In Re Estate of Hammer

130 N.E.2d 437, 99 Ohio App. 1, 58 Ohio Op. 104, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 611
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1955
Docket336
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 N.E.2d 437 (In Re Estate of Hammer) 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 Hammer, 130 N.E.2d 437, 99 Ohio App. 1, 58 Ohio Op. 104, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 611 (Ohio Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Younger, J.

This is an appeal from the Common Pleas Court of Seneca County. It arises by reason of the sustaining of a motion in the Probate Court to set aside the order of probate of the will of Mary Hammer. Because no record was made of the proceedings in the Probate Court, the executor appealed to the Common Pleas Court so that a record could be made as provided for in Section 2101.42, Revised Code. After a hearing was had the Common Pleas Court dismissed the appeal from the Probate Court, and from that order the executor appeals here.

The application for the probate of the will, filed February 6, 1952, showed a large number of nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews, about forty of whom were listed therein as residents of Ohio. All these were eventually served with notice of probate or waived notice, except Earl Wagner, who was listed in the application by the proponent of the will — a lawyer who was named as executor in the will — as a nephew residing at Coldwater, Ohio. The summons issued for him to the sheriff of Mercer County was returned to the court on February 15, 1952, with the notation by the sheriff, “Unable to locate the within named Earl Wagner within our bailiwick. Have information he may be living in Akron, Ohio. ’ ’

Among the nephews of the decedent is Orrin Hammer, one of the appellees in this case. He was represented in the probate proceedings, the Common Pleas Court and this appeal by the same attorney. He and his attorney co-operated with the proponent of the will in locating several of the heirs, and the attorney, on March 8, 1952, wrote the proponent of the will that Earl Wagner’s mother, Henrietta, was deceased and that her two sons Erwin and Earl had both died, leaving no issue, according to the information given him by his client, Orrin Hammer. Later, on March 15, 1952, in another letter, the statement is again made that Orrin Hammer had information that Earl Wagner was deceased and a notation to that effect should be *3 made on the record. The application now bears the notation, after the name of Earl Wagner, printed in ink, “deceased.” By whom it was placed there is not shown. Later, on March 27, 1952, in still another letter to the proponent, this attorney states that Orrin Hammer had been told by at least a half dozen people that Earl Wagner was deceased and left no children, and if a note of that fact “is made in the proceeding, it will obviate the necessity of pursuing that phase of the matter any further.” He suggested further that unless the proponent proceeded with “all possible diligence” he would be compelled to file a motion to dismiss the application for probate for failure to prosecute it within a reasonable time. On April 28, the attorney wrote a letter to the acting probate judge, with a carbon copy to the proponent, advising the judge that some additional waivers had been procured and “that all parties are before the court.”

Hearings had been held before the acting probate judge previously, on April 14, at which time the same attorney had cross-examined the two subscribing witnesses to the will. Further proceedings were thereafter had, and on May 16, 1952, the will was admitted to probate and the executor appointed.

The evidence shows further that the executor had no knowledge that Earl Wagner was alive and living in Akron at the time of the probate of the will, but that he relied upon the representation of the appellee made through his attorney that Earl Wagner was deceased and left no heirs at law.

The evidence shows further that about two months after the will was admitted to probate, a niece of the decedent contacted Earl Wagner at Akron, through a neighbor who was working in Akron, and that at a family picnic held a short time thereafter the death of Mary Hammer and the administration of her estate were discussed with Earl Wagner.

■ Thereafter, on September 16, 1952, a petition was filed in the Common Pleas Court to contest the will, in which action Earl Wagner and Orrin Hammer, the appellees herein, were plaintiffs, together with a number of other heirs.

The evidence shows further that Earl Wagner died on August 8,1953, leaving a widow and three daughters as his only heirs at law, who, on September 15, 1953, sixteen months after *4 the probate of the will, filed the motion in the Probate Court to set aside the order of probate, upon which this case arises.

After hearings were held on the motion, the Probate Court, on January 6, 1954, set aside the order of probate for the reason that Earl Wagner was a resident of Ohio at the time of the probate and had not been served with notice thereof.

Prom that order, the executor has appealed, and we are immediately met with a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the executor is not a proper party to prosecute the appeal. This motion is strongly argued by counsel, with scant authority for or against the question.

We hold, however, that in a case such as this, where the will has been admitted to probate and the executor has accepted the trust and entered upon the discharge of his duties thereunder, the executor is not only a proper party, but he is under a duty to his decedent, whose personal representative he is in carrying out the terms of the will, and to the legatees and devisees who are not parties to the probate of the will and whose rights would otherwise be jeoparized, even without their knowledge, to perfect and prosecute an appeal from an order of a Probate Court which sets aside the probate of a will, and which order is absolutely void.

The Supreme Court of Ohio, by Bradbury, J., says, in Feuchter v. Keyl, 48 Ohio St., 357, at page 366, 27 N. E., 860:

“It is said that notice to the individual, who had been named in the will as the executor thereof, was by relation notice to all the devisees therein. It is no doubt true that an executor, after he has accepted the trust and entered upon its execution, is in many respects the representative not only of the estate, but of all the persons interested therein. ’ ’

Such a void order clearly adversely affects and aggrieves the executor in his representative and fiduciary capacity.

The order of the Probate Court in setting aside the order of probate is void for three reasons.

In the first place, the record before this Court shows by the transcripts of both the Probate Court and the Common Pleas Court proceedings that there is included therein by reference the pleadings and original papers in Case No. 28304 in the Seneca County Common Pleas Court, which is a will contest case in *5 volving the will of Mary Hammer and the parties to this case, duly filed within the six-month period and undisposed of. Upon the filing of this case the Probate Court, following the statute, duly certified the will, order of probate and other necessary papers to the Common Pleas Court.

Upon the certification of the will and related papers to the Common Pleas Court and until the return to the Probate Court of the certificate from the Common Pleas Court as to the result of the case, that is, whether the paper writing is or is not the last will of the decedent, the Probate Court is without any jurisdiction to entertain a motion to set aside the order of probate.

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In Re Estate of Warrick
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172 Ohio St. (N.S.) 1 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1961)
State Ex Rel. Cleveland Trust Co. v. Probate Court
165 N.E.2d 668 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1959)
Skelly v. Graybill, Exr.
165 N.E.2d 218 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1959)
Vance v. Byerly
140 N.E.2d 912 (Madison County Court of Common Pleas, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 N.E.2d 437, 99 Ohio App. 1, 58 Ohio Op. 104, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hammer-ohioctapp-1955.