Ellis v. Berry

110 So. 211, 145 Miss. 652, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 1
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1926
DocketNos. 25510-25515.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 110 So. 211 (Ellis v. Berry) 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
Ellis v. Berry, 110 So. 211, 145 Miss. 652, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 1 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

McDoweN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are six cases consolidated here involving practically the same facts and the same questions of law.

*662 R. L. Berry, appellee, probated Ms claims against the estate of Isaac Bloom, deceased, wliicli were allowed by the chancery clerk, said claims aggregating the sum of one thousand four hundred forty-five dollars.

The administrator contested, in writing, the several claims involved, including the claims of R. L, Berry; and said administrator, with Joseph Bloom, the heir at law, who joined with the administrator in contesting the claims here involved, also procured, by their motion, the court to order R. L. Berry et al. to file with their claims a petition or other pleading’ tendering to the administrator an issue and disclosing facts on which they relied for the recovery of claims.

Thereupon R. L. Berry and other holders of like character of probated claims filed a lengthy petition setting up that, on or about the 1st day of May, 1909, at the residence of R. L. Berry, the decedent, Isaac Bloom, proposed to make his home with Berry and other relatives having probated the claims involved here, changing from place to place as he desired, and that, if agreeable to R. L. Berry, he (Bloom) in consideration of Berry providing a home, food, and board generally, including his washing and mending’ of his clothes and services during his sickness, that he (Bloom) would provide for Berry by -will in a sum that would be more than sufficient to compensate Berry for the services thus rendered, and it is alleged that this agreement was accepted by him, and that in 1923 the said Isaac Bloom died intestate, leaving an estate of more than ten thousand dollars in value; that said Bloom did not make a will as he had agreed to do; and that he had, in his lifetime, received from said Berry board, etc., as itemized in the probated account, for which he had not been paid.

Thereupon the administrator filed a demurrer setting up the three-year statute of limitations, the statute of frauds, and that the contract was not to be performed in one year, that the alleged contract was indefinite and void, *663 and tliat there was no equity on the face of the declaration. This demurrer was overruled by the chancellor.

Thereupon the administrator filed pleas setting up the statute of limitations, the statute of frauds, and to these Berry filed a demurrer, the effect of which was that the statute, of limitations did not apply because the cause of action did not accrue to him until the death of Isaac Bloom in August, 3 923, and that the claims had been probated in due time, to-wit, the 12th day of January, 1924, and the letters of administration had been issued in October, 1923; and the court sustained Berry’s demurrer and allowed the administrator and heir at law to plead further.

Thereupon the administrator filed three pleas denying the contract, denying the debt, and pleading the three-year statute of limitations, and payment, to which the appellee filed an answer setting up that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the death of Isaac Bloom in August, 1923, that the claim was probated in time, and that no statute of limitations could be pleaded successfully in bar of his probated claim, and joined issue on the plea of payment.

Many pages of unnecessary testimony are found in the record before us, and practically every thing in the life and habits of decedent., Isaac Bloom, was exhaustively examined into by the administrator in an effort to discover other property which the administrator and heir at law conceived to have been appropriated or concealed by these relatives of Isaac Bloom who probated these claims against his estate, the effect of such testimony being in favor of the establishment of these probated •claims as found by the chancellor, only the chancellor reduced the amount of the claims to his idea of a reasonable value for the services rendered by these relatives to decedent.

It will be necessary, in considering the assignments of error presented here, to mention certain facts in connection with certain assignments of error:

*664 First. The administrator contends that in this character of proceeding the heir at law should have been a party thereto. ’Whether this he necessary or not we do .not now say, but this record shows that Joseph Bloom, ' above the age of twenty-one years and only heir of decedent, filed his contest in this cause and took part in this proceeding, so that the heir at law is in court in this proceeding, along with the administrator, contesting tfiese claims.

Second. The' administrator contends that, having filed a declaration, or having probated his claim and afterward filed a declaration, claiming same to be a declaration at law, etc., abandoned his claim thereby. Unfortunately for the administrator, he procured this declaration to be filed by urging the court to order Berry, the creditor, to make up an issue, and the administrator cannot complain here of the form of the pleadings, because he procured the filing of these unnecessary pleadings in this cause by order of the court, over Berry’s objection.

Section 1776, Hemingway’s Code (Code of 1906, section 2108), reads as follows:

“The executor or administrator, legatee, heir or any creditor, may contest a claim presented against the estate; and the court or clerk may refer the same to auditors, who shall hear and reduce to writing the evidence on both sides, if any be offered, and report their findings with the evidénce to the court, and thereupon the court may allow or disallow the claim; but such proceeding shall not be had without notice to the claimant,” — and is controlling here. The method of precedure is simple. The creditor having presented his claim for probate, and having had samé probated, allowed, and registered by the court, his claim stands as a 'bona-fide charge against the assets of the estate, along with other probated claims, until same shall be contested either by the executor or administrator, or by the legatee, heir, or other creditor.; and the claimant in this case, Berry, having had his claim properly probated, allowed, and registered as required *665 by statute for probated claims, upon filing of the contest by the administrator, or other proper party contesting the claim, it was wholly unnecessary for Berry to present any written pleadings, unless a bill of particulars had been demanded or necessary from the nature of the items of the probated claim.

We think there is no merit in the contention that the pleadings filed by the holder of the probated claim abandoned the claim. It is proper for these claims for services rendered to a decedent to be probated. Bell v. Oates, 97 Miss. 790, 53 So. 491; Loviza v. Lynch, 115 Miss. 694, 76 So. 629.

Third. The next assignment of error is that the wife of R. L.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 211, 145 Miss. 652, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-berry-miss-1926.