, nominally at least, Thomas L. Burns, who has been appointed as administrator de bonis non in both estates, in place of C. A. J. Taylor.

The various proceedings and transactions involved [693]*693in this litigation and brought to this court for review cover a period beginning in September, 1924, and extending to the present time. A study of the record reveals a deplorable picture of the mismanagement and dissipation of a large estate supposedly being administered in an orderly fashion, and makes necessary a rather lengthy statement of the case in order to convey a clear understanding of the questions to be decided. Many of the details here presented have been set forth in one or another of four previously reported cases in this court, each of them directly or indirectly affecting the estate of Lars Peterson. Those cases are: In the Matter of the Estate of Mary Taylor Peterson (Neaola Taylor Higgins, Appellant, v. L. A. Peterson et al., Respondents), 137 Wash. 137, 241 Pac. 964; Neaola Taylor Higgins et al., Appellants, v. L. A. Peterson, as Administrator, Respondent, 150 Wash. 620, 274 Pac. 186; National Bank of Commerce, Respondent, v. L. A. Peterson, Appellant, 179 Wash. 638, 38 P. (2d) 361; and In the Matter of the Estate of Lars Peterson (C. A. J. Taylor, as Administrator, Respondent, v. Mina B. Quillin et al., Appellants), 6 Wn. (2d) 294, 107 P. (2d) 580.

Lars Peterson, a widower and a long-time resident of Seattle, died intestate in that city on September 20, 1924. His former wife, Mary Taylor Peterson, had passed away about twenty-six years previously, on March 19, 1898. Mrs. Peterson had been married before to • one Charles W. Taylor, and had borne him two children: Neola Taylor (now married to H. W. Higgins), one of the objectors, respondents, and cross-appellants herein, and C. A. J. Taylor, the former administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lars Peterson and former administrator of the estate of L. A. Peterson, now one of the appellants herein. There was bom to Lars Peterson and Mary Taylor Peterson one child, the above-mentioned L. A. Peterson, who died October [694]*69417, 1937, after many of the events herein related had transpired, but prior to the filing of the final report in his father’s estate.

Following the death of Lars Peterson, his son and sole heir, L. A. Peterson, was appointed special administrator of the estate on September 22, 1924, and was appointed general administrator on October 6, 1924. He retained as his attorney James C. McKnight, who has continued in that capacity with respect to the estate ever since. On May 25, 1925, the probate court approved L. A. Peterson’s report as special administrator and allowed him and his attorney each a fee of three hundred dollars.

Shortly prior to that, L. A. Peterson had filed his first report as general administrator. On June 13, 1925, the probate court approved the report and at the same time allowed the administrator a fee of one thousand dollars, and his attorney, Mr. McKnight, a fee in a like amount. The report recited that, as shown by the inventory and appraisement theretofore filed, property to the value of $243,012.05, as of March 31, 1925, had come into the hands of the administrator. In view of the fate sustained by the various properties of the estate in consequence of the transactions which we are now required to scrutinize, we shall quote the inventory and appraisement in. full, except for the omission, wherever possible, of technical legal descriptions of the real property. For convenience, we shall also list, in connection therewith, the amount of encumbrances against the respective real properties:

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Bluebook (online)
12 Wash. 2d 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-burns-wash-1942.