Thomson v. Gregory

487 P.2d 59, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 209
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1971
DocketNo. 1164
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 487 P.2d 59 (Thomson v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson v. Gregory, 487 P.2d 59, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 209 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

[61]*61OPINION

CONNOR, Justice.

This is a probate case in which certain orders of the superior court are brought into question. These orders were directed against a former administratrix who had been removed for misconduct in handling the estate’s affairs.

Wendell Gregory died in 1962, leaving a widow, Lora M. Gregory, and four children from a previous marriage. Lora obtained probate of a will and had herself appointed administratrix of the estate. She submitted an inventory, listing a federal income tax refund as the estate’s only asset.

Robert Gregory, brother of the deceased, became guardian ad litem for the three minor children of the deceased. Robert succeeded in having the will set aside because Lora had procured witnesses to sign the will after the death of the deceased.

Shortly after his appointment as guardian, Robert moved to compel an accounting, alleging that Lora had failed in previous inventories to list all the assets of the estate. Several inventories and accountings were thereafter filed, each one showing additional assets previously unlisted. More than once, Lora Gregory was cited by the probate master for failure to file timely accountings.

In February of 1965 Lora Gregory filed a first and final account and petition for distribution and discharge. The accounting showed assets of $5,656.42 and claims and expenses of $6,572.06, leaving nothing for distribution. Robert Gregory objected to the accounting, claiming that Lora Gregory had failed to include assets in excess of $3,000.00 and had included numerous personal expenses.

After a hearing on the first and final account, the probate master found, among other things, that Lora Gregory as admin-istratrix had intermingled assets and mismanaged the estate to such an extent that an accurate accounting was impossible. The master also found that the account should be disapproved and that Lora Gregory should be removed as administratrix. Based on the master’s findings, the superior court on July 22, 1965, ordered Lora Gregory’s letters of administration revoked and ordered her to put the estate’s assets into proper order. Lora Gregory filed a petition for review of this order, but apparently abandoned it.

Nothing further was done in the estate until March of 1967 when Lora Gregory, by that time remarried, petitioned the court for an award of a widow’s allowance. The probate master denied her petition and further ordered that a new administrator be appointed to make a complete appraisal of the assets preparatory to a full and final accounting.

The new administrator, Claire Thomson, filed a first and final account and petition for final distribution on November 26, 1968. Robert Gregory as guardian for the minor children filed objections. The master found that Lora M. Gregory had improperly claimed certain personal expenses as expenses of the estate. He also found that Lora had purchased a new car for herself in 1963 with the insurance proceeds from the wrecked automobile in which Wendell Gregory had died. He recommended that Lora should restore to the estate with interest the sum of $2,995.00 received from the auto insurance.

The administrator in his account had determined that the estate should be credited with only 30 percent of the assets of the business which deceased had operated. This determination was based on income tax returns for Wendell and Lora Gregory for the years 1960, 1961 and 1962. The returns showed Wendell’s income as roughly 28 percent of their total combined income for those years. The master disagreed with this determination and recommended that 50 percent of the business assets should be included in the estate.

All of the master’s findings and recommendations were accepted by the superior court, except for the denial of Lora’s widow’s allowance, as to which the superior court reserved judgment.

An amended first and final account was subsequently filed in March of 1969. Fol[62]*62lowing a hearing and further amendments by the court, the accounting was approved in May of 1969. The superior court ordered, inter alia, that the interest on the $2,995.00 in automobile insurance which Lora had converted to her personal use should be compounded annually from January 1, 1963, to January 1, 1969, rather than computed simply. The superior court also found the assets of the estate to be $8,109.75 and the claims, expenses and other costs to be $4,604.47. The net estate was awarded as a family allowance to Robert Gregory as guardian of the minor child Phyllis Gregory, for her support and maintenance.1 From the court’s order, the administrator of the estate and Lora M. Gregory have appealed.

1. The Family Allowance.

Lora Gregory (now Lora Ford) cites as error the superior court’s award of the entire net estate as a family allowance for the benefit of the minor child Phyllis Gregory.

The award of the family allowance was based on AS 13.30.130(a) which provides:

“Award to Family, (a) After the filing of the inventory, if the deceased died leaving a widow or minor children, the judge, upon such notice as may be fixed by him, upon being satisfied that the funeral expenses, expenses of last illness and of administration have been paid or provided for, and upon petition for that purpose, shall award and set off to the surviving widow or minor children property of the estate not exceeding the value of $8,000, exclusive of any mortgage or mechanic’s, laborer’s or other lien upon the property so set off, which property so set off shall include the home and household goods, if any, and all property of the deceased exempt from execution.
The award shall be by an order or judgment of the judge and vest the absolute title, and there shall be no further administration upon the portion of the estate so set off and awarded, but the remainder of the estate, if any, shall be settled as other estates. The property thus set apart, if there is a widow, shall be decreed by the judgment, her property to be used and expended by her for the maintenance of herself and the minor children of the deceased, if any, or if there is no widow it shall be decreed the property of the minor child, or if there are more than one, of the minor children in such proportion as the judge considers proper, taking into consideration their age and the expense of maintenance, to be used and expended in the nurture, maintenance and support of the child or children, until they become of legal age, by the guardian thereof, as the law may direct. The judgment, decree and award shall specifically describe the property set apart and is final, except in case of appeal or for fraud.”

This court has stated that the predecessor to this section, when read in conjunction with the sections that are now AS 13.30.120 and 13.30.140,2 “disclosefs] the motivating thought: that of support and maintenance of the widow and children.” In re Hewett’s Estate, 358 P.2d 579, 581 (Alaska 1961).

Appellant maintains that AS 13.30.130 is mandatory once a petition is filed, and that the court has no discretion as to the amount of property it will set aside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
487 P.2d 59, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-gregory-alaska-1971.