102 P.2d 602 | Okla. | 1940
This action was commenced in the district court by the defendant in error, as plaintiff, to quiet his title to a certain tract of land. He claimed that he had purchased the land, but had taken title thereto in the name of his wife, who subsequently died.
At the trial it was revealed that in the probate proceedings had in the matter of the deceased wife's estate, more than three years previous to the filing of this action, the county court had distributed the property in undivided interests of one-third to the plaintiff and 2/27ths to each of the defendants and Mrs. Earnest's other children. Accordingly the trial court in the present action quieted the plaintiff's title to only an undivided one-third interest in said land, but in entering its judgment purported to impress the interests of the defendants therein with a lien in favor of the plaintiff on account of the expenses of Mrs. Earnest's funeral and last illness which the plaintiff testified he had paid. To the portion of the judgment last described, the defendants excepted and have preserved said exception in the present appeal.
The present record contains copies of the "Final Report and Petition for Distribution and Discharge," which was filed in the county court under date of July 20, 1935, on behalf of the plaintiff as administrator of his deceased wife's estate as well as the final decree, which was thereafter entered in the probate proceedings on August 13, 1935. The final decree indicates that on the latter date the decedent's funeral expenses as well as other expenses of the estate had been paid, and in the final report no mention was made of funeral expenses, but, on the contrary, it was represented that no debts or unpaid claims were outstanding against the estate. During his redirect examination in the present case, the plaintiff admitted that he had made no claim against the estate for his expenditures in connection with his wife's last illness, funeral, and burial.
It is settled law in this jurisdiction that a husband's claim for money he has expended on account of his wife's last illness is not a proper charge' against her estate, but that which he has expended for her funeral is the proper subject of a claim against said estate. In re Wagner's Estate,
BAYLESS, C. J., WELCH, V. C. J., and RILEY, OSBORN, HURST, and DANNER, JJ., concur. CORN and GIBSON, JJ., absent.