Widman v. Maurer

141 P.2d 135, 19 Wash. 2d 28
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1943
DocketNo. 29033.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 P.2d 135 (Widman v. Maurer) 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
Widman v. Maurer, 141 P.2d 135, 19 Wash. 2d 28 (Wash. 1943).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

J. — This was an action to compel the executor of a decedent’s estate specifically to perform an alleged oral contract of the decedent obligating her to devise and bequeath her entire estate equally among her ten surviving children. Upon a trial before the court, without a jury, findings were made, conclusions were drawn, and a decree was entered directing the executor to disregard certain provisions contained in the last will and testament of the decedent and to distribute her estate among her children, share and share alike, as prayed for in the complaint. The defendants, including the executor, appealed.

The plaintiff-respondents are Ida Widman, Alice Blank, William Hofmann, Martha Kernkamp, R. J. Hofmann, and Huida Feldman. The defendant-appellants are Liza Maurer, Frank Hofmann, Christ Hofmann, and F. J. (Fred) Hofmann, who is the executor of the decedent’s estate. The respondents and the appellants are all brothers and sisters, and are the surviving children of the decedent, Rosina Hof-mann, and her husband, Rudolph Hofmann, who predeceased his wife by many years.

Rudolph Hofmann, the father, died intestate on January 29,1924, leaving surviving him his widow, Rosina Hofmann, and the ten children above named, all of whom were considerably over twenty-one years of age at the time of their father’s death. Fred J. Hofmann is the oldest of the children and Christ Hofmann is the youngest.

Rudolph Hofmann’s estate, though not now the immediate subject of this litigation, enters into the controversy by reason of the fact that the proceeds thereof became the property, and constituted a portion of the estate, of Rosina Hofmann, whose will is directly affected by this lawsuit.

The estate left by Rudolph Hofmann consisted of his com *30 munity interest in real property appraised at $44,500 and personal property appraised at $31,221.93, or a total of $75,721.93. The liabilities of the estate, consisting of community obligations, amounted to $20,397.51. The net value of the’community estate after deducting the liabilities thus amounted to $55,324.42, one-half of which made up the estate of Rudolph Hofmann.

The real property referred to above consisted of several farms and certain residence property in the town of Rosalia. The present action involves solely one of these farms, comprising four hundred sixty-two acres located in Whitman county and referred to in the record as “the home place.” As appears by the inventory and appraisement filed in the estate of Rudolph Hofmann on May 5, 1924, this farm was appraised at $25,400.

Included in the personal property listed in that estate were two promissory notes, each in the sum of six thousand dollars, executed respectively by two of Rudolph Hofmann’s sons-in-law whose wives are respondents herein, and two promissory notes, one in the sum of fifty-five hundred dollars and the other in the sum of twenty-two hundred dollars, executed respectively by two of his sons who are appellants herein.

Rudolph Hofmann and his wife, Rosina Hofmann, lived upon and managed the farm known as the home place until 1915 or 1916, when they retired and took up their residence in the town of Rosalia. From about that same time, or possibly a little later, until 1925 or 1926, the farm was operated by the son William. Thereafter and down to the time of Rosina Hofmann’s death on December 30, 1941, Christ Hofmann, the youngest of the children, conducted the farm under a lease from his mother.

Sometime in the month of February, 1924, several weeks after the death of Rudolph Hofmann, all of the children, accompanied by all but one of their respective spouses, met with their mother at her home in Rosalia for the purpose principally of determining who should act as the administrator of their father’s estate. Mrs. Hofmann, who was of *31 Swiss descent, was then sixty-seven years of age and spoke very little English. As a result of that conference, at which utmost harmony and good will prevailed' among all concerned, Fred J. Hofmann, the oldest of the children, was chosen and was induced to act as administrator, and thereafter on February 18, 1924, was duly appointed and qualified as such.

At that same meeting,' according to the testimony of the appellants, or within a period of a few months thereafter, according to the testimony of the respondents, it was agreed among all the parties concerned that the children would unite in conveying and transferring to their mother all their right, title, and interest in and to the estate of their father. It may be stated at this point that the sole question in dispute in this case is whether or not Rosina Hofmann, the mother, then and there or ever, in return for such promised conveyance and transfer, agreed to devise and bequeath her entire estate to her ten children, share and share alike, as contended by the respondents but controverted by the appellants.

The probate proceedings upon Rudolph Hofmann’s estate were conducted by Mr. Thomas A. E. Lally, an attorney representing the administrator, Fred J. Hofmann. Pursuant to the above mentioned agreement on the part of the ten children, Mr. Lally, in September, 1924, during the progress of the probate proceedings, prepared a deed in which the children quitclaimed to their mother all their right, title, and interest in and to the assets, real and personal, of the estate of their father; the lands described in the deed were the same as those inventoried in the estate. The deed recited as consideration “the love and affection they [the children] have for the Party of the Second Part [their mother], and for other good and valuable and legal consideration to them in hand paid,” and directed that after payment of the debts all of the assets and estate of Rudolph Hofmann be distributed to Rosina Hofmann. The execution of this quitclaim deed was completed by all the grantor children on October 11, 1924.

*32 On December 6,1924, a decree of distribution was entered in the estate of Rudolph Hofmann. The decree recited the execution and delivery of the above mentioned deed and then distributed the estate, one-half to Rosina Hofmann, the surviving widow, and an undivided one-twentieth to each of the ten children. Immediately following the entry of the decree, the quitclaim deed was filed in the auditor’s office, and at the same time a written instrument showing receipt by all the heirs of their respective shares of the estate was filed with the clerk of the court.

On December 11, 1924, Rosina Hofmann executed a will which had been prepared for her by Mr. Lally. The will provided that, after payment of all her just debts, the remainder of her estate was to be distributed in equal shares to her ten children. The will further provided that from the share to be received by each there should be deducted any indebtedness owing to the testatrix by such child or by the husband or wife of such child. Expressing her full confidence in Fred J. Hofmann, her oldest son, she nominated him as the executor of her will, to act without bond and without the intervention of court except such as should be absolutely necessary under the laws of the state of Washington.

During the period between 1928 and the latter part of 1941, Mrs. Hofmann made substantial gifts of money, in equal shares, to all of her children.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P.2d 135, 19 Wash. 2d 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/widman-v-maurer-wash-1943.