218 N.W. 456 | Minn. | 1928
Mr. Colby departed this life April 4, 1926. July 19, 1926, appellant was appointed administrator of the estate, and on the same day the probate court made its order limiting the time for the filing of claims to the usual six months period. The claim here in question is upon a promissory note for $2,392.23, given by deceased for money borrowed from the National Bank of Luverne, now in process of dissolution by plaintiff as its receiver. There is no attempt at a defense on the merits. But the note was not filed as a claim against the estate within the six months period first allowed. May 24, 1927, the receiver applied to the probate court for leave to file the claim, and after a hearing on the application the claim was permitted to be filed and allowed on June 20, 1927.
1. This brings us to the first point made for defendant on this appeal, that no cause was shown justifying the probate court, even in its discretion, in receiving and allowing the claim. The application was made pursuant to G. S. 1923, § 8811, which provides that "for cause shown," the probate court "in its discretion, may receive, hear, and allow a claim when presented before the final settlement of the administrator's or executor's account, and within one year and six months after the time when notice of the order was given." The final account of the administrator had not been presented for settlement, and the statutory maximum period of one year and six months had not run. The only question is whether there was an abuse of discretion in permitting the filing and in allowing the claim.
We discuss this proposition on its merits, although probably we should not. The complaint in the district court set out the note and its filing and allowance in the probate court as a claim against the estate. The answer, held bad on demurrer, is silent as to the *104 proceedings in the probate court, except to show that the claim was not filed within the six months first limited. It makes no attempt to negative the order made subsequently allowing the claim or to question its propriety. So the answer falls far short of pleading facts sufficient to put in question the presumptively valid action of the probate court permitting the claim to be filed and allowing it.
But counsel have argued the merits of the case, and to forestall a further appeal from the judgment we have considered them. The claim was filed by one Heimark, plaintiff's predecessor as receiver. He knew of the death of Mr. Colby and generally of the proceedings for the distribution of his estate. The proof offered the probate court was that he postponed the filing of the claim at the request of an attorney who had and deserved his confidence and who at the time was representing the Colby interests in important litigation arising over the depository bonds to be mentioned later. He had some ground to assume that that attorney represented the Colby family interests. He postponed the filing of the claim because, as it was represented to him by the attorney in question, a settlement was pending, concerning the litigation just referred to, which might have been jeopardized by the too early appearance of the claim. The receiver's purpose was to aid the estate. We need not go into detail. What has been said indicates that, while the administrator had no right to waive the six months limitation of the probate court, the grounds upon which he acted were of such a nature that there was no abuse of discretion in the order permitting the filing of the claim and allowing it. There is merit in the argument that, although the receiver of the bank was mistaken in assuming that the attorney had the right to speak for and bind the estate as such, there would be obvious injustice in allowing the administrator to take advantage of that error to accomplish a miscarriage of justice and defeat a claim for which the deceased admittedly was bound.
2. Mr. Colby had become surety upon the bonds of the National Bank of Luverne which secured deposits of county and school district funds. The claim that the liability as surety (now reduced to judgments) can be offset against that on the promissory note, evidencing money loaned by the bank, is ruled adversely to appellant *105
by Veigel v. Converse,
Order affirmed.