105 Neb. 432 | Neb. | 1920
Lester S. Pollard, a resident of Deuel county, Nebraska, died intestate on November 14, 1918, leaving surviving Mm
Counsel for appellant in their brief say that the question raised is this: “Can one who is not beneficially interested in an estate file a petition in the county court within the
“We have, then, a case where the record affirmatively shows that, administration was granted on an application made within 30 days of the death of the intestate, by one not the next of kin, and whi'ch fails to show that the petitioner was a creditor of the estate, or that the next of kin or the creditors had renounced their right to administer. The question presented, then, and the only question in this*435 case, is Avhether the appointment of an administrator based upon an application of that character, and made under such circumstanecs, should be held void when assailed in a collateral proceeding.”
The provisions' of the statute then under consideration were exactly the same as section 1339, Rev. St. 1913, Avhich provides:
“Administration of the estate of a person dying intestate shall be granted to some one or more of the persons hereinafter mentioned, and they shall be respectively entitled to the same in the following order: First — The widow, or next of kin, or both, as the judge of probate may think proper, or such person as the AvidoAV or next of kin may request to have appointed, if suitable and competent to discharge the trust; second — If the widow, or next of kin, or the persons selected by them, shall be unsuitable or incompetent,, or if the AvidoAV or next of kin shall neglect, for thirty days after the death of the intestate, to ap; ply for administration, or to request that administration be granted to some other person, the same may be granted to one or more of the principal creditors, if any such are competent and willing to take it; third — If there be no such creditor competent and willing to take administration, the same may be committed to such other person or persons as the judge of probate may think proper.”
It Avas held that the. provisions of the statute above quoted do not go to the jurisdiction of the county court, but rather to the manner of its exercise, and the rule Avas announced that, “in a petition to the county court for administration on the estate of a deceased person, the only averments essential to the jurisdiction of the court' are, that such person died intestate, and Avas at the time of his death a resident or inhabitant of the county where the petition is filed; or, -in case he was at the time of his death a nonresident of the state, that he left an estate in such county to be administered.”
While it is true that in the Larson case the appointment of the administrator was assailed collaterally, and the
“The statute does not anywhere prescribe how the jurisdictional facts shall be ascertained;- lienee the probate court may ascertain them as best it can; and if it ascertain them correctly, that is all that is required. All that is! really necessary is, that the jurisdictional facts shall exist as facts; and how the court ascertains them is wholly immaterial.”
In this state the uniform practice has been to officially call the county court’s attention to the existence of the jurisdictional facts by a petition. It has not been the uniform practice, lioAvever, that the petitioner be a person beneficially interested in the estate. Any person who knows the facts is a qualified person to do so.
Counsel for appellant cites In re Estate of Glover, 104 Neb. 151, and In re Estate of Anderson, 102 Neb. 170. There is nothing in these cases, hoAvever, which runs counter to our holding in the Larson case. We are then confronted Avith the question Avhether the doctrine as announced in the Larson case should be modified or overruled. The rule there announced has stood as the law of the state for over 17 years. Courts, attorneys, and parties interest
Prom what has been said, it would seem to follow that no objections to the jurisdiction of the county court can successfully be predicated upon the mere fact 'that the petitioner has no beneficial interest in the estate.
Having determined that the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter the question arises, Did the court err in failing to appoint the appellant?
Under the plain provisions of section 1339, Rev. St. 1913, Mrs. Murray, being a creditor and having filed her application for appointment as administratrix, was, as against Mr. Pollard, entitled to be named, if competent to discharge the trust. The preferential right given by the statute to the classes of persons named therein to be appointed administrators is obligatory upon the court, and it is error to appoint a stranger to the estate where some one falling within the preferential class asks to be appointed, and is competent to discharge the trust. Two things were necessary to make Mrs. Murray’s right absolute. She must have been a creditor, and she must have been competent.
For the reasons announced, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.