Banning v. Gotshall

62 Ohio St. (N.S.) 210
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Ohio St. (N.S.) 210 (Banning v. Gotshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banning v. Gotshall, 62 Ohio St. (N.S.) 210 (Ohio 1900).

Opinion

Williams, J.

By the will of Charles M. Campbell, his executor was directed to sell certain real property of which he died seized, and pay one-fourth of the proceeds to his son, Henry M. Campbell. John D. Thompson qualified as executor of the will, in Knox county, in 1873, and afterwards sold the property in accordance with the will, and received the proceeds. The share of Henry under the will amounted to something over fourteen thousand dollars, but before its payment he died intestate, in. Knox county, and the right to receive the money, it is conceded, vested in his personal representative, no other disposition thereof having been made by the will. He left a widow who received her share of his personal estate, and an infant daughter (Elizabeth) his only heir at law, whose share, amounting to the sum of $9,558.34, was demanded by Samuel R. Gotshall, who had become the administrator of Henry’s estate.

[224]*224The widow of Henry married Marcus A. Miller, and they removed from the county of Knox to the state of Tennessee, taking with them the minor child, Elizabeth, where Miller procured his appointment as guardian of her estate. He presented an authenticated transcript of his appointment together with a cop;}' of his bond as such guardian, to Thompson, who then paid him the last mentioned amount of the money bequeathed to Henry by his father’s will, taking from Miller the following receipt: “Mount Vernon, Ohio, September, 1892. $9,558.34. I, Marcus A. Miller, as the guardian of Elizabeth Campbell, - infant daughter of the late Henry M. Campbell, deceased, she being the only child and sole heir at law of said decedent, do hereby acknowledge to have received of John D. Thompson, sole acting executor of the estate of the late Charles M. Campbell, deceased, father of the said Henry M. Campbell, the sum of nine thousand, five hundred and fifty-eight and thirty-four one hundredth dollars, being the full distributive share of my said ward of the legacy and bequest to the said Henry M. Campbell under the will of his father, the said Charles M. Campbell.

Marcus A. Miller, Guardian as Above.”

No application was made to the probate court of Knox county for an order authorizing the payment of the money to Miller, nor was any proof of his appointment filed in that court, nor any order obtained for such payment.

Thompson, also, about the same time, paid to the administrator of Henry’s estate the sum of fifty dollars, for which the following receipt was given: “Mt. Vernon, Ohio, Sept. 15,1892. $50.00.

Received of John D. Thompson, executor of the estate of the late Charles M. Campbell, deceased, the sum of fifty dollars, ($50.00), which I agree to and do receive in full satisfaction of all claims due or to become due to me, either in my own right or as admin[225]*225istrator of the estate of Henry M. Campbell, deceased, for commissions on funds in the hands of said executor coming to the heirs of said Henry M. Campbell; I having made claim that the whole of said Henry M. Campbell’s share in the said Charles M. Campbell’s estate should be paid to me as the administrator of said Henry M. Campbell’s estate, while the said Thompson as such executor claimed, and the heirs of- said Henry M. Campbell were insisting upon the right to have the said share paid directly to the said heirs of said Henry M. Campbell, and thus depriving me of all commissions thereon'; and now this amount is paid to me by and with the consent of the widow and heir of said Henry M. Campbel], deceased, as a compromise and in full satisfaction of my said claim-

S. R. Gotshall, Administrator of Henry M. OamiJbell.”

Thereafter Thompson filed his final account as executor of the will of Charles M. Campbell, including in the account the two receipts above given, and claiming credit for their respective amounts. No exceptions Avere filed to the account, and it was approved and confirmed by the court, after due publication of notice. Some time after that, Thompson died testate and Thomas D. Banning qualified as his executor ; and, the administrator of Henry’s estate having resigned, Harry Gotshall was appointed his successor, and brought the action below.

These facts are shown by the uncontroverted allegations of the pleadings, and the agreements of the parties. Issues were joined upon various allegations of bad faith on the part of Thompson in the payment of the money to Miller, and of deception and misrepresentation in obtaining the receipt from Samuel R. Gotshall. It Avas claimed by the plaintiff, and denied by the defendant, that the money was paid by Thompson to Miller [226]*226in pursuance of an agreement between them that the latter should apply a part of the money to the discharge of an individual obligation of his on which Thompson was bound, a part to the payment of a debt which Miller owed Thompson, and the balance to be used by Miller in business of a speculative character for his own benefit; and that Thompson so made the payment knowing Miller was pecuniarily irresponsible.

On the trial of the action Samuel R. Gotshall, the predecessor of the plaintiff as administrator, was permitted to testify to various admissions and statements of Thompson concerning the allegations made against him. Objection was made to this testimony on the ground that the witness was incompetent to give testimony in regard to any fact which occurred prior to Thompson’s death. The overruling of that objection and the admission of the testimony presents one of the questions made in this case. The witness was not a party to the action, and by no express provision of the statute was his testimony rendered incompetent. The contention is, that it should have been excluded under that clause of section 5242 which provides that when a case is plainly within the reason and spirit of the three preceding sections, “though not within the letter, their principle shall apply”; the claim being that the testimony admitted was plainly within the reason and spirit of that provision of section 5241 which excludes the testimony of an assignor of a chose in action, in respect to any matter- to which, if a party, he would not be permitted to testify. The reason for excluding the testimony of an assignor, as provided by section 5241, does not seem applicable to a resigned administrator or executor. Before the enactment of that provision it was not uncommon to make assignments of claims for the purpose of enabling the assignor, by his testimony, to establish the claim for his own benefit, in an action by his assignee against the representative of an estate. [227]*227Then, the assignment of a claim is usually accompanied with a liability of the assignor in case the proof is insufficient to enable the assignee to recover upon it. So that the assignor, in such cases, is a party in interest, though not of record, and his testimony is practically in his own behalf. Upon the resignation of the personal representative, the title tp the assets of the estate, and all the rights and duties of further administration, devolve- upon his successor by operation of law, and he ceases to have any interest in the estate. For this reason it is quite generally held that when an administrator has resigned, or been removed, he is a competent witness in behalf of his successor, in all respects as if he were a stranger to the estate. In BurcVs Executor’s v. McGregor’s Admr., 2 Grant Gas., 353, an attempt was made to bring a discharged administrator within the rule which excludes an assignor of a chose in action from being a witness to support his claim.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ohio St. (N.S.) 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banning-v-gotshall-ohio-1900.