Fickle v. Snepp

97 Ind. 289, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 424
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1884
DocketNo. 11,308
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 97 Ind. 289 (Fickle v. Snepp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fickle v. Snepp, 97 Ind. 289, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 424 (Ind. 1884).

Opinion

Elliott, C. J.

The complaint of the appellee was fiied against the administrator with the will annexed, of the estate •of John Snepp, deceased, and seeks to enforce payment of a legacy alleged to have been bequeathed to the claimant.

[290]*290. A note is set forth in the complaint, signed by the testator,, and containing, among others, the following provision : “ On the day of my death I promise to pay Joseph H. Snepp seventeen hundred dollars.” This note was one of a series of five, signed by the testator, and made payable to his children. They were folded up with the will, and were in the testator’s, possession at the time of his death. It is averred that “a will was duly executed and probated,” and that “in item first of said will the said testator did direct that his executors should pay all of his just debts, including whatever might be due for principal and interest upon five notes which he had at the time of the, execution of the will made to five of his. children, to wit, his daughter Elizabeth, his daughter Maria,, his sons William M., Joseph H. and David J. Snepp, for the purpose of making all his children equal in their advancements out of his estate.” In the will, which is made part of the complaint, is the following:

“ Item 1st. I direct that all of my just debts, including; whatever may be due for principal and interest upon five notes, which I have this day made to five of my children, viz.,. Elizabeth, Maria, William M., Joseph H. and David J., for the purpose of making all my children equal in their advancements out of my estate, which said notes are payable at my death.”

. Following this is a provision for the payment of funeral expenses and for the sale of property, and then comes this provision : “ I direct that the residue of my estate, which shall then remain in the hands of my executors, shall be equally divided among my children, viz., Elizabeth Hoskins, Maria Runshe, May J. Fickle, William M. Snepp and David J. Snepp, share and share alike, provided that if I shall at any time hereafter have to pay any money for any of my sons-in-law by reason of my liability therefor, the same shall be taken as part of the share in my estate of such daughter for whose husband I shall pay the same; and provided, also, that if any of my said children shall die before I do, then the share of [291]*291such deceased child shall be paid to their legal heirs, issue of their bodies.”

Following the signature of the testator and the attestation clause is a list of notes and amounts, to which is appended the following statement, signed by one of the subscribing witnesses : “The above isa statement of the notes made by John Snepp to five children for sums of money to make them all equal in advancements with May J. Fickle.”

The schedule signed by the witness can not be regarded as part of the will. It is not in any way identified; there is not the slightest reference to it in any part of the instrument. It is true that schedules or other papers may be considered in connection with the will when they are plainly identified, but there is here no identification, either in express words or by fair implication; hence the paper can hot be deemed part of the will. 1 Jar. Wills (5th Am. ed.), 37, 38, auth. n.; 1 Redf. Wills, 261, 262. We applied in Pulse v. Miller, 81 Ind. 190, the general principle which governs here to contracts, and the reason for its application to wills is stronger than that which operates in cases of contracts.

The notes which the testator signed at the time he executed the will are clearly and fully identified. There can not be the slightest doubt as to their identity. They are, therefore, to be regarded as a part of the will. This question was examined with great care and discussed with much ability in Newton v. Seaman’s Friend Society, 130 Mass. 91; S. C., 39 Am. R. 433. In that case it was said by Gjray, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court: “If a will, executed and witnessed as required by statute, incorporates in itself by reference any document or paper not so executed and witnessed, whether the paper referred to be in the form of a will or codicil, or of a deed or indenture, or of a mere list or memorandum, the paper so referred to, if it was in existence at the time of the execution of the will, and is identified by clear and' satisfactory proof as the paper referred to therein, takes effect as part of the will, and should be admitted to pro[292]*292bate as such.” ' The case from which we have quoted is also reported in 2 Am. Prob. Cases, 18, and copious notes are added giving many valuable cases. These authorities so fully settle the question that a discussion would be profitless. And we content ourselves with adding to the cases cited by the reporters the case of Fosselman v. Elder, 98 Pa. St. 159, and our own case of Fesler v. Simpson, 58 Ind. 83.

The appellant’s counsel argue the case on the theory that as the notes were not delivered they were not in existence. This is a fundamental error. The notes as papers, as instruments of writing, were in existence, and as such they were fully identified by the will. It was not necessary that the notes should have been made effective by delivery; had that been so, there would have been no necessity for any will; the notes would have been in themselves effective without a will. The question is not whether the notes existed as valid promises to pay money, but whether they were in existence as papers or instruments capable of identification and capable of forming, by way of reference, part of the will of the testator. It matters not, as all the cases show, whether the paper did or did not create a binding obligation. If it had an existence as a writing and was of such a character as that it could be incorporated in the will, then the requirements of the law are satisfied. This is the rule declared in Fesler v. Simpson, supra.

In a supplemental brief counsel for appellant argue that it is not shown that the administrator had money in his hands sufficient to pay the legacy, and that for this reason the complaint is bad. The complaint does aver, that “there is now in the hands of the administrator the sum of $-belonging to said estate, that the whole amount of said note is unpaid, and that by reason of the premises, and under the provisions of the will, he is entitled to have allowed him by said administrator, and to be paid out of the estate, the sum of $2,712.86.” We think that in view of the liberal rules of pleading, that obtain in claims against estates, and in view [293]*293of the rule that the remedy for uncertainty is by motion, the complaint must be upheld against an attack by demurrer. The practice of leaving blanks in a pleading is not a commendable one; on the contrary, it is one which good pleaders abhor. But we do not think it necessary for the claimant to show that there are assets sufficient to pay his claim before he can obtain an allowance. It is one thing to obtain an allowance and another thing to obtain a direction for the payment of the claim.

Claims may be allowed without inquiring whether there are assets sufficient to pay them, or whether they are or are not members of a preferred class. The allowance comes first; the direction as to payment comes afterwards. The statute fixes the order of priority of claims, and this the courts can not change. Jenkins v. Jenkins, 63 Ind. 120.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Ind. 289, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fickle-v-snepp-ind-1884.