IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JEREMIAH BENNETT, Deceased.
No. DA 13-0060.
Supreme Court of Montana
Decided August 13, 2013.
Rehearing Denied September 17, 2013.
2013 MT 228 | 371 Mont. 270 | 312 P.3d 400
Submitted on Briefs June 26, 2013.
For Appellee: Robert Terrazas, Julia D. Goodkind, Terrazas Law Office, Missoula; Keith W. McCurdy, McCurdy Law Firm, P.C., Polson.
CHIEF JUSTICE McGRATH delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Abel Robert Bennett appeals from the District Court‘s December 19, 2012, Order Granting Petition for Formal Probate. We affirm.
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
¶2 Jeremiah Bennett died intestate in September 2012, the victim of a motor vehicle accident caused by another driver. His two minor children survived the accident but sustained injuries. The children reside with their mother, Jeremiah‘s ex-spouse Sabrina. Jeremiah and Sabrina were divorced in 2010. The District Court appointed Jeremiah‘s ex-spouse Sabrina conservator and guardian for the children.
¶3 Jeremiah‘s father Abel opened an informal probate of Jeremiah‘s estate (
¶4 Abel petitioned for a writ of supervisory control, and this Court denied the petition by an order on February 6, 2013. A second petition for supervisory control by Abel is pending as of the time of this Opinion. Abel now appeals pursuant to M. R. App. P. 6(4), and the issue on appeal is whether the District Court properly ordered that Abel be removed and replaced by Sabrina as PR. Other matters concerning the Estate of Jeremiah Bennett are still pending before the District Court.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶5 This Court reviews a district court‘s decision regarding the
¶6 A district court‘s appointment of a personal representative is reviewed to determine whether the district court correctly applied the law. In re Estate of Kuralt, 2001 MT 153, ¶ 11, 306 Mont. 73, 73, 30 P.3d 345, 345.
DISCUSSION
¶7 It is clear that the District Court had wide discretion as to the appointment of a PR for Jeremiah‘s estate. Zempel; Greenheck;
¶8 The principal point of contention between Abel and Sabrina concerns the proceeds of legal claims that have or may arise from Jeremiah‘s death. Abel contends that Sabrina intends to exclude him from any monetary recovery for Jeremiah‘s death. Under Montana law there can be only a single action to recover for a person‘s death, and that action must be maintained by the PR of the estate. The PR does so on behalf of those who may have a claim to a share of the proceeds of any action, under the supervision of the district court. See Hern v. Safeco, 2005 MT 301, ¶¶ 35-36, 329 Mont. 347, 347, 125 P.3d 597, 597. Issues as to the claims or causes of action Sabrina pursues as PR, or the disposition of the proceeds, are not before this Court in this limited appeal.
¶9 Section
¶10 Section
¶11 Abel argues that he is an “other heir” entitled to preference under
¶12 In this case, it is both efficient and logical that Sabrina be the PR of Jeremiah‘s estate. She is the natural mother of Jeremiah‘s children, as well as their custodial parent and appointed guardian and conservator. Sabrina and the children are residents of Montana where the estate is being probated and where any claims or lawsuits arising from Jeremiah‘s death will be resolved. Because of her representative status on behalf of her children, the heirs of the decedent, she is not precluded in that capacity for appointment as PR.
¶13 Abel argues that under
¶14 The District Court properly concluded that the cited statutes “contain no prohibition of a duly appointed guardian and conservator of minor heirs from serving as a personal representative of an intestate estate even though such conservator may also be an ex-spouse of the decedent.”
¶15 Since
¶16 The District Court is affirmed. This Court declines to entertain Abel‘s request for sanctions.
JUSTICES RICE, COTTER, WHEAT, BAKER, McKINNON and MORRIS concur.
JUSTICE RICE, concurring.
¶17 The appointment of a former spouse as personal representative seems to clearly contravene the general effort made in the probate code to ensure that a former spouse cannot take property from the decedent or his estate. To me, it is incongruent to prohibit a former spouse from taking property, yet permit her to administer the estate and presumably pay herself for doing so. Nonetheless, a former spouse is not expressly prohibited from serving under
