Ferguson v. Connell

230 N.W. 859, 210 Iowa 419
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 16, 1930
DocketNo. 40100.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 859 (Ferguson v. Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Connell, 230 N.W. 859, 210 Iowa 419 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

Floyd E. Jackson, who was an American soldier in the late war with Germany, died during July, 1918, in the service of his country, at Chateau Thierry, in France. At the time of his death, he carried a war risk insurance policy for $10,000, payable in annual installments to Albert Jackson so long as the latter lived. This beneficiary, Albert Jackson, died in St. Joseph, Missouri, during July, 1925. Said annual installments above-mentioned were received by the beneficiary to the extent that, when he died, there remained due under the policy only $7,243. The concession is made, for the purposes of this case, that, under the Federal law, the balance aforesaid became payable to the estate of the insured, Floyd E. Jackson. So, on September 30, 1925, an application for the appointment of an administrator of the Floyd E. Jackson estate was made in Linn County by the defendant-appellant Roy L. Connell. That appellant was the uncle of Floyd E. Jackson. On October 2, 1925, the Linn County district court appointed the applicant, Roy L. Connell, as administrator of said estate, and fixed the administrator’s bond at $10,000. Complying with the court’s order, the administrator, on October 3, 1925, furnished the bond, upon which the defendant-appellant National Surety Company of New York City was surety. Thereafter, the insurance money was collected, distribution thereof made, and the administration in all respects proceeded in the regular way until May 5, 1927, when the estate was finally closed, the administrator discharged, and the surety on his bond exonerated.

Listed as the heirs of Floyd E. Jackson in the Linn County probate proceedings were the appellant Roy L. Connell, of Cedar Rapids, the defendant-appellant Eugene Connell, of Clarinda, both uncles, and Maude Hayes, of Excelsior Springs, Missouri, and Bessie Walker, of 'St. Joseph, Missouri, both aunts. These *421 aunts’ánd úneles were the sisters and brothers, respectively, of Norá Jackson (née Nora Connell), who was the mother of Floyd E. Jackson, deceased. . It is claimed by appellants that Floyd E.' Jackson, was the illegitimate son of Nora Connell, and that Albert Jackson, the beneficiary aforesaid, was not his natural father, but a stepfather. Nora Connell and the beneficiary, Albert Jackson, married about two years after the birth of the insured, Floyd E. Jackson.. Contention is made by the plaintiffr appellee that Albert. Jackson, after his marriage to Nora Connell, the mother of Floyd, so recognized the child as his own as to establish the relationship of father and son. Nora Connell Jackson died, in the year 1900.

Appellee was appointed administrator of the Floyd E. Jackson estate in Page County on May 3, 1927. Application for said appointment was made by the alleged heirs of the beneficiary, Albert Jackson, their claim being that they were entitled to receive the proceeds of said insurance through the alleged fathbr, Albert Jackson Before the administration was completed in the Linn County district court, Frederieka Stiverson appeared therein, and set up a claim to the insurance money for herself and others similarly situated. Frederieka Stiverson and the others for whom she appeared in the Linn County court are.the alleged heirs of Floyd E. Jackson, who, according to the administrator in Page County, are entitled to the. insurance money. Dismissal of the claim in the Linn County proceedings was made by Frederieka Stiverson for herself- and the others she represented, -and the claimant- withdrew - from that proceeding. Subsequently, on May 6th, the present suit was commenced, for the purpose, as before stated, of recovering from the appellants the $7,243 war insurance money previously described. To put the thought in another- way, the appellee, as administrator, desires to obtain possession of the funds aforesaid in order that they may bé delivered to the heirs, not of the mother, Nora Connell, but of the purported father, Albert Jackson.

Becaúse of the jurisdictional question involved, we do not decide or suggest who are the heirs of Floyd E. Jackson, or in what proportion they inherit. ’ Many matters are extensively briefed and argued by the parties, but, for the purposes of this appeal, the material issues, we find, are confined to the following propositions.: First, that-the Linn County district court *422 did not have jurisdiction to appoint the administrator and conduct the administration, for the reason that Floyd E. Jackson, at the time of his death, so it is alleged, was a resident, not of Linn County, but of Page County; and, second, the appellant Boy L. Connell, through fraud, induced the Linn County district court to accept jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

'For answer to the first proposition aforesaid, the appellants maintain that the Linn County district court, so far as the probate record shows, did have jurisdiction, and therefore the same cannot be collaterally attacked. Any attack which may be made upon the jurisdiction in the premises, appellants argue, must be direct, as distinguished from collateral. By way of answer to the second contention made by appellee concerning the fraud, appellants argue that the evidence does not sustain the allegation. Such, in a general way, is a statement of the problem presented.

I. Assuming there was no fraud in the institution of the proceedings, did the Linn County district court have jurisdiction so far as a collateral attack is concerned? This is the first question. The Code of 1924 contains the following provisions:

“Section 10763. The district court of each county shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction:
“1. * * * to grant administration upon the estates of, all persons who at the time of their death were residents of the county, and of nonresidents of the state who die leaving property within the county subject to administration, or whose property is afterwards brought into the county. * * *”
“Section 11825. The court of the county in which * * * administration [of a decedent’s estate] * * * is granted, shall have jurisdiction coextensive with the state in the settlement of the estate and the sale and distribution thereof.”

In 1920, this court, after reviewing many cases, finally concluded that the judgment of the district court first assuming jurisdiction over probate proceedings could not be collaterally attacked unless the records thereof disclosed no jurisdiction. In re Estate of Kladivo, 188 Iowa 471. During the discussion in the Kladivo case, we said:

“The doctrine that administration [of an estate] granted in a county other than that of decedent’s residence at the time *423 of his death is voidable, rather than void, tends for conservatism, and will avoid largely the evil consequences which might follow in the wake of a different conclusion. Where the question, as in this case, is one of doubt as to the county to which administration belongs, there might be two administrations, debtors might be subjected to verdicts by different juries, and possibly two judgments for the same debt, but by different courts. Confusion might result as to the title of property, both real and personal.

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Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 859, 210 Iowa 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-connell-iowa-1930.