76 Wash. 291 | Wash. | 1913
Certiorari to review the proceedings of the superior court of the state of Washington for Pierce county-in the matter of the estate of Nelson Bennett, deceased.
The proceedings, as disclosed by the record, were as follows : On July 23, 1913, the decedent died, as it is claimed, intestate, leaving estate within Pierce county. On petition of the widow, a special administrator was appointed, qualified by giving a bond of $10,000, and took possession of the estate on July 25. The petition disclosed as a part of the assets a partially performed contract with the Northern Pacific Railway Company, to construct what is known as the Point Defiance tunnel, in the northwestern part of the city of Tacoma, and assigned, as one of the reasons for the appointment of a special administrator, that the work contemplated by the contract required immediate supervision. Thereafter, the widow filed her petition for appointment as administratrix of the estate. On July 30, the relator filed his petition, alleging that he was a general partner of the decedent for the construction of the tunnel under contract with the railroad company, and .prayed that letters of administration of the partnership be issued to him. Both petitions were set for hearing on August 9. By continuance the matters came on for hearing on August 13, before the Honorable Ernest M. Card, one of the judges of the superior court for Pierce county, and the widow answered the petition of the relator, denying the partnership, and filed a motion challenging the jurisdiction of the court to determine the issues raised by that petition and her answer thereto, on the grounds, first, that the relator’s petition was premature in that no inventory of the estate had been filed; and second, that the superior court, sitting in probate, had no jurisdiction to determine whether or not the alleged partnership actually existed. The court sustained the motion upon both grounds.
On August 13, the widow was appointed administratrix of the estate, filed her bond fixed in the sum of $101,000, qualified, and has since acted as administratrix. On August
The petition and affidavit for the writ, after setting forth the matters above mentioned, alleged, in substance, that the relator’s right to administer the partnership estate is a valuable right; that the partnership property is of great value, not less than the sum of $100,000; that the relator’s interest
The relator assigns as error, first, the denying of his petition filed July 30, 1913; second, the denying of his petition filed August 27, 1913, and dismissing the petition with costs.
The respondents move to quash the writ on the grounds, first, that it was improvidently issued, in that the petition of the relator shows that he has an adequate remedy by appeal; second, because of lack of jurisdiction to grant the writ upon the facts stated in the petition; third, insufficiency of the petition in law to justify the issuahce of the writ. The respondents also demur to the petition on the grounds, first, that the allegations therein contained do not justify the relief prayed for; second, that there is an adequate remedy by appeal. It is thus apparent that the case presents but three questions for our consideration: (1) Would the remedy by appeal be adequate? (2) Has the superior court power, in a probate proceeding, to consider and determine the question of the existence of' a partnership where the existence of the partnership is not conceded? (3) Was the denial of the first petition of the relator res judicata of the question here presented? We will consider these in this order.
“This adequate remedy has not been construed to be as speedy a remedy as the remedy by extraordinary writ might be, but a remedy which preserves the fruits of the appeal when won. In other words, the status quo of the parties litigant must be preserved, and, if by awaiting the result of an appeal the fruits of the litigation would be lost, the remedy has
See, also, In re Sullivan’s Estate, 36 Wash. 217, 78 Pac. 945; State ex rel. Wyman etc. Co. v. Superior Court, 40 Wash. 443, 82 Pac. 875, 111 Am. St. 915, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 568; State ex rel. Royse v. Superior Court, 46 Wash. 616, 91 Pac. 4, 123 Am. St. 948, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1010; State ex rel. Speckert v. Superior Court, 48 Wash. 141, 92 Pac. 942; State ex rel. Schwabacher Bros. & Co. v. Superior Court, 61 Wash. 681, 112 Pac. 927, Ann. Cas. 1912 C. 814; State ex rel. Meredith v. Tallman, 24 Wash. 426, 64 Pac. 759. Our decision in State ex rel. Quigley v. Superior Court, 71 Wash. 503, 129 Pac. 83, is not contrary to the views here expressed. In that case, the term of office in question extended beyond the term necessary for the determination of the appeal, and the status quo could be preserved by a mere preservation of the ballots offered in evidence as exhibits, as physical evidence is preserved in other cases. Moreover, to have accorded the writ in that case, there being no showing of any peculiar circumstances requiring greater speed than in other cases of election contest, would have been to abrogate the special statute granting the appeal as incidental to the right of action. We there said:
“The legislature, in enacting § 4956, providing the remedy by appeal in election contests in the very same statute allowing a contest, must be presumed to have considered that remedy adequate in such cases. To hold that it is inadequate in this case is to hold that it is inadequate in any such case. It is, in effect, to repeal the statute, and declare a policy contrary to that expressly declared by the legislature upon a subject clearly within its province.”
No such considerations are found in the present case. A review in detail of the many other decisions cited by the respondent would be of no profit. They are all distinguishable from the case before us.
II. The respondents contend that the superior court has power to appoint the surviving partner as administrator of
“The language of the constitution is not that the superior courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction, but it gives to the superior courts universal original jurisdiction, leaving the legislature to carve out from that jurisdiction the jurisdiction of the justices of the peace and any other inferior courts that may be created.”
In conferring jurisdiction upon the superior courts in probate matters, the constitution makers did not carve out a section of the jurisdiction of the courts of this state and confer it as a limited subject upon the superior courts as probate courts of limited jurisdiction. The failure at all times to observe this fundamental fact has led to some confusion in our own decisions. The constitution simply throws probate matters into the aggregate jurisdiction of superior courts as courts of general jurisdiction, to be exercised along with their other jurisdictional powers, legal and equitable, and as a part of those general powers. The respondent claims that only the powers expressly enumerated in Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1278 (P. C. 409 § 1), can be exercised by the courts in probate matters; but this court has held that the inherent powers of the superior court, conferred by the section of the constitution creating the court, are not dependent on statutory sanction for their existence and exercise.
“By statute (§ 6355, Bal. Code) it is made the duty of the court sitting in probate upon the settlement of the final account to distribute the estate among the persons who are by law entitled thereto. This statute, we think, confers upon the court jurisdiction to determine who are entitled to the property, as the power to distribute includes the power to determine to whom distribution should be made. But, if this were not so, the court has inherent power to determine
See, also, Alaska Banking & Safe Deposit Co. v. Noyes, 64 Wash. 672, 117 Pac. 492; In re Ostlund’s Estate, 57 Wash. 359, 106 Pac. 1116, 135 Am. St. 990. When a superior court has presented to it through a petition, in any matter of probate, any issue touching the estate, it has jurisdiction both of the parties and of the subject-matter, and it deals with them not as a court of limited, but of general, jurisdiction. It may exercise all of its powers, legal or equitable, and may even invoke the aid of a jury to finally determine the controversy. The constitution has no more limited its powers in such cases than in others of which jurisdiction is conferred by the same constitutional provision.
“In this state, we have no probate court, properly speaking, as distinguished from the court that entertains jurisdiction of other matters. The court of general jurisdiction also hears and determines probate matters. Matters pertaining to probate are referred to what is called ‘probate procedure’ as distinguished from what is denominated ‘civil’ or ‘criminal procedure.’ But when the court, sitting in a probate proceeding, discovers in a petition the statement of facts which forms the basis of a controversy, we see no reason why it may not settle the issues thereunder when an appearance has been made thereto, and then proceed to try it in a proper manner, as any other civil cause. The court may require the
The decision in In re Gorkow's Estate, 28 Wash. 65, 68 Pac. 174, is not authority for the contrary view. It holds no more than that the powers of the court cannot be invoked in a probate matter “to hear and determine controversies between third persons which in no way affect the interests of the estate itself.” This fact is pointed out in In re Murphy’s Estate, supra. The respondents insist that the holding of this court in In re Alfstad’s Estate, 27 Wash. 175, 67 Pac. 593, is decisive of this case. It is true that in that case this court held that the superior court, in a probate proceeding to settle an administrator’s accounts and distribute the estate, had not jurisdiction to determine the claim of the administrator to one-half of the estate as a partner of. the deceased. That decision, however, as it seems to us, contravened the manifest purpose of the constitution and was too soon qualified, and in effect disregarded, to make it a basis for the invocation of the rule stare decisis. Though never in express terms overruled, it was so soon, and has been so often, impinged by other decisions not distinguishable in principle that it has long ceased to reflect the views of this court; and in
“The argument of counsel apparently is, in substance, that, as to all such sums claimed by Mrs. Hazzard, she is a stranger to the guardianship estate, and that, therefore, she cannot be required to account for such sums in the guardianship proceedings. If this guardianship matter were pending in a court of exclusive, statutory probate jurisdiction, instead of a court possessing general equity powers, there might be some plausible grounds upon which to rest counsel’s argument. In the case of In re Sall, 59 Wash. 539, 110 Pac. 32, 626, 140 Am. St. 885, this court had occasion to notice the nature and extent of the jurisdiction of the superior courts of the state in the guardianship of the estates of incompetent persons. It was there held that the jurisdiction of the superior courts in such matters is not limited like that of an exclusive probate court proceeding under statutory power, but that it proceeds with all the incidental powers of a court of equity. It is apparent, therefore, that the superior court of Kitsap county had jurisdiction, as a court of equity, by way of an accounting, over the subject-matter of every question that it determined in the settlement of the account of Mrs. Haz*302 zard, and the only way Mrs. Hazzard could escape the' effect of the court’s accounting decree upon her relations with Miss Williamson prior to the actual commencement of the guardianship by appointment of the court, would be to successfully show that the court did not have jurisdiction over her person for the purpose of adjudicating such matters. This, we think, she has not successfully done, in view of the fact that she voluntarily became the guardian of the estate of Miss Williamson.”
This language is as clearly applicable to the facts in the Alfstad case as in the case where used. In the former case, the administratrix became no less voluntarily the administratrix of the estate than did the guardian assume the similar relation of guardian in the latter case. The court had the same general jurisdiction over the person of the administratrix in the one case as over the person of the guardian in the other. There is no possible distinction, and the decisions being in direct antagonism, the former is overruled by the latter.
So also here. Both the general administratrix and the relator, by their application for letters, voluntarily submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court as a court of general jurisdiction, with authority to invoke all of the powers incidental to such a court necessary to the determination of the controversy in which the estate as such had a direct interest.
The decision in Stewart v. Lohr, 1 Wash. 341, 25 Pac. 457, 22 Am. St. 150, cited by respondents, holding, in effect, that the territorial probate court, in the probate of an estate, had no power to determine whether a homestead claimed by the husband of the deceased as his separate property was or was not community property belonging to the estate, is not decisive of the question here presented. It arose on appeal to the superior court from a decision of the territorial probate court, a court of limited jurisdiction. The estate was never'in the superior court as a probate court, but only as an appellate court reviewing powers of an inferior probate court of limited jurisdiction and circumscribed power. The
The decision in In re Belt’s Estate, 29 Wash. 535, 70 Pac. 74, 92 Am. St. 916, properly considered, does not militate against our conclusion in this case. Though it is there said on authority of Stewart v. Lohr, supra, “that the probate court is without jurisdiction to try the title to property as between representatives of an estate and strangers thereto,” the court seems to have overlooked the fact that Stewart v. Lohr, supra, had reference to the territorial probate court which was a court of limited jurisdiction. In any event, the trial court, in the probate proceedings in the Belt case, did determine as a fact that “moneys mentioned in the petition are not any part of the assets of the estate of the deceased,” and was by this court sustained in that decision. This was certainly nothing more nor less than determining the question of title so far as the estate was concerned.
Our statute expressly confers upon the surviving partner
Obviously, these sections of the statute would be of little utility if the court had no power at the outset to determine whether or not there was a partnership. Of what avail would be the requirement of an additional bond, if the court had no power to consider and determine the antecedent existence of the partnership? Of what avail a citation, if the court had no power to determine the very fact upon which its right to issue the citation must depend? The existence or nonexistence of the partnership is a thing of vital importance to the estate itself, at every step of the proceedings, from the appointment of the administrator to the fifing and settlement of his final account. The assertion on the one hand that there was a partnership, and on the other that there was none, was simply allegation against allegation. The court could not assume, without trying out the fact, that either assertion was correct. This has been held, even as to a court of confessed limited jurisdiction. Schick v. Corbbett, 52 La. Ann. 180, 26 South. 862. _ The superior court has every power and every facility for the determination of the existence of the partnership in the probate pro
III. The respondents contended, on the argument, though failing to brief the question, that, in any event, their plea of res judicata must be sustained. The order denying the relator’s first application to administer the alleged partnership estate was entered on August 13, 1913. It adjudged, first, that the petition was premature, and second, that in any event, the court could not consider or determine the question of the existence of a partnership when not conceded. This second holding was, as we have seen, clearly erroneous. We think the first was equally so. The purpose of the statute requiring application to be made within five days from the filing of the inventory (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1437; P. C. 409 § 269), was to fix a limit beyond which application may not be made unless an extension of time be granted. It was never intended to prohibit the consideration of such an application if made before the filing of the inventory. Suppose that neither the next of kin nor any creditor made any application for letters. There would never be any inventory, and if the trial court’s view be correct, the partner, though vitally interested, could never apply for letters. The court’s ruling on this first branch of the order was interlocutory, but the second was final. It affected a substantial right and, in effect determined finally and adversely the relator’s right to administer. (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1716; P. C. 81 § 1183). It was a final dismissal of the relator’s petition. It had the effect of a final judgment thereon. The time for taking an appeal therefrom was therefore, ninety days. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1718 (P. C. 81 § 1187). It is too well settled to admit of serious question that the application for writ of review must be made within the statutory period for taking
The orders complained of are reversed, and the case is remanded with direction to the trial court to try out and determine whether, in fact there was a partnership, and either to grant or refuse letters to the relator according to that determination.
Crow, C. J., Gose, Chadwick, and Main, JJ., concur.