Heitman, Rec. v. Scales

38 N.E.2d 890, 111 Ind. App. 68, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 106
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1942
DocketNo. 16,657.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 N.E.2d 890 (Heitman, Rec. v. Scales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heitman, Rec. v. Scales, 38 N.E.2d 890, 111 Ind. App. 68, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 106 (Ind. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Bedwell, P. J.

The appellant, Elmer W. Heitman, receiver of First National Bank of Gary, Indiana, instituted this action in the Warrick Circuit Court against the appellees, a part of whom were the executors and all of whom were the legatees under the last will *71 and testament of Travis D. Scales, deceased. The purpose of the action was to set aside the final settlement of the estate of Scales under the provisions of § 6-1424 Burns’ 1933, which is as follows:

“When final settlement of an estate shall have been made, and the executor or administrator discharged, any person interested in the estate, not appearing at the final settlement, nor personally-summoned to attend the same, may have such settlement, or so much thereof as affects him adversely, set aside, and the estate reopened, by filing in the court in which the settlement was made, within three [3] years from the date of such settlement, his petition, particularly setting forth the illegality, fraud or mistake in such settlement, or in the prior proceedings in the administration of the estate, affecting him adversely. The executor or administrator of the estate, and any of the creditors, heirs, devisees or legatees of the decedent adversely interested in the matters alleged in such petition shall be made defendants thereto, and shall be entitled to such notice of the pendency thereof as is required to be given under the Code of Civil Procedure to defendants in ordinary actions. If any person interested in an estate shall, at the time of the final settlement thereof, be under legal disabilities, he may file such petition within three [3] years from the time of the removal or cessation of such disability.”

The trial court sustained a demurrer to an amended complaint filed by appellant and he refused to plead further but permitted a judgment for costs to be rendered against him, from which he appeals and assigns as error the action of the trial court in sustaining such demurrer.

Appellant’s suit was begun in the Warrick Circuit Court on May 10, 1939. We shall not attempt to set forth in full the allegations of the amended complaint. The following facts pertinent for a determination of the validity of the court’s action were shown therein: *72 That the plaintiff is the duly qualified and acting receiver of the First National Bank of Gary, Lake County, Indiana; that Travis D. Scales died testate on or about November 11, 1936, and at his death was indebted to the receivership of such bank; that the defendants Welby Earl Scales and Margaret E. Howard were the duly appointed and acting executors of the estate of Travis D. Scales, and the defendants Jane Roth, Lutie Esmeier, Welby Earl Scales, and Margaret E. Howard are the legatees under his will. That such executors were appointed executors of such estate by the court and as such entered upon the discharge of their duties a short time after the death of said Travis D. Scales; that on or about March 7, 1938, such executors filed a final report which was endorsed by the clerk for hearing on April 9, 1938, and was submitted to the court for approval on April 29, 1938, but was by the court disapproved; that thereafter on the 25th day of June, 1938, a supplemental final report was by the executors filed and on said day submitted to the court for approval, and that the court did on such day enter an order approving such supplemental final report, closing the estate and discharging the executors. That neither the plaintiff nor any one representing the receivership appeared at such hearing on final settlement; nor was any representative of the receivership summoned to attend either of such hearings, nor did any representative of such receivership have personal notice or knowledge of the filing of either of such reports, or of any of the hearings or orders thereon; that neither the present receiver, nor any of the predecessor receivers of the First National Bank of Gary, had any knowledge of the death of Travis D. Scales or the pendency of proceedings for the settlement of his estate until on or about the 23rd day of January, 1939. That for a *73 long time prior to the death of Travis D. Scales, he was indebted to the receivership of the First National Bank of Gary because of an assessment made against him as a stockholder thereof by the Comptroller of the Currency; that he acknowledged such indebtedness and made payments thereon, and during his lifetime he agreed to pay the same in full; that such payments were made by him personally or by his attorney who is also the attorney for the defendant estate; that by the terms of his last will the decedent directed his executors to pay all of his just debts. That the legatees of said will who were named as executors have received approximately $35,000, and the other legatees, who are also named as defendants, the sum of approximately $20,000, as beneficiaries under such will; that during the 'pendency of administration on such estate, the executors and their legal representatives' knew of plaintiff’s claim and knew that the plaintiff and his predecessors had no knowledge or notice that there was an administration on such estate pending.

The complaint contains many allegations that are legal conclusions, but from the allegations thereof we gather that the claimed “fraud, mistake and illegality,” upon which the appellant relies as a basis- for setting aside the final settlement of the estate, are the following facts:

That the final report and the supplemental report were not verified and that no proper affidavit was attached thereto; that there was never any publication of notice of any kind of settlement of the estate; that there was never any final distribution of the assets of the estate, but that certain certificates of stock are in the possession of the attorney for the estate; that no order was made showing publication of notice of the issuance of letters to the executors and proof thereof; *74 that there was no order showing the filing of executors’ final report and fixing the date of hearing of final settlement thereon; and that there was no proof of service of notice of the final hearing thereon; that the supplemental final report that was filed on June 25, 1938, stated that “all liabilities of said estate have been paid,” when the executors then and there knew that there was an outstanding obligation and liability of said estate then due and owing to the then receiver of the First National Bank of Gary, for the sum of approximately $7,000; that the approval of the supplemental final report by the court below was illegal for the reason that no time had been fixed for the hearing of such supplemental final report and no notice of such hearing given. The prayer to the complaint was that the purported final settlement and supplemental final report, and the adjudications and orders thereon, be set aside and vacated and that the estate be declared open and pending, and that the petitioner be permitted to file and have acted upon in said estate his claim which was attached to his petition, and that the defendants be ordered to recognize said claim and to administer thereon.

The appellees by their memorandum to the demurrer specified that this amended complaint was insufficient in the following particulars, namely: (1) That it failed to show that the plaintiff had such an interest in the estate which would entitle it to have the final settlement set aside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 890, 111 Ind. App. 68, 1942 Ind. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heitman-rec-v-scales-indctapp-1942.