In Re Estate of Kaffenberger

48 N.E.2d 885, 71 Ohio App. 201, 26 Ohio Op. 17, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 593
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 1942
Docket839
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 885 (In Re Estate of Kaffenberger) 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 Kaffenberger, 48 N.E.2d 885, 71 Ohio App. 201, 26 Ohio Op. 17, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 593 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Matthews, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Probate Court of Butler county setting aside an order of distribution previously made and ordering payment to the appellee, May Sheets, as executrix of the estate of Robert L. Sheets, deceased, the sum of $1,056, as compensation for services of her deceased *203 husband as master commissioner in an action instituted in the Common Pleas Court of Butler county by the adminstrators of the estate of Gustave Kaffenberger against The Shartle Brothers Machine Company, for an accounting of the value of certain shares of stock in- the defendant company and accrued dividends thereon; and a further order appealed from is that made in favor of the appellee, Conrad C. Stroh, clerk of courts of Butler county in the sum of $97.53, for costs that were due him in the same action.

In the action against The Shartle Brothers Machine Company the court decreed that the plaintiffs as administrators of the Kaffenberger estate were entitled to an accounting. Thereafter, the administrators filed a motion in that action to have a master commissioner appointed to hear evidence and state the account, and, on this motion, Robert L. Sheets was appointed to hear evidence and report his findings to the court. •This he did. The court confirmed the report and findings and rendered judgment for the administrators' in these words:

“It is therefore considered by the court that the said plaintiffs recover from the said The Shartle Brothers Machine Companv the said sum of $35,984.49 together with interest at (6%) six per cent per annum from July 1st, 1936, their costs herein expended including the sum of $1,056 which the court allows to the said Master for his services and expenses herein, taxed at $...........”

After execution was returned unsatisfied on this judgment, the administrators instituted an action in the nature of a creditor’s bill against certain persons including the personal representative of the C. W. Shartle estate to recover the amount of the judgment, including the clerk’s costs and the master commis *204 sioner’s fee. A settlement was made with the Shartleestate for $15,000, and the action is still pending-against the other defendants.

After reaching this compromise agreement with theShartle estate, the administrators of the Kaffenberger estate appeared in the Probate Court and requested the court to approve the compromise and for an order-distributing the fund, and on their request, without notice to anyone, the court made an order on November 28, 1940, directing the distribution of the fund to-the beneficiaries of the estate, who were the administrators, one of whom had died in the interim, and the-order directed the payment of her share to her personal representative. The surviving administrators are the-sole beneficiaries of the deceased administrator’s estate.

On December 19, 1940, the appellees filed applications setting forth their respective claims, objecting to the distribution and praying that the order of distribution be set aside and that the administrators be-ordered and directed to allow and pay their claims. In the interim, the appellees had caused execution for the-amount of their claims to be issued against the Kaffenberger administrators on the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas and the execution had been, returned unsatisfied before the hearing in the Probate-Court. Upon hearing of these motions, the court granted them, set aside the order of distribution., found' the facts as herein, recited, and directed the administrators to pay these claims before making any distribution to the “heirs of said estate..” That is the-order appealed from.

The appellants urge that the Commo.n Pleas Court rendered no judgment against .the Kaffenberger. estate in favor of the appellees and that the appellees’" *205 whole case is predicated upon that erroneous assumption. It is quite true that no such judgment, in terms, was rendered against the Kaffenberger estate. On the contrary, the judgment purports to be in their favor and authorizes a recovery by the appellants of these items from the, defendant in that case. But liability for costs of a person invoking the aid of a court results largely by operation of law and not from the express terms of a judgment.

In 11 Ohio Jurisprudence, 70, Section 72, it is said:

“Each party is primarily liable for his own costs,— that is, for the costs incurred at his instance; and where the prevailing party is given judgment for his costs, it is either upon the theory that he has paid them or because of his primary liability therefor, the object being, in the one case, to reimburse him, and, in the other, to furnish him indemnity to the extent that he may be compelled to pay them in the future.”

So the liability of the Kaffenberger administrators for these costs results if these items are properly designated as costs incurred by them. And that they were seems clear from the facts already set forth. They invoked the jurisdiction of the court, they asked that the master commissioner be appointed, and the court on their prayer entered judgment in their favor on his report. Upon the rendition of services under such circumstances an implied promise would arise even if they had had no relation to pending litigation. And the clerk’s charges against them are supported by the same considerations.

In McCune Co. v. Warndorf, 55 Ohio App., 279, 9 N. E. (2d), 709, it appeared that the court had adjudged that each party should pay his own costs, and the question was whether an execution could issue against the defendant for the expense of caring for *206 attached property, and this court held that that item was a part of the plaintiff’s costs, and, therefore, under the judgment could not be recovered from defendant.

We think the Court of Common Pleas was right in finding the master commissioner’s and clerk’s fees to be a part of the costs incurred by the Kaffenberger administrators, and, therefore, properly included them in the judgment in their favor. If the finding in that respect were wrong, then their inclusion in the judgment would have been erroneous. Bliss v. Long, 5 Ohio, 276; Russell v. Giles, 31 Ohio St., 293. However, if the finding had been erroneous, it could not be attacked collaterally. The finding was conclusive in the-Probate Court.

It is said that to enforce the appellees’ claim summarily on their motions filed in the Probate Court in the estate case deprives the administrators of a right to a trial by jury, contrary to the constitutional guaranty:

It seems to us that this contention is answered by reference to the fact that these costs were incurred in a case in which there was no right to trial by jury and the court found them to be costs incurred by the-administrators. They had their day in court in that, case and could have contested the finding of the court, had they so desired. We do not mean to imply that a litigant in a case in which costs have been incurred ■is entitled to have an issue as to the taxability of costs-submitted to a jury. There is no issue of fact. It. results as a matter of law.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 885, 71 Ohio App. 201, 26 Ohio Op. 17, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-kaffenberger-ohioctapp-1942.