CHALABY v. DRISKELL
Supreme Court of Oregon
March 25, 1964
April 15, 1964
390 P. 2d 632 | 391 P. 2d 624
Argued March 5, affirmed March 25, petition for rehearing denied April 15, 1964
Thomas H. Ryan, Portland, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief was Lester W. Humphreys, Portland.
Before MCALLISTER, Chief Justice, and PERRY, O‘CONNELL, DENECKE and LUSK, Justices.
O‘CONNELL, J.
Plaintiff filed a claim against the estate of William E. Driskell to recover on three promissory notes executed by the decedent. Defendant disallowed the claim. The present action was brought against defendant individually and as administrator of the decedent‘s estate. Plaintiff prayed for (1) a judgment allowing his claim, (2) an order invalidating a claim against the estate filed by defendant, (3) a decree impressing a trust in favor of plaintiff upon $12,935 defendant paid to himself on his own claim, and (4) for general equitable relief.
The case was tried without a jury under
Plaintiff‘s first assignment of error attacks this conclusion of the trial court. Notice to creditors was published in the Daily Journal of Commerce in Multnomah County, Oregon for the first time on July 10, 1959 and for the last time on August 7, 1959. On September 1, 1960 defendant filed his final account and caused notice of the time and place for the settlement of said account to be published for the first time on September 2, 1960 and the last time on September 30, 1960, giving notice that October 3, 1960 was the time fixed for the settlement of the final account. Plaintiff presented his claim to the administrator on April 27, 1961.
Plaintiff contends that he is not barred under
We shall not attempt to explore the various circumstances under which the Mullane doctrine is applicable to probate proceedings.2 It is enough to say that we do not regard the doctrine as applicable to the present case.
In a letter dated September 17, 1959 defendant informed plaintiff: “I have been appointed administrator by Circuit Judge for Oregon.” This was sufficient to apprise plaintiff of the fact that the estate of William Driskell was being administered. Having this notice it was up to plaintiff to timely file his claim. It is not the administrator‘s duty to explain to a creditor the hazards of delay, whether that hazard is the general statute of limitations or the specific statute of nonclaim. We do not believe that the Mullane case was intended to carry the requirement of notice that far.3 We hold that plaintiff received notice sufficient to satisfy the constitutional requirement of due process.
Plaintiff finally argues that the statute of nonclaim did not run because the “final account” filed by defendant was not in fact a final account. To establish this point plaintiff points to various matters which had not been completed at the time the “final account” was filed. Among other deficiencies in the final account it is shown that proof of publication of notice to creditors was not filed until ten months after the filing of the “final account“; that no application for an income tax release from the Oregon State Tax Commission had been submitted; that contrary to Rule 93 of the Multnomah County Probate Rules the “final account” indicated that a certificate from the depository bank showing the current balance had not been attached to the account itself; that no order was taken setting the fees of the administrator; that the “final account” did not reveal the amount of inheritance tax paid, and that it did not contain vouchers for various payments. Other deficiencies are recited.
The fact that a final account fails to include an item does not, of course, render it a nullity as a final
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
ON REHEARING
Morton A. Winkel of Reinhardt, Coblens & Stoll, Portland, for the petitioner.
No appearance contra.
Before MCALLISTER, Chief Justice, and ROSSMAN, PERRY, SLOAN, O‘CONNELL, GOODWIN and DENECKE, Justices.
O‘CONNELL, J.
In our original opinion we stated that “[t]he trial court entered a decree allowing the final account.” As plaintiff points out in his petition for rehearing, that decree was not entered. Therefore, the presumption created by
The other grounds for the petition for rehearing are without merit.
The petition is denied.
