Carney v. Hawkins

83 A. 327, 34 R.I. 297, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 27, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 83 A. 327 (Carney v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carney v. Hawkins, 83 A. 327, 34 R.I. 297, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 51 (R.I. 1912).

Opinion

*299 Parkhurst, J.

This case is a probate appeal from the Probate Court of the city of Central Falls, which was taken by the appellants as residuary devisees under the will of James Gilbane, from the allowance of the account of Hawkins, Executor, by said probate court, and the reasons of appeal specify the items intended to be contested, as follows,, viz.:

Paid on execution in case of John J. Gilbane.... $77 20'
Paid in settlement of case of Margaret Gilbane v. Estate. 500 00'
E. DeV. O'Connor, Atty. fees. 600 00
Retained for services. 214 00
Monument erected in cemetery. 350 00

After hearing of this appeal before a justice of the Superior Court, without a jury, jury trial having been waived, the justice allowed all of the contested items except that one specified as “Paid on Execution in case of John J. Gilbane, $77.20,” which was disallowed.

(1) Theappellants excepted to this decision and the case is now before this court upon the bill of exceptions. The decision of the justice states that “His account, sworn to, is submitted by the executor. There was no cross-examination of him by the appellants.” But the transcript of testimony does not show that the executor was present in court, or that the account was submitted by him or sworn to by him in court; or that he was present at any time before the court so that he .could be subjected to cross-examination. The only evidence submitted was offered by the appellants, and consisted of certain papers in several prior suits and proceedings relating to the charges for amounts paid to John J. Gilbane for $77.20, and to Margaret Gilbane for $500. No evidence was offered by the appellants as to the other items of the account, set forth in the reasons of appeal. Nor does it appear upon the transcript, that the appellants-formally consented to the introduction and admission of the account sworn to by the executor, as prima facie evi *300 dence of the correctness and propriety of the items therein charged, and waived the proof of the items of the account, as to which they had taken their appeal. This procedure ■was highly irregular. The mere presentation of a copy of the sworn account of the executor, produced with other papers from the probate court, as a part of the record of the probate court, to show what the appeal relates to, is not •evidence of the propriety and correctness of the items of the account, and should not have been accepted as such by the trial judge, unless expressly stipulated by the parties. Upon appeal from a decree allowing an administrator’s or executor’s account by the probate court, the administrator or executor, who presented the account for allowance (2) inthe probate court, is “the party holding the affirmative” under Rule 14 (law rules) of the Superior Court, and should proceed in due form at the outset to present his account and the vouchers showing his expenditures, or other evidence in support of the items of the account as to which the appeal is claimed, so that the court may at the outset have evidence before it as to the contested items. Unless this procedure is followed, there is no evidence before the court upon which it can act as to the allowance or disallowance of the contested items, or upon which the appellants are required to offer any testimony (unless by stipulation as above referred to, which in this case there is nothing to show).

We find, therefore, in this case, that the record does not show that the appeal was ever properly presented to the trial judge, or that there was any evidence before him as to the last three items of the account above set forth showing whether or not the several sums of $600, $214, or $350 had been actually expended, or as to the propriety of the same as credits to the account. So that we find that, when the trial judge allowed these items, as he did in his decision, he acted without evidence, and so without authority; and as to the allowance of these items, therefore, we sustain the appellants’ exception to his decision.

As to the other items in dispute, the transcript does show *301 that evidence was offered by the appellants, upon which the trial judge could and did act. The item, “Paid on execution in case of John J. Gilbane, $77.20,” appears to have been based upon a judgment of the District Court, and an in (3) spection of the papers presented and referred to in the transcript shows that the judgment upon which the execution was issued was a personal judgment against said Hawkins,, and not a judgment against the estate of James Gilbane,, and so the same was properly disallowed. As to the claim of Margaret Gilbane, evidence also appears fully showing-the basis of the claim and the proceeding relative thereto, and as to this claim we think the evidence was sufficient to-warrant the trial judge in considering the same and making, a finding thereon.

(4) As to this claim of Margaret Gilbane, it has been before-this court, in two prior proceedings (Gilbane v. Hawkins, 29 R. I. 502; Carney v. Superior Court, 30 R. I. 276). From these cases it appears that Margaret Gilbane filed her claim against the estate of James Gilbane in the probate clerk’s office seasonably after the death of James Gilbane, for the sum of $768; that these appellants objected to the allowance of the claim, and the same was disallowed by the executor;, that thereafter suit was brought by Margaret Gilbane, in the District Court, for the sum of $500, remitting $268, and that the appellants attempted to defend this suit by consent-of the executor, and by their attorney in the District Court, did in the name of John B. Hawkins, claim a jury trial and the case was certified to the Superior Court upon such claim. After it got there, Hawkins submitted to judgment for $500, and the case was brought to this court upon exceptions alleged by these appellants, claiming the right to defend said suit. Upon examination of the papers in this-court it was found that the action was brought against the defendant Hawkins personally, since it appears in the writ and declaration that the plaintiff declares against Hawkins-on a contract of indebtedness and a promise by him only,, without any allegation to show that it was originally an *302 indebtedness of the deceased James Gilbane; and for that reason, because the judgment was not against the estate, the devisees under the will of Gilbane had no interest in it, .and their proceedings to set it aside were dismissed. (Gilbane v. Hawkins, 29 R. I.

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Related

Carney v. Superior Court
74 A. 1018 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1910)
Mason v. Taft
50 A. 648 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1901)
Dowling v. Clarke
13 R.I. 650 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1882)
Thompson v. Hoxsie
55 A. 930 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1903)
Barnes v. Mowry
11 R.I. 420 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1877)
Kenyon v. Probate Court of East Greenwich.
65 A. 267 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1906)
Thayer v. Farrell
11 R.I. 305 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1876)
Gilbane v. Hawkins
72 A. 723 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1909)
Vaill v. Town Council
28 A. 344 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A. 327, 34 R.I. 297, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carney-v-hawkins-ri-1912.