Buckingham Hotel Co. v. Kimberly

103 So. 213, 138 Miss. 445, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 62
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1925
DocketNo. 24681.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 So. 213 (Buckingham Hotel Co. v. Kimberly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckingham Hotel Co. v. Kimberly, 103 So. 213, 138 Miss. 445, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 62 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

*450 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion'of the court.

Judge William C. Marshall, a resident citizen of the state of Missouri, died testate, leaving a last will and testament in which his two daughters were named executrices and sole beneficiaries without bond. It appears that his personal estate was situated in St. Louis, Mo., his real estate in Warren county, Miss., and that his will was *451 admitted to probate in St. Louis, Mo., and his personal estate administered there.

Buqkingham Hotel Company is a corporation domiciled in the state of Missouri, and alleges that the decedent, W. C. Marshall, at the time of his death was in debt to it in the sum of one thousand two hundred ninety-three dollars and twenty-five cents. After the will was probated letters of executorship were issued to the two daughters by the probate court of the city of St. Louis, state of Missouri, on the 21st day of May, 1922, and on the 1st day of June, 1922, the notice to creditors in accordance with the laws of Missouri was published for the first time; the last publication of said notice being on June 29, 1922.

On the 1st day of June, 1923, the Buckingham Hotel Company presented its claim for one thousand two hundred ninety-three dollars and twenty-five cents in the probate court of St. Louis, Mo., and thereupon the executrices filed a written motion in the court to strike from the docket of the court this claim, because the claim was not exhibited to the executrices within one year after the granting of letters, nor was the same presented within that time to the court.

The court heard and considered the petition of the executrices and the motion to strike the claim from the docket, and disallowed it because presented- too late, entering two orders to the same effect dismissing and disallowing the claim, and adjudging that the Buckingham Hotel Company was entitled to take nothing by their suit. These orders were entered by default; it appearing that the Buckingham Hotel Company did nothing more than present its claim for probate to the court in which the administration was being had in Missouri.

At the time of his death W. C. Marshall, the decedent, was seized and possessed of a tract of land evidently worth twenty-five thousand dollars in Warren county, Mississippi, and his two daughters after his. death undertook to convey these lands by warranty deed to the appel *452 lee, A. Kimberly, without ail administration up to that time of the .estate of the decedent in Mississippi. On March 22, 1924, the Buckingham Hotel Company presented an authenticated copy of the will of W. C. Marshall, deceased, as probated in St. Louis, Mo., to the chancery court of Warren county, Miss., alleging that his personal estate had been administered in Missouri, and alleging that the personal estate only amounted to about one thousand five hundred dollars; that the estate in Missouri had not been closed, and prayed that the American Bank & Trust Company bb appointed administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo, and on that date the authenticated copy of the will was admitted to probate by the clerk of the chancery court of Warren county, Miss., and the letters as prayed for issued to the American Bank & Trust Company; decree being entered on March 24, 1924.

Subsequently Henry, Canizaro & Henry, lawyers, filed a motion as amicus curiae, setting up the administration in Missouri, and, in short, alleging that the claim of the Buckingham Hotel Company, having been disallowed in Missouri, was not a claim which could be probated in Mississippi, and that the action of the clerk in granting letters of administration and appointing an administrator should be revoked and annulled because the Buckingham Hotel Company was not a creditor of Marshall’s estate; its claim being barred in the state of Missouri.

A. Kimberly, who had purchased the land from the devises under the will, also filed a similar motion, alleging that the Buckingham Hotel Company had undertaken to probate its claim in the state of Missouri, and failed to probate it within one year, and that it was therefore barred, and joined in the motion to revoke the letters.

The Revised Statutes of Missouri relative to the probation of claims against estates of decedents is in the following language:

Section 182, Revised Statutes of Missouri 1919, provides :

*453 “All demands not thus exhibited in one year shall be forever barred, saving to infants, persons of nnsonnd mind or imprisoned, and married women one year after the removal of their disability, and said one year shall begin to run from the date of the granting of the first letters on the estate where notice shall be published, the first insertion within ten days after letters aije granted; and in all other cases said one year shall begin to run from the date of the first insertion of the publication of the said notice. R. S. 1909, section 191, amended Laws 1917, p. 91.”
“Sec. 186. Demand to be Presented to the Probate Court, When. — No claimant shall avail himself of the benefit of the preceding section unless he shall exhibit his demand to the administrator in the manner provided by law, for allowance, within one year after the date of granting of the first letters on the estate, or the first insertion of the publication of notice of the grant of such letters as provided for in section 182 of this article, nor unless he shall within the said time also present his said demand to the probate court. R. S. 1909, section 195, amended Laws 1917, p. 98. ’ ’

The court held that the Buckingham Hotel Company, Inc., was not a creditor of the estate, and-ordered that the letters of administration, the order appointing the administrator, and the notice be revoked, annulled, and set aside, and enjoined the bank from doing aught in and concerning the estate of the said "VV. C. Marshall, deceased. And from that order appeal by the Buckingham Hotel Company is prosecuted here.

The decree of the court below dismissing the proceedings was evidently based upon the idea that the claim of Buckingham Hotel Company, not being provable in and having been rejected by the probate court of Missouri, was barred there, and for that reason barred here, and that our laws of administration would be governed by the laws of the domicile of a nonresident debtor. And it is argued here that the judgment of the court there is *454 ■conclusive against the Buckingham Hotel Company, and that by comity our courts must recognize and respect the decree of the St. Louis county court as to this claim.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 213, 138 Miss. 445, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckingham-hotel-co-v-kimberly-miss-1925.