58 Wash. 199 | Wash. | 1910
Lawrence Statler died in Spokane county on January 24, 1908, leaving estate therein consisting of real and personal property. Shortly thereafter certain persons petitioned the court of that county to admit to probate what was alleged to be the nuncupative will of the deceased. After notice given, one O. Lohan, as German consul and as attorney in fact for certain heirs of the deceased, appeared and contested the validity of the will and its admission to probate. On the hearing the court adjudged and decreed the will to be null and void as the last will and testament of the deceased, and denied its admission to probate.
In its decree the court ordered that “the matter of awarding costs and expenses including attorney’s fees to contestants” be continued to a day certain, and that the contestant serve upon the administrator of the estate his application for such an order, and a citation to the administrator requiring him to appear and show cause why the application should not be granted. The application and citation were filed and served as directed, and on the return day the administrator appeared specially and moved to quash the same, on the ground that the process by which it was sought to bring him into court was insufficient to give the court jurisdiction of his person or the subject-matter of the controversy. The motion to quash was denied by the court, whereupon the administrator, “reserving all rights under the special appearance heretofore made and not waiving' his special appearance, and protesting against being compelled to proceed further,” moved that the applicant be required to furnish a bond as security for such costs as might be awarded against him should he be unsuccessful in his application. This motion was also denied. The administrator
The appellant contends that the expenses and attorney’s fees sought to be recovered by the respondent constitute what is denominated in the statute a claim against the estate of the deceased, and before a proceeding at law will lie to recover them, they must be presented to the administrator as a claim for allowance or rejection; and further, that should the claim be rejected by the administrator and a proceeding begun to establish the same, the proceeding must be an ordinary civil action at law, in which the administrator is brought into court by the service of a summons as in civil actions generally. But we are unable to agree with these contentions. The costs and expenses of contesting the probate of a will are not a claim against the estate of the deceased in its broad sense. The deceased did not incur them, nor can they be in any sense his obligations. They are collectible out of his estate simply because the statute makes them so. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1313; State ex rel. Richardson v. Superior Court, 28 Wash. 677, 69 Pac. 375. In this instance they might properly have been entered as a judgment against the estate in the decree setting aside and annulling the will, and it does not make the proceeding an independent action merely because the court set the matter down for a separate hearing and directed that the administrator be given notice and an opportunity to contest the amount of the allowance if he so desired. There was, therefore, no mistake in the form of the proceeding, and the motion to quash was properly overruled.
The cases of Barto v. Stewart, 21 Wash. 605, 59 Pac. 480, and In re Sullivan’s Estate, 36 Wash. 217, 78 Pac. 945, cited by the appellant,-do not sustain his position. In the first cited case the court was speaking of claims that were
For the reason that this proceeding is but a continuation of the proceeding brought to annul and cancel the purported nuncupative will, it was not required that the respondent furnish a bond as security for costs.
The appellant next contends that the respondent’s services were without value to the estate, and, hence, since the claim is based upon benefits to the estate, there can be no recovery. Considering the estate an an entity apart from the interest of its beneficiaries, it is probably a legitimate argument to say that it can make no difference whether the property of the estate is taken by one set of claimants or by another. But we do not understand that this is what is meant by benefiting the estate. The contest is made by one set of claimants against another, and the benefit derived therefrom inures to the successful claimants, and this we think is the benefit contemplated by the rule. Since the expenses when allowed reduce the residuary share of the successful claimants, they might justly complain if no gain was derived by them by the contest, but when the contest results in their gain, clearly it furnishes a sufficient consideration for the allowance contemplated by the statute.
Lastly, the appellant argues that the allowance when made cannot exceed the amount allowed as costs by the general statutes. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 481. We think, however, that the allowance is governed by the special statute. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1313. True, the phrases used are general,— “fees and expenses,” “cost and expenses,” etc., and no limitations are fixed, yet we think it contemplates the allowance of the actual court costs and such expenses incurred in the
The judgment is affirmed.