In Re Nickals

Nevada Supreme Court
In Re Nickals, 34 P. 250 (Nev. 1893)
21 Nev. 462
Bigelow

In Re Nickals

Opinion of the Court

By the Court,

Bigelow, J.

(after stating the facts as above):

The only question involved in this appeal is, who has the preferred right to letters of administration upon the estate of the deceased. There is no dispute concerning the facts, and there is neither allegation nor proof that either of the applicants is not duly qualified to discharge the duties of the trust. It consequently becomes simply a matter of statutory construction, as the right to the appointment is given by law, and the court has under these circumstances no discretion concerning it. (Coope v. Lowerre, 1 Barb. Ch. 45; Estate of Pacheco, 23 Cal. 480; Estate of Bauquier, 88 Cal. 302, 310; Hayes v. Hayes, 75 Ind. 395, 398; 1 Woerner’s Law of Adm’n. Sec. 242.)

Gen. Stats. Sec. 2719, provides the following order for the appointment of administrators: “First. The surviving husband or wife, or some person as he or she may request to have appointed. Second. The children. Third. The father or mother. Fourth. The brothers. Fifth. The sisters Sixth. The grandchildren. Seventh. Any other of the kindred entitled to share in the distribution of the estate. Eighth. The public administrator. Ninth. The creditors. Tenth. Any of the kindred, not above enumerated, within the fourth degree of consanguinity. Eleventh. Any person or persons legally competent.”

Section 2722: “ No person shall be entitled to letters of administration who shall be: 'First, under the age of majority.”

Section 2724: “If any person entitled to letters of administration shall be a minor, administration shall be granted to his or her guardian.”

Section 2733: “Administration may be granted to one or more competent persons, although not entitled to the same, at the request of the person entitled to be joined with such person.”

Section 2734: “ When letters of administration have been granted to any other person than the surviving husband or wife, the child, the father, mother, or the brother of the intestate, any one of them may obtain the revocation of the letlers by presenting to the probate court a petition praying the *465 revocation and that letters of administration be issued to him or her.”

As suggested in Estate of Woods, 97 Cal. 428, concerning a similar statute, there is doubtless some difficulty in construing and harmonizing these somewhat conflicting sections so as to determine when the guardian of a minor will have a preferred right to letters of administration over other applicants, but we do not find it necessary to consider the matter here. It is admitted that the respondent has no right to the letters except under his appointment as guardian by the California court, and as such, we are of the opinion that he does not come within the meaning of section 2724. ExceiDt as a matter of comity, and to a very limited extent, guardians appointed in one state are not recognized as such, or as having any power or authority in any other state. Speaking of an English decision holding the authority of an English guardian sufficient to institute a suit for the personal property of his ward in Scotland, Judge Story says: “It has certainly not received any sanction in America in the states acting under the jurispirudenee of the common law. The rights and powers of guardians are • considered as strictly local, and as not entitling them to exercise any authority over the person or personal property of their wards in other states, and upon the same general reasoning and policy which have circumscribed the rights and authorities of executors and administrators.” (Story, Confl. Law, Sec. 499.) The same rule applies to real estate. (Id. Sec. 504 ) This language is repeated and approved in Whart. Confl. Laws, Sec. 261, and in Hoyt v. Sprague, 103 U. S. 613, 631, and is certainly the law as understood and administered in the United States. (Cooley. Const. Lim. 414; Schouler, Dom. Rel. 445; Leonard v. Putnam, 51 N. H. 247.) In other words, as to any other state than the one of the appointment, except as a matter of comity, he is no guardian and has no rights as such. On the other hand, we have in Gen. Stats. Sec. 548, et seq., a complete system for the appointment of guardians of minors by our own courts, who would in this state be vested with all the authority; that a guardian could have anywhere, and to our minds it i,s very clear that it was this kind of a guardian, instead of one that has no authority or responsibility, that the legislature had in mind in the enactment of section 2724, regulating the settlement of the estates of deceased persons.

*466 The statute of 1887, p. 58, authorizing the payment of money in certain oases to guardians appointed in other jurisdictions, rather strengthens than otherwise this view, as it tends to prove that without such statutory authority the guardian appointed in another state has no standing before our courts.

It follows that the appellants have the preferred right to the letters of administration in this case, and should have been appointed.

The order is reversed, with directions to the district court to issue letters to the appellants, upon their taking the oath of office and giving the necessary bonds.

Reference

Full Case Name
In the Matter of the Estate of W. W. Nickals, Deceased
Cited By
5 cases
Status
Published