v.
BLACKBURN
delivered the opinion of the court.
Dr. Gideon E. Blackburn, of Butte, died intestate on March 24, 1912, leaving some estate, and surviving heirs as follows: Hannah A. Blackburn, his wife, Charles A. Blackburn, a son, and two daughters- On March 29, 1912, Charles A. Blackburn filed in the district court of Silver Bow county a petition for letters of administration of the estate, and also filed a writing signed by the widow, wherein she formally waived her right to such letters and requested his appointment. In the petition it is recited that the estate and effects in respect of which letters of administration are asked do not exceed the value of $5,000, and that it consists of office and household furniture, libraries, book accounts, and miscellaneous stocks and bonds .of unknown value. The petition came on for hearing in due course, and at the hearing the petitioner testified that, so far as he then knew, the value of the estate was not to exceed $5,000; of this, $2,900 was cash, the remainder being stocks, bonds, and other interests. [*185] The petition was granted, and Charles A. Blackburn has since acted as administrator. On June 5, 1912, he filed an inventory and appraisement, wherein he failed to list a gold watch and a pair of field-glasses as part of the estate, but did list as the property of said estate a large number of securities and various parcels of realty claimed by the widow as her individual property. By this inventory it was made to appear that the estate was of the value of $34,996.07. On June 7, 1912, the widow filed her petition, alleging, in substance, that the administrator had willfully and fraudulently failed and refused to list the watch and field-glasses above mentioned, and had converted the same to his own use, and that, with the intent to involve the estate in useless and unnecessary litigation, he had listed the securities and realty above referred to, belonging exclusively to her. On the following day the administrator filed a supplemental inventory, listing the watch, the glasses, a revolver, and an additional piece of real estate; so that, as finally presented by the two inventories, the appraised value of the estate is made to appear at $35,-558.07.
To the petition of the widow two answers were filed: One by the administrator, and the other by H. L. Maury on behalf of Daisy I. O’Neill and Sister M. Florentia, the daughters of deceased; the answer of the daughters, praying “that no relief be granted to Mrs. Hannah A. Blackburn,” denies generally the allegations of her petition,.including her widowhood; denies that the watch and glasses are of any value; alleges that she is not related to them, and that their mother is still alive. The answer of the administrator puts in issue the widowhood of the petitioner ; explains the omission of the watch and glasses from tb*e 'irst inventory; denies the charges of fraud, waste, or intent -ijvolve the estate in unnecessary litigation, or that^v irrigation lie bring will be in bad faith; and allege- that any claim he\may assert or attempt to enforce will be under the permission of .^e court, for the sole use and benefit oí the estate. By way of fu.,. ther answer the administrator pleads the waiver and request.' executed by the widow, and alleges that in consequence thereof, [*186] and of expenditures by him of money in the care of the estate, “she is not entitled to now assert any rights which she may have or claim, as widow, to have letters of administration issued to her.”
In reply to the answer of the administrator, the widow admits the execution of the waiver and request filed March 29,1912, and alleges that the same was made by her “upon the solicitations of Charles A. Blackburn and the advices of John 6. Brown, his attorney, and the representations of friendliness on the part of the said Charles A. Blackburn” toward her, and that since the issuance of letters of administration to him, he has become and now is hostile to her and to the best interests of the estate “and dishonest and untrustworthy, as more fully appears from the petition herein on file.” The matter was heard before the district court of Silver Bow county, the Honorable Jeremiah J. Lynch, judge presiding; and, upon the proceedings had, including the testimony taken, an order was made by which the petition of the widow was denied and the proceeding dismissed. From that order this appeal is taken.
The appellant contends that the petition should have been granted, because the widow is vested by the statute with a prior right to administer her late husband’s estate, which cannot be affected by her renunciation; because the circumstances under which the administrator secured her renunciation were such that it ought not be held effective in view of his present attitude toward her interests, and because the evidence establishes that he is not a fit and proper person to have control of the estate.
1. The position that the widow is entitled, notwithstanding
“Administration of estate of all persons dying intestate must be granted to some one or more of the persons hereinafter mentioned, * * * in the following order: 1.'The surviving husband or wife, or some competent person whom he or she may request to have appointed. 2. The children. 3. The father or mother. 4. The brothers. 5. The. sisters. * * * ” (Sec. 7432, Bev. Codes.) “Letters of administration must be granted to any applicant, though it appears that there are other persons having better rights to the administration, when such persons fail to appear and claim the issuance of letters to themselves” (see. 7444); but when letters have been granted to any other person than the surviving spouse, child, parent, brother, or sister, “any one of them who is competent, or any competent person at the written request of any one of them, may obtain the revocation of the letters, and be entitled to the administration” by presenting to the court an appropriate petition (see. 7447), on which a citation to the administrator shall issue (sec. 7448), and a hearing be had (sec. 7449). “The surviving husband or wife, when letters of administration have been granted to a child, father, brother or sister of the intestate; or any of such relatives, when letters have been granted to any other of them, may assert his prior right and obtain letters of administration and have letters before granted revoked in the same manner prescribed in the three preceding sections. ” (Sec. 7450.) The primary purpose of these provisions is, of course, to confer a [*188] prior right of administration upon those most interested in the estate, to signify the legislative will concerning the order of priority, to provide a method by which it may be once asserted in every case, and to authorize its assertion by nomination in certain instances. There is no warrant for the inference that the legislature intended the right to continue after it had been once freely exercised; for, valuable though it is, the advantage conferred is solely for the benefit of the persons named, and involves no public purpose. It may therefore be waived (sec. 6181, Rev. Codes), and the effect of its waiver cannot be different from the effect of a waiver in other cases. This result, derived from our statutory provisions alone, is supported by an abundance of authority, and compels us to hold that if the renunciation and request of appellant, because of which the administrator was appointed, was fairly procured and freely given, she has exercised her prior right, and no longer has any to assert. (In re Estate of Moore, 68 Cal. 281, 9 Pac. 164; Slay v. Beck, 107 Md. 357, 68 Atl. 573; Estate of Keane, 56 Cal. 407; In re Evans’ Estate, 117 Mo. App. 629, 93 S. W. 922; Estate of Wooten, 56 Cal. 322; Stocksdale v. Conaway, 14 Md. 99, 74 Am. Dec. 515; In re Bedell’s Estate, 97 Cal. 339, 32 Pac. 323; Estate of Kirtlan, 16 Cal. 161.)
2. It is, however, the policy of our law that the widow shall
The voluminous record before us tends to show that the claim asserted by the widow to certain stocks, bonds, and real estate which were not mentioned in the petition for letters, but which have been listed in the inventory, is not wholly baseless. The evidence bearing upon the attitude of the administrator
The testimony of the administrator is as remarkable for what it does not contain as for what it does contain. On direct examination he gave no testimony in denial of the foregoing or concerning his attitude before and after administration, touching her and her claims, except that he had consulted counsel regarding the stocks, bonds, and real estate, and had listed them as the property of the estate on the advice of counsel. He also said: “I first knew the deeds had been destroyed when the matter was testified to here in court. * * * I can’t recall whether Mrs. Blackburn told me she was going to destroy them; my recollection is that she did tell me that her intention was to destroy them.” On cross-examination he said he could not tell when he first consulted counsel about the real estate, except that it was after his appointment. “I did not tell him about those deeds in the bank and their removal by Mrs. Blackburn before I petitioned for letters of administration. I knew about those deeds before I petitioned for letters of administration, but did not disclose the fact to my counsel. I don’t know why I didn’t, but it probably escaped me. I don’t know whether I [*192] disclosed that fact to him before I secured letters of administration or not. * * * I testified at the hearing of the application for letters of administration * * * that the estate did not, to the best of my knowledge, own any real estate. # * At that time I knew of those deeds which Mrs. Blackburn had removed, and had known of them some ten days before, but began to see the light in regard to this real estate as soon as I had put the facts up to my counsel.’ I cannot say what date that was, but I am quite sure it was after my appointment. * * * i first learned of those bonds being down in the Miners’ Savings Bank before Dr. Blackburn was buried. # * * I took this matter up with my counsel, and got advice from him shortly before I was appointed, I think. I am not sure that I talked that matter over with him about it before my appointment. I am not positive whether I did or not. * * * Upon the advice of my counsel, it was true of my own knowledge that this was the property of the estate. It was my own knowledge that that was property of the estate, and Mrs. Black-bum was endeavoring to get it for her own use. '* # # I remember Mr. Brown in my presence, and within a few minutes after I was appointed administrator, telling Mrs. Blackburn that those securities had to be turned into the estate. He told Mrs. Blackburn that standing in front of Judge Lynch’s courtroom on Granite street. That was a few minutes after I was appointed. At that time Mrs. Blackburn said, ‘Well, now, you can go right down and get my stocks and give them to me, can’t you?’ or ‘Get my bonds and stuff at the Miners’ Savings Bank,’ and Mr. Brown said, ‘Why, that stuff must undoubtedly go through the estate.’ * # # I presume Mrs. Blackburn addressed the remark, ‘ Go down and get my bonds or stocks, ’ to me. All three of us were there. I had not previously agreed to do that. In a general way the ownership of the securities at the Miners’ Savings Bank had been discussed between myself and Mrs. Blackburn. I did not tell her as late as the morning of my appointment .that I would go down and get those things for her as soon as I was appointed. In this general con [*193] vernation that I had about the ownership, I did not agree with her, that she was the owner. I did not say she was hot. I took the position that until I had been more fully advised in the premises and had seen the securities, and had had an opportunity to investigate the conditions under which they had been left there, and the physical appearance of them, that it was not up to me to decide as to whose they were. I don’t know whether I told her that at any time before' I was appointed administrator or not. As to telling the court that when I was under oath, I wasn’t asked about it. * * * • I consulted with Mr. Maury in regard to this proceeding. He is not my attorney in this case. I have not consulted with him quite as frequently as I have with Mr. Brown. I retained him on behalf of Sister M. Florentia and Daisy I. O’Neill. I do not feel that I am controlling their case. I do not feel that I am their representative. They "have not communicated directly with Mr. Maury or Mr. Templeman, to my knowledge. As far as I know, they have communicated with me. ”
Counsel insist that the zeal of the administrator in getting together all the property of the estate is no fault or ground for removal. Assuredly not, but that is beside the mark. The question is whether the waiver of the widow and her request for his appointment was fairly procured and freely given. We think her testimony shows that it was not, and his serves only to confirm that impression. He received her consent to the administration by him of an estate of, a certain character, estimated at not to exceed $5,000 in value, and which did not claim any of the property in dispute; she never did consent that he should administer an estate of a different character, valued at $35,558.07, three-fourths of which consists of property claimed by her as her own. Before his appointment she undoubtedly believed, and had reason to believe, that his attitude toward her claims was not adverse; whether this arose from what he said or failed to say is of no importance. (Power & Bro. v. Turner, 37 Mont. 521, 97 Pac. 950.) His duty under the circumstances was candor toward her and toward the court; he should have [*194] told her that her claims might have to be questioned, and he should have given the court, in his petition for letters and in his testimony at the hearing thereof, all the information he then had in regard to the matter; instead of this, he evaded to the point of deception, if he did not expressly deceive. Deception cannot be countenanced in matters of this kind. (Lutz v. Mahan, 80 Md. 233, 30 Atl. 645; In re Farnham’s Estate, 41 Wash. 570, 84 Pac. 602.) At the time he filed the inventories, at the time he filed his objection to her petition, and at the time he testified on this hearing, no material facts had come to his knowledge which were unknown to him at and before the time he received his appointment as administrator; yet he now questions her widowhood, is certain that none of the property is hers, charges her with endeavoring to convert the property of the estate to her own use, and causes counsel to appear and join in his attack on behalf of the other heirs. His offense is not in listing the property in question, but in the exhibition of an attitude so generally hostile to the widow as to warrant the inference that he had held it before his appointment, but carefully screened it from her until his position should be assured.
It is urged, however, that there was no sufficient allegation in
Some remarks are also made about the discretion of the district court and the willingness of the administrator to have the disputed questions of title settled by an agreed statement of
3. An examination of the record and of the authorities convinces us that the failure of the administrator to include the
We have said above that the widow is not incompetent merely
The order appealed from is reversed, wdth directions to the district court of Silver Bow county to revoke the letters of administration heretofore issued to Charles A. Blackburn, and to grant the petition for the appointment of the appellant, unless the court shall find, from the evidence taken or which may be taken at a further hearing, that she is incompetent for want of proper understanding or integrity, in which event to appoint such competent person as she may nominate.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing denied December 24, 1913.