Gocio v. Seamster, Judge

160 S.W.2d 194, 203 Ark. 937, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 2, 1942
Docket4-6655
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 194 (Gocio v. Seamster, Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gocio v. Seamster, Judge, 160 S.W.2d 194, 203 Ark. 937, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 181 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

McHaney, J.

This is a petition for a writ of prohibition to the Benton probate court to prohibit said court from proceeding in the administration of the estate of B. L. Bocio without jurisdiction, or in excess of its jurisdiction. B. L. Bocio died testate a resident of Benton county on January 18, 1938. As directed in his will, petitioner, a son by a former wife, and Charles Bocio, a son by his widow, Maggie Bocio, were, on March 5, 1938, appointed and qualified as executors of the estate of the father, said B. L. Bocio. In addition to petitioner, the testator left four children by his former wife surviving him, to-wit: Agnes Wilson, Mrs. Beorge Haig, Ida Haizlip, and Jennie Bocio. In addition to his son, Charles, •by bis second wife and widow, be left surviving him Ms daughter, Amelia Hardister. It appears that this- litigation over the estate of the testator grows out of a contest between the first set of children, represented by petitioner, and the widow and the second set of children.

On May 15, 1939, petitioner filed his first annual settlement, in which he stated that his co-executor, Charles Gocio, had declined to sign any papers with reference to said estate. In this settlement he charged himself as executor with two items of receipts as follows:

By collections through April 21, 1939,

from Chicago Note 37..............................$ 4,266.67

By deposit Denver National Bank,

January 1, 1938................................................ 7,509.75

$11,776.42

He credited himself with a number of items he had paid constituting claims against the estate and being for funeral expenses, hospital, nursing and medical expenses, and for his personal traveling expenses, notes of the testator to the bank, taxes, advances he had made to the widow and heirs, and a claim of his own for moneys advanced testator in his lifetime of $1,477.05—all in such a sum that left a balance in his hands of $815.12. To this settlement, the widow, Charles Gocio, and Amelia Hardister filed eight exceptions: (1) that he did not charge himself with the whole amount of the estate and there has been no appraisement or inventory thereof filed and that testator was the owner of real estate notes, mortgages or bonds on Chicago property of about $75,000; (2) that he has collected more from Chicago notes or bonds than reported and from other than note No. 37; (3) that testator owned a large rental property in Denver, Colorado, and that said executor took charge of same, collected the rents in a large sum and has made no account thereof; (4) that in addition to the amount he charged himself as shown above, his settlement states that the estate is due the sum of $2,636.40 as the share of B. L. Gocio in the estate of E. P. Notrebe, and that said executor has or should have a much larger sum in his possession than the amount reported, and should be required to account therefor, as B. L. Gocio estate has a one-sixth interest in the Notrebe estate; (5) that Joseph Gocio is indebted to the estate of B. L. Gocio in the sum. of $4,062.50, evidenced by two promissory notes, and that he should be required to account therefor and charge himself therewith; (6) that he has taken charge of all the- assets of said estate to the exclusion of Charles, made all collections, paid all claims, without the knowledge or consent of exceptors, and he should be required to disclose all assets; (7) that the claim of $1,477.05 which he paid himself was not due him, no claim therefor being filed, nothing probated and no order of court allowing it, and there are no vouchers attached to the settlement as required by law; and (8) that Joseph Gocio is also the executor of the Notrebe estate, which is being administered in Colorado and in Jefferson county, Arkansas, and that B. L. Gocio had an interest in said estate which he should account for in this proceeding. Thereafter, petitioner moved to quash all exceptions, except No. 7, to which exceptors filed a response.

On March 28,1940, petitioner filed what he captioned “The 1940 Account 'Current,” in which he sets out in detail the receipts and disbursements from the rental property in Denver, heretofore mentioned, and referred to as two apartment houses, showing gross receipts from rents in 1938 and four months in 1939 of $36,477.77, and from which he deducts in operating expenses and “other expenses and charges” the sum of $32,332.92 leaving a balance due the Gocio estate of $4,144.85, with which amount he charges himself, in addition to the amount brought forward from his previous report, and two-thirds of the collections on note No. 37 in the sum of $2,866.67 and the amount received as the one-sixth interest of testator in the Notrebe estate. He took credit for inheritance and estate taxes, insurance on property and expenses of administration, and showed a balance on hand of $5,571.44.

It was alleged in this report, among other things that the Denver apartments are under the management of one Willie Nobles; that their operation entails large expenditures, including taxes and interest on a loan secured by a lien thereon; lliat B. L. Goeio was the owner of an undivided ll/12ths interest therein and he was the owner of the other l/12th interest; that the proceeds therefrom, exclusive of certain cash expenditures by the manager, were deposited in the Denver National Bank to the credit of Goeio & Goeio, during the lifetime of his father, and that the checks were drawn against this account to pay other operating expenses and a division of profits, and that this arrangement was continued by him after the death of his father until the appointment of James D. Benedict, about May 1, 1939, by the probate court in Denver, as ancillary administrator. Numerous other matters were detailed in said report regarding the management of said apartments and the disbursement of the receipts therefrom, including the partnership account in said bank, but we think it unnecessary to set them out here. Ten exceptions were filed to this report on various grounds and petitioner again moved to quash all of them except the 4th and 8th.

The matter was submitted to the court on the motions to quash certain exceptions to each said report, petitioner entering his special appearance on the motions to quash and reserving his general appearance for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court 'to try said exceptions. The motions were heard upon said settlements, exceptions and motions,-and the testimony of certain witnesses for petitioner, including himself and his attorney, and exhibits thereto, and the court overruled said motions to quash “for the reason the questions raised by such exceptions are necessary to be heard to determine the advisability of approving the reports or continuing the hearing on them until any question of a disputed title to property involved could be determined in the proper forum.”

Petitioner then applied to this court for a writ of prohibition to the Benton probate court and he contends that the action of said court in overruling his motions to quash certain exceptions is tantamount to a holding that the court has jurisdiction to try title to property, that is, that the court is about to proceed to try the question of the disputed title to an 1/3 interest in Chicago Note No. 37 and all of Chicago Note No.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 194, 203 Ark. 937, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gocio-v-seamster-judge-ark-1942.