In re Campbell

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 386, 22 Ohio Dec. 578, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 38
CourtAshland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 18, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 386 (In re Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashland County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Campbell, 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 386, 22 Ohio Dec. 578, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 38 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Devor, J.

E. M. Campbell, as executor- of the estate of Drusilla Akins, deceased, filed his final account on April 2, 1910. Exceptions were filed to this final account on April 30, 1910. The probate court disposed of the matter, and an appeal was taken to this court by the executor. After several delays the matter was, by agreement of the parties, referred to J. F. Henderson, who was appointed referee, on January 23, 1912, to hear the matter and report his proceedings on the facts and law in forty days. A report was filed by him on March 12, 1912, and for irregularities therein, the report was referred back to him for correction. On May 1, 1912, his report, as corrected, was refiled, and the matter is now before this court to be disposed of.

[387]*387The referee finds against the executors in the sum of $2,800.21, with interest thereon for nineteen years and four months. Exceptions were duly filed by the executor to this finding. After the report was filed in this court a motion for new trial was filed. Then, later, a motion was filed to vacate the report, for irregularities'in the proceedings of the referee.

A motion was filed by the exceptors, to strike from the files the motion of the executor for a new trial.

The motion to strike from the files the motion for a new trial is sustained, and it is ordered that the motion for new trial be stricken from the files, for the reason that the same should have been filed before the reference.

The motion to vacate the report of the referee for irregularities in his proceedings is overruled, because there has been too much delay in this case already, and because the irregularities complained of are simply matters of form and not of substance.

This leaves this matter for disposition by the court, upon the report of the referee, exceptions thereto, and a motion to confirm the report.

The facts preceding this matter are substantially as follows: An aged couple, Amor Akins and Drusilla Akins, possessed of about $9,000 of personal property, were fast approaching the end of life. They had no children to help them in their declining years and look after their property interests. Amor Akins died January 20, 1889, willing all his property to his wife, Drusilla Akins. Not having long to live, she called upon R. M. Campbell to write her will, which he did on May 23, 1889. On August 8, 1889, Lamertine G-reenwald wrote a second will for her. On August 12, 1889, the Probate Court of Ashland County appointed a guardian over her property, upon the application of Dr. R. C. Kinnaman, and she died on August 30, 1889.

On September 2, 1889, the first will written by R. M. Campbell was filed for probate. On September 5, 1889, the last will written by Lamertine G-reenwald was filed for probate. On September 12,1889, the first will, written by Campbell, was probated, [388]*388and he was duly appointed the executor under said will. On September 14, 1889, the probate court refused to probate the last will written by Greenwald, and not long thereafter Greenwald was sentenced to the Ohio penitentiary for forgery, and that ended his interest in this estate. R. M. Campbell gave bond as executor, and took possession of all the estate of Drusilla Akins, deceased.

He followed the biblical command to “Make to yourselves friends by means of the mannon of unrighteousness.” The neighbors and friends- of the Akins were paid liberally for boarding and for .their kindnesses and attention shown to the Akins during their lives. The doctor, the undertaker, and others, as well as the attorneys at law, who were interested in the proceedings, were paid large sums of money, and the executor was making himself a general good fellow with the crowd on the Akins’ estate. Because there were no children the estate was regarded as kind of a free pie. Everybody in the crowd was invited to have a slice, except Greenwald, who was on the outside, and was probably by the time this matter got safely under way, in jail or the penitentiary. The only heirs of Drusilla Akins were two sisters, Eliza Metcalf and Sarah Tyron. The executor, during this time, appears to have had the two sisters in his crowd, and they seem to have been pleased at the way things were going. It was anything to beat Lamertine Greenwald with them. Now, recently, the case has been dug up by someone, probably Greenwald, and the executor is called upon to give an account of his stewardship.

Without writing too long an opinion in this matter, it appears to the court that the referee last sight of the issues or what he was to hear and determine in this case. The matter was for hearing upon the final account of the executor, and the exceptions filed thereto. The evidence and the report of the referee should have been confined to these matters. The first partial account by the executor had been filed in the probate court, approved and settled over twenty years ago, and no exceptions of any kind were ever filed to this account. The referee, however, opens up this account, and makes a number of findings against the allowance of certain claims therein.

[389]*389The law of Ohio provides that upon every settlement of an account by an executor all his former accounts may be so far opened up as to correct any mistake or error therein; excepting that any matter of dispute between two parties which had been previously heard and determined by the court can not again be brought into question. Section 10835, General Code.

The law of Ohio further provides, “When an account is settled in the absence of the person adversely interested, and without actual notice to him, it may be opened on his filing exceptions to the account within eight months thereafter.” You will note that the law provides that the account “may be opened on his filing exceptions.”' It is not claimed by any one that there was any error or mistake in the first partial account. It is only contended that the claims of R. O. Kinnaman, $238.40, W. C. Frazee, $518.90, and J. B. Britton, $538.96, and several others, should not have been allowed and paid out of the funds of this estate as just and lawful claims. A mistake is defined as some unintentional act, omission or error. The allowance of these claims and the payment of them was, from all appearances, intentional, and not an error or mistake. The items were all set out in this first partial account, and the interested parties in this estate had notice of this for over twenty years. And without ever filing exceptions to any of these items, the referee was called upon and undertook to open up this first partial account and considered a number of the claims that were allowed and paid and in his report disallows them. He went beyond his authority. It appears that the probate judge, in his finding, did the same thing, and the referee followed the same course.

This first partial account had been on file, approved and settled October 5, 1891, by E. Finger, then probate judge, and the heirs and interested parties in this estate of Drusilla'Akins were bound to “give attention to this business” and act within the law if they desired to contest any of the claims set out in the first partial account. “It is only where error or mistake in one account has intervened, that the court, on the filing of a subsequent one, can correct such mistake or error. ’ ’ Campbell v. McCormack, 1 C. C., 504.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 386, 22 Ohio Dec. 578, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-campbell-ohctcomplashlan-1912.