Gresham v. Talbot

31 S.W.2d 766, 326 Mo. 517, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 14, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 766 (Gresham v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gresham v. Talbot, 31 S.W.2d 766, 326 Mo. 517, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 812 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*519 FRANK, J.

This action was bi’ought by appellant, plaintiff below, on November 4, 1925, in the Circuit Court of Clark County, to contest the will of Louis Coleman, deceased. The original petition did not make Marjorie Louise Athey a party to the suit, although she was one of the legatees under the will. On December 7, 1925, the *520 court sustained a demurrer to the petition and granted plaintiff leave to file an amended petition. Later, on May 5, 1925, plaintiff filed an amended petition in which Marjorie Louise Athey, a minor, by her next friend, was added as a party plaintiff. On June 22, 1926, a second amended petition was filed. On June 29, 1926, the court sustained a demurrer to the second amended petition, ordered that said Marjorie Louise Athey be made a party defendant, and granted plaintiff leave to file an amended petition. On July 2, 1926, a third amended petition was filed in which said Marjorie Louise Athey was added as a party defendant and was thereafter duly and personally served with process. On August 12, 1926, the venue of said cause was changed to the Circuit Court of Lewis County at Canton, Missouri. Thereafter on October 1, 1926, that court sustained defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, dismissed plaintiff’s petition and rendered judgment sustaining said will, and plaintiff appealed.

The will devised to plaintiff, Violet L. Gresham, twenty-five dollars, to defendant Marjorie Louise Athey twenty-five dollars, and to defendant Anna Phillips the residue of testator’s estate, real, personal and mixed.

Testator died on March 8, 1925. His will was admitted to probate on March 16, 1925. This suit was brought on November 4, 1925. The statute provides that suits to contest a will must be brought within one year from the date of the probate of the will. [Secs. 525, 527, R. S. 1919.] While this suit was brought within the statutory period, Marjorie Louise Athey, one of the legatees under the will, was not a party to the suit as originally brought, and more than one year from the date of the probate of the will had elapsed at the time she was made a party thereto by amendment of the petition.

Defendant contends that no valid judgment can be rendered in a suit to contest a will until all interested parties are in court and for that reason the filing of the' original petition in this case which omitted to make one of the legatees under the will a party to the suit, wholly failed to state a cause of action, did not amount to the institution of a suit to contest the will, and was, therefore, not subject to amendment. Further contention is made that the filing of an amended petition bringing in Marjorie Louise Athey as a party defendant, after the statutory period of one year had run, was the institution of a new suit and was barred by limitation, because not brought within the statutory period of one year from the date of the probate of the will.

It is true that a court has no authority to try a suit to contest a will and render a judgment therein unless all interested parties are before the court. [Wells v. Wells, 144 Mo. 198, 202, 45 S. W. 1095.] *521 However, it does not follow that necessary parties to a suit to contest a will, may not be brought in by amendment of the petition after the statutory limit of time in which such suits m|ay be instituted has run, where, as here, the suit was brought within the statutory period of limitation.

In suits where several judgments may be rendered the general rule is that amendments to a petition relate back to the date of the filing of the original petition unless the Statute of Limitations is involved, in which case the action, as to the new parties, is regarded as commenced from the date of the amendment. But this rule should not be applied to a case, where, as here, no judgment could be rendered until all interested parties are before the court. The issue in this character of a suit is will or no will. The will must either stand or fall as a whole. If the right to contest the will is barred as to one of the parties, it is barred as to all. A several judgment could not be rendered. Plaintiff, the only interested party desiring to contest the will, in good faith, brought her suit to contest within the statutory period. It would be laying down a harsh rule to hold that her action was barred by limitation because she inadvertently overlooked making one of the persons interested a party to the suit within the statutory period. The law favors the right of action rather than the right of limitation. “Amendments are allowed expressly to save the cause from the Statute of Limitations, and courts have been liberal in allowing them, when the cause of action is not totally different. ’ ’ [Cytron v. Transit Co., 205 Mo. 692, 700, 104 S. W. 109.]

The right to amend the petition in a will contest suit by bringing in new parties after the statutory period of limitation has run, has never been expressly decided by the courts of this State so far as we have been able to find. However, the exact question has been decided by courts in other jurisdictions. Bradford v. Andrews, 20 Ohio St. 208, was a suit to contest a will. The suit was brought within the statutory period of limitation. Subsequent to the bringing of the suit and after the expiration of the two years statutory period of limitation, it was discovered that two of the interested parties had not been made parties to the suit. On motion of plaintiff they were made parties defendant and were served with process. They set up the statutory limjitation of two years in bar of the action against them. The trial court held the action barred as to all defendants and dismissed the suit. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Ohio reversed the judgment of the trial court, and in doing so said:

“We think the superior court erred in holding the action barred, and in dismissing the proceeding. Where a petition for such a contest is filed within the statutory period of limitation,, although only part of the persons interested are made parties thereto, the right of action is saved as to all who are ultimately made parties, notwith *522 standing some of them are not brought into the case until after the period of limitation has expired. If any person interested appears, and in good faith files his petition for a contest, the statute entitles hfm to a trial, and the verdict of a jury, touching the validity of the will; and that verdict will be binding upon all parties who may be before the court as such, at the time of its rendition. The interest of the parties is joint and inseparable. Substantially this is a proceeding in rem, and the court cannot take jurisdiction of the subject-matter by fractions. The will is indivisible, and the verdict of the jury either establishes it as a whole, or wholly sets it aside. To save the right of action therefore to one is necessarily to save it to all. The ease belongs to that class of actions where the law is compelled either to hold the rights of all parties in interest to be saved, or all to be barred. And it seems now to be quite well settled law, that the preference will in such cases be given to the right of action, and not to the right of limitation.”

A like question was before the Supreme Court of Indiana in Floyd v. Floyd, 90 Ind. 130, whereat the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 766, 326 Mo. 517, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gresham-v-talbot-mo-1930.