In Re Estate of Adams

48 N.E.2d 127, 71 Ohio App. 113, 25 Ohio Op. 477, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 600
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1942
Docket3432
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 127 (In Re Estate of Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Adams, 48 N.E.2d 127, 71 Ohio App. 113, 25 Ohio Op. 477, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 600 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

This is the third time that some phase of the controversy between the parties to this action has been before this court.

Rudolph J. Hooffstetter, appellee, filed a motion in the Probate Court of' Summit county in a proceeding to administer an estate styled “In the matter of the Estate of Benton H. Adams, deceased,” in which proceeding Carl E. Adams was administrator de bonis non of said estate.

Said motion was to revoke the appointment of Carl E. Adams as administrator de bonis non, on the ground *114 that such appointment was procured by fraud practiced upon the court, and because said Adams was pursuing a course which violated a former order of the Probate Court, as well as a like order entered by this court on appeal. In the Probate Court said motion was granted, and the administrator has brought the matter before this court by an appeal on questions of law.

Hooffstetter, the mover of said motion, was not an heir, devisee or legatee- in the said estate, and had no interest therein except such interest as arises from transactions which will be hereinafter referred to. As we view the record, if Hooffstetter had an interest which’ would give to him the right under the statutes of Ohio to make such motion, there can be no doubt whatsoever of the correctness of the judgment entered by the Probate Court removing such administrator.

It is strenuously urged in this court by counsel for appellant that Hooffstetter had no such interest in such estate.

The record discloses the following:

That Carl E. Adams was appointed administrator of the estate of his father, Renton H. Adams, that he qualified and administered the estate, and that he was discharged as administrator 15 years before he was appointed administrator de bonis non of the same estate. He had a brother by the name of George E. Adams, who was an heir of and had an interest in the estate.

That George E. Adams, the heir, went to Columbus and there entered into a business arrangement with the said Hooffstetter; that in pursuance of said arrangement Hooffstetter signed a note with the said heir at a bank, by means of which said heir obtained $12,000 to pay for stock in a corporation organized for the purpose of carrying out said business arrangment; *115 that the corporation was conducted and managed by said heir; that the corporation became insolvent; and that Hooffstetter paid the note of said heir at the bank.

That while Hooffstetter, as liquidating agent, was liquidating said corporation, a fire occurred which brought insurance funds to Hooffstetter as liquidator, the proceeds of which funds were distributable to the owners of the stock of said corporation, and which gave to the stock its only value.

That, after Hooffstetter had reduced his claim against said heir to judgment and asked him1 to produce his stock and assign the funds thereon to him (Hooffstetter) to apply on his judgment, said heir conspired with his brother, Carl E. Adams, the former administrator of their father’s estate, for the purpose of defeating the collection of the claim of Hooffstetter against said heir. That, pursuant to such conspiracy, Carl E. Adams procured his appointment as administrator cle boms non, and made an arrangement with said heir by which said heir assigned said stock to said administrator de bonis non, in discharge of notes which said heir had given to his father, and which were long since outlawed.

Thereupon Hooffstetter filed a motion in the Probate Court in said estate to set aside the transfer of said stock, on the ground that it was a fraudulent transfer to defeat creditors of said heir.

The trial in that proceeding in Probate Court, in which George E. Adams, the heir, was also a party, resulted in a decree sustaining the contentions of Hooffstetter, and, in due time, the proceedings were appealed to this court and tried upon questions of law and fact, and this court reached the same conclusion as was reached by the Probate Court. In that case, this court determined that Hooffstetter had a right to *116 intervene and prosecute said motion in the Probate Court as a part' of the proceedings in settling said estate. The decision of this court, written by Judge Doyle, is found in 67 Ohio App., beginning at page 21, where there is set forth a full history of the facts involved in said litigation, and for that reason they will not be more fully described in this opinion. It is pertinent, however, to set forth that the opinion of the Probate Court specifically found that the appointment of Carl E. Adams as administrator de bonis non'was obtained by fraud practiced upon 'the Probate Court, and also that this court, as did the Probate Court, not only set aside the transfer on the ground of fraud, but that both courts made the following order in their respective decrees:

“* * * that the said Carl E. Adams, as administrator as aforesaid, abandon all manner of right and claim to, or interest in, the properties mentioned and described in said order of said Probate'Court dated January 25, 1938, and in said assignment and transfer made by the defendant, George E. Adams, to said administrator on said date.”

That decree of this court is in full force and effect.

Notwithstanding said decree, said administrator and said heir, thereafter, for the purpose of further hindering and delaying Hooffstetter in the collection of his judgment from said heir, entered into an arrangement by which said heir gave a new note to said administrator as a substitution for the outlawed notes of said heir, and, by the cooperation of said administrator and said heir, a judgment by' confession was entered upon the new note in the Common Pleas Court of Summit county.

Thereafter the administrator sought, by proceedings in aid of execution in said case, to obtain the funds in the hands of said Hooffstetter distributable *117 upon said stock of said heir, which funds in the meantime had been by order of the court deposited by Hooffstetter in a bank in Akron to await the outcome of the litigation which was then pending and which has heretofore been referred to.

Hooffstetter was a party to that action and filed a motion to vacate a restraining order, concerning said-funds, issued by the Common Pleas Court in that case. The trial was had in the Common Pleas Court on the issues joined in reference to said funds, and that court in its judgment found:

“1. That fraud was practiced by the plaintiff administrator and the defendant George E. Adams, upon said motioner and, also, upon the Probate Court of this county in a former proceeding involving said last mentioned parties, respecting the matters complained of by said motioner in said Probate Court.

“2. That the action of said plaintiff administrator in procuring the execution by the defendant George E. Adams, of a new note, being the note previously entered in judgment in this cause, is likewise a further fraudulent collusive arrangement to defeat justice and thwart the action of said Probate Court and the Court of Appeals of this district.

“3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 127, 71 Ohio App. 113, 25 Ohio Op. 477, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-adams-ohioctapp-1942.