Ewalt v. Ames

6 Ohio App. 374, 29 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 27 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 465, 27 Ohio C.A. 465, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 302
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 Ohio App. 374 (Ewalt v. Ames) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewalt v. Ames, 6 Ohio App. 374, 29 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 27 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 465, 27 Ohio C.A. 465, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 302 (Ohio Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Richards, J.

Columbus Ewalt, as administrator de bonis non of Elizabeth Delano, deceased, commenced this action in the court of common pleas against the defendant Benjamin Ames, individually, and as surviving executor of the last will and testament of Columbus Delano, deceased, and also against other defendants, for a citation to appear and disclose as to the assets of the estate of said Columbus Delano, deceased, in their possession or under their control. Benjamin Ames filed a second amended answer denying most of the allegations contained in the petition, and setting up numerous defenses against others therein.

On the trial in the court of common pleas the issues were found and adjudged with the defendants, and the petition dismissed. Error is prosecuted to this court and a reversal of the judgment so rendered is demanded upon numerous grounds.

Columbus Delano was a distinguished citizen of Mount Vernon who died testate on October 26, 1896, leaving as his widow, Elizabeth Delano. The \yidow died testate in August, 1897. At the time Columbus Delano executed his last will and testament, to-wit, on November 13, 1891, he was [376]*376eighty-two years of age, had been a brilliant lawyer, was a man of wide experience in business affairs, had represented Knox county in the general assembly, had represented his district in congress, had served as commissioner of internal revenue during the first term of President Grant, and as secretary of the interior during the second term of that president. His wife, Elizabeth, appears by the' evidence to have been a lady of education and refinement and to have enjoyed his implicit confidence, and to have been entirely familiar with his numerous business transactions and with the extent of his large estate. His will is shown to be in her handwriting, and her will was prepared in her own handwriting, but before she executed it she had the same typewritten by an attorney at law. At the time of Columbus Delano’s death he had an estate variously estimated, but apparently exceeding $150,000 in value. His wife, also, was the owner of a very considerable estate. They had two children, John S. Delano and Elizabeth Delano Ames, the latter residing in Washington,' D. C. Mrs. Ames had three sons and one daughter, and John S. Delano was married and had a daughter named Eleanor Delano Shealey. John S. Delano died in 1896, shortly before the death of his father Columbus Delano.

While many defenses are urged in this case to the contentions made by the plaintiff,' we find it necessary to discuss only three of them.

First: It is insisted that Columbus Ewalt is not the administrator de bonis non of Elizabeth Delano, deceased.

[377]*377Second: It is insisted that the property which is sought to be reached by this proceeding was given by Columbus Delano to his daughter, Elizabeth Delano Ames, by completed gift, inter vivos, a number of years before the donor’s death.

Third: It is insisted by the defendants that the widow, Elizabeth Delano, elected in fact to take under the will of Columbus Delano, and that having done so she was not by the terms of that will entitled to any of the assets now sought to be reached.

If either of the defenses named should be found to be sustained the plaintiff can not recover. We will take up first the issue as to the appointment of Columbus Ewalt as administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, of the estate of Elizabeth Delano, deceased. In her will she named as executor H. H. Greer, a prominent attorney of Mount Vernon, who qualified and served as such executor, filing a final account and subsequently resigning his trust in May, 1911, the resignation being accepted by the probate court. Shortly thereafter application was made in the probate court of Knox county by Eleanor Delano Shealey for the appointment of an administrator de bonis non of the estate, on the claim that there were assets belonging to the estate, to the amount of many thousands of dollars, which were unadministered. The probate court on hearing this application denied the same and refused to appoint an administrator de bonis non. The proceeding was taken on' appeal to the court of common pleas and was there heard on its merits, the court of common pleas adjudging that an administrator de bonis non should be appointed; and the court thereupon proceeded to and [378]*378did appoint the plaintiff, Columbus Ewalt, as such administrator de bonis non. So far as the record before us discloses, the adjudication and appointment thus made in the court of common pleas were never reviewed on error or appeal.

It is insisted, however, that the validity of the appointment may be contested in this case, and it is contested on the ground that the decision of the probate court refusing to appoint an administrator de bonis non was not appealable and that the court of common pleas had no jurisdiction to make the appointment. It appears that the parties went to trial on the merits in the court of common pleas in the case so attempted to be appealed, and it does not appear that any objection was made in that court to the appealability of the proceeding. We think it not important to review the statutes on the question of whether an appeal lies from the refusal of the probate court to appoint an administrator de bonis non. Whether or not such appeal would lie, it is apparent that error could have been prosecuted to that judgment of the probate court.

The parties having gone to trial on the merits in the court of common pleas, and having permitted the action to proceed to judgment without objection to its appealability, so far as the record shows, and on a matter in respect to which that court could have taken jurisdiction on error, they could not thereafter be permitted to question the jurisdiction of the court to try the case on appeal, even if they had so attempted in that action; much less can they do so collaterally in this proceeding. Drake et al., Trustees, v. Tucker et al., 83 Ohio St., 97; Cadwell v. Cadwell, 93 [379]*379Ohio St., 23; Barner v. Barner, 93 Ohio St., 477, and State, ex rel. Faber, Receiver, v. Jones et al., 95 Ohio St., 357.

The two cases from 93 Ohio St., cited, were tried in the court of appeals by the judges now sitting in the case at bar.

Furthermore, it must be remembered that a proceeding for the appointment of an administrator is one in rem, and, the .court having jurisdiction, its decision in that class of proceedings binds the whole world. That an application for the appointment of an administrator is a proceeding in rem was directly announced by the supreme court in Cross v. Armstrong, 44 Ohio St., 613, in the course of the opinion delivered by Judge Spear, at page 624.

It was held, In re Guardianship of Oliver, 77 Ohio St., 473, that a court of common pleas could appoint a guardian of an imbecile on appeal from an order of the probate court refusing to make an appointment and dismissing the application. The court in that case held that the common pleas court was empowered to make the appointment. It is true that the statute specifically authorizes an appeal from an order refusing to appoint a guardian, while no such specific provision is found as to the refusal of the probate court to appoint an administrator.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio App. 374, 29 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 27 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 465, 27 Ohio C.A. 465, 1917 Ohio App. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewalt-v-ames-ohioctapp-1917.