In re Davis' Estate

88 P. 957, 35 Mont. 273, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 78
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1907
DocketNo. 2,369
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 P. 957 (In re Davis' Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Davis' Estate, 88 P. 957, 35 Mont. 273, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 78 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appeal from an order settling and allowing an annual account. On' or about July 24, 1903, John H. Leyson, administrator with the will annexed of Andrew J. Davis, deceased, filed in the district court of Silver Bow county his eighth annual account of his administration and ashed to have it settled. To this account Henry A. Eoot, in his own right, and as administrator of the estate of Sarah Mariah Cummings, deceased, Ellen S. Cornue, Joseph A. Coram, Harriet E. Sheffield, and Henry A. Davis, all being parties in interest and entitled to participate in the distribution of the estate, interposed certain objections and exceptions. Later the account was amended in certain particulars, but not so as to meet the objections made.

On July 11, 1905, a hearing was had; whereupon the controversy was submitted on the evidence adduced and written briefs by the respective counsel. On April 7, 1906, all the objections and exceptions were by the court overruled and disallowed, and an order entered settling and allowing the account. Thereupon the objecting parties jointly and severally appealed to this court. A sufficient statement of facts to make clear this controversy will be found by reference to In re Davis’ Estate, 27 Mont. 235, 70 Pac. 721; Id., 27 Mont. 490, 71 Pac. 757.

The items of the account to which objection was made are the following: $556.25, wMeh the administrator claims as the expense of preparing and printing transcript and brief on his appeals to this court from an order directing partial distribu[280]*280tion, made on December 3, 1901, and an order denying a new trial (In re Davis’ Estate, 27 Mont. 490, 71 Pac. 757); $1,250, counsel fees paid to E. N. Harwood for prosecuting tbe appeals; and $7,126.68, counsel fees allowed McHatton & Cotter, attorneys, for legal services alleged to have been necessary to protect the interests of the estate in certain causes in the district court of Silver Bow county and in the United States circuit court of Montana; and costs paid by these attorneys during the litigation. It is also contended that the court erred in not requiring the administrator to pay interest on the sum of $100,-000, directed to be distributed to appellants under the order of December, 1901, from that date until the date of payment on April 9, 1903.

1. No question was made in the district court but that proper notice of the hearing upon the account had been given. It is argued in this court for the first time in the proceeding that, since the record contains no proof of notice, the district court was without jurisdiction to make the order. By this contention we presume counsel mean that the giving of the notice required by section 2791 of the Code of Civil Procedure is necessary to give the court jurisdiction of the persons of those who are interested in the estate. In this view we think counsel correct. The giving of the notice is an indispensable requirement, and must be observed, or the order of allowance will not be binding. It is required by section 2796 that on the hearing proof of notice must be made, and the order must show that fact. This latter section also provides that the finding in the order shall be conclusive evidence of the fact. The record before us contains no proof of notice; but the order of settlement finds “that the clerk had given notice of the settlement of said account in the manner and for the time heretofore ordered by the court. ’ ’ This meets the requirements of section 2796, supra, and is conclusive upon the parties on this appeal.

Furthermore, the notice required in probate proceedings serves the purpose of a summons in ordinary actions. Service of summons is waived by a general appearance. By analogy, the [281]*281giving of the notice in probate proceedings may be rendered unnecessary by the appearance of the parties and their participation in the proceedings. In such ease the purpose of the notice has been served, and one who has appeared and taken part in the hearing will not be heard to say that the court had no jurisdiction to determine his rights. At the hearing in this matter all the appellants had filed written objections to the account and they were represented at the hearing by counsel. They may not now complain that thev were not properly before the court. '

2. As to the items of costs, to which objection is made, it is said that they were incurred on former appeals, which were not taken in good faith or in the interests of the estate or of the appellants, and should not be allowed for this reason. The appeals were prosecuted jointly by John H. Leyson, the administrator, and by John E. Davis, the administrator of the estate of John A. Davis. The questions presented thereby and decided will be understood by reference to the opinion in Re Davis’ Estate, 27 Mont. 490, 71 Pac. 757. One of them was, whether the order of August 27, 1897, by which the will was admitted to probate under the compromise agreement of the parties, of whom John E. Davis, administrator of John A. Davis, was one, and under which John H. Leyson received his appointment, was void. Another was whether the court could order a distribution to an assignee of a distributee. A third was whether the administrator could safely pay the distributive shares while still impleaded in two pending suits, the purpose of one of which ’ (Ingersoll v. Root et al.) was to impound the distributive shares of certain of the petitioners, and of the other (Erwin Davis v. John E. Davis, Administrator, et al.) to have overturned and declared nugatory the order of August 27, 1897, under and by virtue of the terms of an alleged contract between Erwin Davis and John A. Davis, entered into before the order was made. A fourth was whether the distribution could be made prior to the determination of the rights of the petitioners by action under section 2840 of the Code of Civil Procedure. And, lastly, it [282]*282was argued that the order appealed from was erroneous in directing payment to Calvin P. Davis, an insane person, who had joined in the petition by his attorney instead of appearing by his guardian.

Calling attention to the fact that all of these contentions, except the last one, were decided against the appellants, and further to the fact that, if the first of them had been sustained, the authority of Leyson as administrator would have been annulled, and the rights of the petitioners to share in the estate would have been imperiled, if not entirely destroyed, the appellants here argue that it is apparent that the appeals were prosecuted in bad faith, and Leyson should not be allowed any of his costs expended therein. Furthermore, they say that this court in that case adjudicated the matter of his bad faith by taxing the costs of the appeal to the appellants.

Under the statute (Code Civ. Proc., see. 1859), it is the duty of the court to charge an administrator or executor personally with the costs of an action or defense, if he appears to have been guilty of mismanagement or bad faith with reference thereto. But this will not be done in any case unless his dereliction is apparent. From an examination of the facts presented in the proof, and the questions raised and decided on the appeals, we are of the opinion that there was enough doubt as to the duty of Leyson in the matter to justify his desire for a final decision by this court of the other questions involved, conceding, as this court decided, that he had no right to question the validity of the order under which he received his appointment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 957, 35 Mont. 273, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-davis-estate-mont-1907.