224 P. 1073 | Wyo. | 1924
Henry T. Church died testate April 11, 1919. Almon J. Church, son of the decedent and one of the residuary legatees named in the will, made two conflicting written assignments of his interest in the estate. One bears date April 12, 1919, and purports to assign all his interest in the estate to his wife, the plaintiff in error. The other bears date April 19, 1919, and purports to assign a part of the same interest to the Manderson State Bank. Neither assignment contains any reference to the other. On June 14, 1919, the defendant in error was appointed executor of the will. On June 16, 1919, the assignment to the bank was presented to the executor who endorsed thereon a purported acceptance and promise to pay it. On or about December 6, 1919, the assignment to the plaintiff in error was presented to the executor. Thereafter the executor paid out of the funds of the estate the amount called for by the assignment to the bank, and in his final report asked credit for that amount as a charge against the distributive share of the legatee. After the filing of this report, which was accompanied by a petition for distribution of the estate, the plaintiff in error, as assignee of all the interest of said legatee, filed objections to the report; claiming that the assignment to her was prior and supe
After the case was taken under advisement in this court we came to doubt whether the district court sitting in probate had jurisdiction to decide the point in issue. No such question had been raised by either party in the district court or here, and we therefore thought it advisable to give counsel an opportunity to present briefs on the-point. "We did this, and in both briefs filed in response to our suggestion it is contended that the district court had jurisdiction. Needless to say, in these circumstances, we would be happy to overlook the question of jurisdiction or to decide it in accordance with the views of counsel, if we could do so without setting what would seem to us to be a bad precedent in the probate practice. After a somewhat painstaking investigation we are driven to the conclusion that the probate jurisdiction of the district court does not include the power to determine the priority of conflicting assignments of a legatee’s interest in the estate.
While in this state the district court is the court of general jurisdiction, and the same court, has by the constitution (§10, Art. 5) jurisdiction “of all matters of probate,”
It is laid down as a general principle that probate courts have no power to investigate the validity of an assignment of an interest of an heir or legatee unless that power be expressly conferred by statute. Woerner on Administration (3rd Ed.), §§ 151, 563. We think our statutes when examined with a proper regard for the decisions in California and in other states, which, like Wyoming, have adopted in substance the California probate code, do not mean that questions of priority of conflicting assignments by a legatee shall be matters of probate.
The issues between parties claiming the right to participate in the final distribution of an estate may be determined in one of two separate proceedings provided for in the probate code. See, Black’s Estate, supra, at page 1061 of 216 Pac. The proceeding in the case at bar was upon the petition of the executor in connection with his final settlement. C. S. 1920, §§ 6974-6976. It is true that a no
“Partition or distribution of the real estate may be made as provided in this chapter, although some of the original heirs, legatees or devises may have conveyed their shares to other persons, and such shares must be assigned to the person holding the same, in the same manner as they otherwise would have been to such heirs, legatees or devisees.”
In considering the effect of this section the courts of California have had frequent occasion to speak of the authority of the courts in distributing an estate to determine the rights of persons claiming under contracts with heirs or legatees. In 1891, when Wyoming adopted the probate code, the last expression of the California Supreme Court on this subject was the case of Chever v. Ching Hong Poy, 82 Calif. 68, 22 Pac. 1081, decided in 1889, where it was said that the decree of distribution has nothing to do with contracts or conveyances which may be made by heirs, de-visees or legatees of or about their shares of the estate, and intimated that section 1678, supra, of the California code could have been intended at the most to apply to admitted claims. The court refused to follow Freeman v. Rahm, 58 Calif. 111, which contains some expressions that might sustain a different view. It has sometimes been thought that later cases threw doubt upon the authority of Chever v. Ching Hong Poy on this point and ap
In Martinovich v. Marsicano, supra, it was said that “matters of probate” do not include the determination of conflicting claims to the estate of an heir or devisee, or whether he has conveyed or assigned his share of the estate. The court took occasion to refer to some expressions in other cases to the effect that under the notice for distribution the whole world is brought in, and said that those expressions must be construed in connection with the subject matter before the court and the court’s jurisdiction to distribute only the estate of which the decedent was possessed at the time of his death.
In Howe’s Estate, supra, it ivas said that whenever the fact of a conveyance from an heir, devisee or legatee is in dispute, or where its validity or effect is an issue upon the distribution of the estate, the determination of that question is not a matter within the probate jurisdiction of the court. We cannot agree with counsel that what was said in regard to this point in Sprangenberg v. Sprangenberg, 19 Calif. App. 439, 126 Pac. 379, or Gamble’s Estate, 166 Calif; 253, 135 Pac. 970, was intended to approve or establish any different rule, and think Howe’s Estate is in accordance with the other approved eases in California.
The same rule has been announced in other states having similar probate codes. In Utah the ease of Snyder v. Murdock, 26 Utah 233, 73 Pac. 22, approved Freeman v. Rahm, supra, but Dunn v. Wallingford, 47 Utah 491, 155 Pac. 347, passed the point as doubtful, and Miles’ Estate (Utah) 223 Pac. 337, seems fully to approve the view announced in Howe’s Estate, supra. In Montana, in upholding distribution to an assignee where the assignment had not been questioned, it was said that the validity of
In Weidenhoft v. Primm, 16 Wyo. 340, 352, 94 Pac. 453, this court, when considering the right to appeal from the judgment of the district court in a proceeding to determine heirship under sections 6979 to 6982, supra, quoted from Burton’s Estate, 93 Calif. 459, 461, 29 Pac. 36, for the purpose of illustrating an argument upon the question then under consideration but without having in mind or intending to decide any question as to the jurisdiction of the district court. The language quoted, and other expressions in Burton’s Estate, would seem to authorize the drawing of a distinction between the powers of the district court when acting under sections 6974 to 6976 and its powers when acting under sections 6979 to 6972. As we have said, we think the court’s functions in the two proceedings are the same, and so far as the ease of Burton’s Estate holds the contrary, and supports the view that in either of the proceedings to determine heirship the court has jurisdiction to settle the validity of a disputed assignment, we believe it to be out of harmony with the other cases which we approve.
The legatee in the case at bar admitted that he signed and delivered both assignments. In many of the cited eases' the heir or legatee himself denied the validity or effect of the writing, and counsel seek on that ground to distinguish those cases from this. We can see no distinguishing feature. If there be any difference at all, it would seem that a dispute between .two assignees would be more remote from the “matter of probate” than a dispute between an heir and ah assignee.
. The executor, by paying the bank, created an awkward situation. As between the two assignees he, as executor, was entirely disinterested. So was the estate. We see no good reason why the executor should have put himself in a position where he felt called upon to litigate, apparently at the expense of the estate, the claim of one assignee against the other. The assignments need not have interfered at all with the distribution of the estate. The court could have ordered the executor to distribute the amount in controversy to the legatee, and thereafter the executor, as a stakeholder, would have held it subject to all assignments of which he had notice.
The order of the district court should be modified so that it will carry out as nearly as possible the views herein expressed. The case will be remanded with directions to modify the order by striking therefrom the finding that the assignment to the plaintiff in error was inferior to the assignment to the bank, and substituting therefor a finding that the court has no jurisdiction to determine that question; by disallowing the executor’s claimed credit for the amount in controversy and directing the distribution of that amount to the legatee subject to the assignments. This will leave the issues affecting the rights of the assignees to be settled in any proper manner.
Our order will provide that neither party recover costs in this court.
NOTE — See 15 C. J. pp. 804, 1008, 1009 (1925 Anno), 1010; 24 C. J. p. 517 (1925 Anno).