Feustmann v. Estate of Gott

32 N.W. 869, 65 Mich. 592, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 637
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 N.W. 869 (Feustmann v. Estate of Gott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feustmann v. Estate of Gott, 32 N.W. 869, 65 Mich. 592, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 637 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

In the month of April, 1881, Mrs. A. M. Crane resided in Ann Arbor, and was engaged in the millinery business. She had negotiations with Feustmann & Raufmann, of Philadelphia, a firm in that city, engaged in trade in that kind of business, for the purchase of a bill of millinery goods to the amount of $300 on four months’ time. Feustmann & Raufmann, however, declined her order, unless she secured the payment therefor, and for that purpose she obtained and forwarded to the Philadelphia firm the following letter of James B. Gott, viz.:

“ Ann Arbor, April 29, 1881. “Messrs. Feustmann & Rauemann,—
Gents: Please send the bill of goods ordered by Mrs. A. M. Crane, and I will be responsible to the amount of three hundred dollars.
“Yours truly,
“James B. Gott.”

[594]*594This she inclosed to Feustmann & Kaufmann in her own letter, requesting them to forward the goods ordered by express. On the receipt of the letter the goods were immediately forwarded to Mrs. Orane at Ann Arbor. In her letter inclosing Mr. Gott’s, she says:

“I inclose the letter, and request the privilege to return any portion of the order that is not what I ordered, or do not think I need.”

On the invoice of the goods sent to Mrs. Orane appears the following statement made by F. & K.:

A few articles ordered were sold out when your order reached us. Wherever we could, we substituted; sending you in all cases desirable numbers and patterns. ”

On the nineteenth of May following a small invoice of goods was returned by Mrs. Orane, amounting to $11.55, and on the twentieth goods were sent in exchange to the amount, of $11.05.

On the ninth of August, 1881, Feustmann & Kaufmann wrote Mr. Gott that Mrs. Crane’s indebtedness—

“Will be due, as per terms of four months, on September 3 next. Mrs. Orane wants me to grant her an extension of time. We are willing to allow her until October 1, if you are willing that such should be done.”

And on the eleventh of the same month, Mr. Gott answered as follows:

“Ann Arbor, August 11, 1881.
“ Messrs. Feustmann & Kauemann,—
Gents: You have my consent to extend the time on the bill of Mrs. Orane, of this city.
Respectfully,
“James B. Gott.”

Feustmann & Kaufmann, on the eleventh of October, 1881, notified Mr. Gott that the bill had not been paid, and that they should look to him for payment.' After this, and in December, 1881, Kaufmann died, and within a week thereafter Feustmann died. A few months later- James B. Gott [595]*595died; and against his estate the claim.is presented for allowance by the representatives of the Feustmann & Kaufmann interest. One of Fenstmann’s executors, Mr. Silbermann, died in the spring of 1884, and the claim is now being prosecuted by Mrs. Eosalie Feustmann as executrix. It was first brought before commissioners duly appointed upon the estate of James B. Gott, and allowed, and on appeal to® the circuit it has been three times tried, and the proceedings upon the last trial, wherein the claimant prevailed, are now before us for review.

Bernard H. Feustmann owned and had control of the claim as surviving partner at the time of his death. He made a will, and died in the city of Philadelphia, where the same was duly probated, in 1881. Mrs. Feustmann and said Silbermann were appointed executors, and in 1885 the will was probated in the county of Washtenaw, and Mrs. Feustmann was by the probate court duly appointed executrix, being named as such in the will. The proceedings in the case now before us were had in the Washtenaw circuit at the October term, 1886.

It is first claimed by counsel for the administrator that the court erred in admitting in evidence the proceedings had in the probate court on the appointment of Mrs. Feustmann executrix of her husband’s will in this State, and he states his reasons as follows:

“1. The record did not show that the entire record of the Pennsylvania court was before the probate court for the county of Washtenaw.
“2. The affidavit of publication was defective, in that it. did not set forth distinctly the dates of publication, so that it can be known to the court- whether it was published for three successive weeks.
“3. The petition is not signed by the petitioner. It does-not appear that the will was produced by the executor, or any other person interested in the will.
‘•'4. If the proceedings were regular, they gave the appellee no standing to prosecute the claim in the Washlenaw circuit court.”

[596]*596It is not claimed that the order made by the judge of probate was insufficient, or that the publication thereof was imperfect, and as against the objection taken to the evidence of proper publication we think the affidavit was sufficient.1 See Wilkinson v. Conaty, post; also Snyder v. Hemmingway, 47 Mich. 549.

The petition is made by Mrs. Feustmann, the widow of the testator, by Sawyer & Knowlton, as her proctors, and is so signed, and avers that the will of her husband was duly probated’ in the state of Pennsylvania; that she is one of the executors named therein; and that a duly-authenticated copy of said will, and the probate thereof in the state of Pennsylvania, was then filed in the probate court to which the petition was directed; and prayed that she might be appointed administratrix in Washtenaw county, with the will annexed, where there was $400 of the estate to be administered.

We think the petition was properly signed, and sufficiently showed Mrs. Feustmann to be a person interested in the estate, and that a copy of the will was produced to the judge of probate, in which her interest appeared; and that the proceedings had upon the petition sufficiently authorized her to prosecute the claim in question against the estate of J ames B. Gott, before the commissioners, and in the circuit court on the appeal. It is not material whether the claim was presented by Mrs. Feustmann before or after letters of adminis[597]*597tration were granted to her here, so long as she was named executrix in the will, which gave her the claim against the estate of Gott. The probate of the will here only furnished the evidence of her rights already existing; and, if this evidence was furnished on the trial, it was all that was necessary. Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y. 103; Reynolds v. McMullen, 55 Mich. 577; Wilkins v. Ellett, 9 Wall. 740; Doolittle v. Lewis, 7 Johns. Ch. 49; Mower’s Appeal, 48 Mich. 447.

The second point of counsel for defendant is—

“ That the court should have directed a verdict disallowingthe claim, for the reason that there was no competent evidence of any liability on the part of the decedent [James B.. Gott] upon the alleged guaranty.”

It is claimed that the Philadelphia firm should have sent' all the goods Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.W. 869, 65 Mich. 592, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feustmann-v-estate-of-gott-mich-1887.