Barrett v. Heim

152 Minn. 147 | Minn. | 1922

Hallam, J.

Matija Smrcek, a native and citizen of Austria Hungary, residing in St. Louis county, Minnesota, died intestate in St. Louis county on November 17, 1916, leaving a widow and daughter natives and residents of Austria Hungary. Plaintiff furnished the burial casket and rendered services as an undertaker of the value of $100.50. On January 11, 1917, defendant was appointed administrator of the estate of decedent. The only assets that came into his hands as administrator was $329.77 in money. Plaintiff demanded of defendant the payment of his bill, but it was refused. On March 3, 1919, the final account of defendant as administrator was allowed. Upon the hearing of the account defendant represented to the court that the funeral expenses had been paid by the employer of deceased. The expenses of administration were deducted from the $329.77 and the balance was assigned to the widow. Plaintiff then brought action against defendant to recover the amount of his bill. The court gave judgment for plaintiff and defendant appeals.

The court found as a fact that defendant promised and agreed to pay plaintiff’s bill. This finding is challenged as not sustained *149by the evidence. We find no evidence of any such promise and the objection to this finding must be sustained.

It was held in Dampier v. St. Paul Trust Co. 46 Minn. 526, 49 N. W. 286, that under our statutes a claim for funeral expenses need not be presented to the probate court for allowance, and also that an executor or administrator who has assets in his possession available for payment of such a claim is personally liable if he refuses to pay it after demand. Since demand was made in this case the only question is whether the money in defendant’s hands as administrator could have been used by him to pay funeral expenses. We think it could not.

G. S. 1913, § 7243, provides that when a person dies owning personal property the widow shall be allowed the personal property not exceeding $500 in value to be selected by her and an allowance for maintenance as the court deems necessary, and further provides that “if the personal estate amounts to more than the allowances mentioned in this section, the excess thereof, after the payment of the funeral charges and expenses of administration, shall be applied to the payment of the decedent’s debts.”

Section 7307 provides that, after return of the inventory, the surviving spouse may petition the court to set aside the homestead and assign the personal property allowed by law, showing the personal property selected and the appraised value thereof, and section 7308 provides that the property set aside pursuant to said petition “shall be delivered by the executor or administrator to the person entitled thereto, and shall not be treated as assets in his hands.”

In Benjamin v. Laroche, 39 Minn. 334, 40 N. W. 156, it was held that the right of the widow to personal property to the amount of $500 is absolute and the appropriation by the widow of the prescribed amount without a formal order of the court was sustained.

In Sammons v. Higbie’s Estate, 103 Minn. 448, 115 N. W. 265, it was held that the statute vested in the widow an unqualified right to this amount of property immediately upon the husband’s death and that selection is necessary only as a designation of the particular property she elects to claim.

*150In Stromberg v. Stromberg, 119 Minn. 325, 138 N. W. 428, tbe court referring to section 7308 said [p. 327]: “Tbe part tbe widow is entitled to is not to be included in tbe estate to be administered upon, and is not subject to tbe expenses of administration or tbe payment of proved claims, and is no part of tbe residue to be distributed.” See also Nordlund v. Dahlgren, 130 Minn. 462, 153 N. W. 876, Ann. Cas. 1917B, 941; State ex rel. Pettit v. Probate Court of Hennepin County, 137 Minn. 238, 163 N. W. 285, L. R. A. 1917E, 436.

Tbe provisions of our statutes and tbe language of our decisions leave no room for dou'bt that tbe amount that came'into tbe bands of tbe administrator, being less than $500, was not subject to tbe payment of funeral expenses and could not be applied by tbe administrator for that purpose.

Tbe trial court was of tbe opinion that if tbe widow bad lived in Minnesota tbis position would be correct, but that, since sbe lived in a foreign country, sbe is not entitled to take advantage of tbe beneficial provision of our statute, and that tbe provision for a widow’s allowance was intended only for tbe benefit of residents of tbis state. With tbis we do not agree. Tbe court is bound by tbe language of tbe statute. Tbe statute makes no exception of foreign widows, and we cannot read any sucb exception into it. And tbis point bas already been decided. Tbe claimant in Stromberg v. Stromberg, supra, was a nonresident widow and ber claim was sustained. See also Boeing v. Owsley, 122 Minn. 190, 200, 142 N. W. 129.

Counsel for plaintiff call attention to tbe fact that In tbe Strom-berg case tbe trial court found that tbe decedent left no property in tbe state of bis domicile and contends that distinguishes that case from tbis one. It is not intimated in tbe decision in that case that this fact was considered important in deciding tbe case. But however that may be we are of tbe opinion that tbe existence of facts depriving tbe widow of her allowance will not be presumed. Deceased resided in Minnesota. Tbe administration here was apparently a principal and not an ancillary one. There is no proof or suggestion of assets, elsewhere. Tbe widow’s allowance should prevail in tbe absence of some proof or showing of facts that bar ber right.

*151Tbe result may not be a bappy one in this case, but tbe statutes seem to us clear and tbe legislature alone can alter them.

Judgment reversed.