In Re Estate of Lathrop

141 N.E.2d 212, 103 Ohio App. 392, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 458, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 482, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 599
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1956
Docket181
StatusPublished

This text of 141 N.E.2d 212 (In Re Estate of Lathrop) 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 Lathrop, 141 N.E.2d 212, 103 Ohio App. 392, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 458, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 482, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 599 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

OPINION

By YOUNGER, J.

The claimants in this case filed their petitions in the Probate Court of Auglaize county for authority to present their claims against the *459 executor of the estate of clarence Lathrop after the expiration of four months following the appointment of said executor.

The petitions allege that the claimants and the decedent were involved in an automobile accident on August 8, 1954, on U. S. Highway 30, some nine miles west of Van Wert, Ohio, in Van Wert county; that shortly after the accident decedent was removed from the Van Wert County Hospital to a hospital in Lima, Ohio, where he died on August 10, 1954; that newspaper articles in the Lima News on August 9, 10 and 11, 1954, gave the decedent’s address as Route 1, Lima, Ohio, and listed decedent as a member of certain organizations in Spencerville, Ohio; that the undertaker was C. B. Miller & Son of Spencerville, and that burial was made in Shawnee Cemetery all in Allen county, Ohio; and that Lima is situated geographically almost in the center of Allen county.

The petitions further allege that William C. Leonard, an attorney at Law, Lima, Ohio, examined the records of the Probate Court of Allen county, Ohio, on October 18, 1954, and on January 28, 1955, but found there was no record of any appointment of an administrator or executor, or any estate proceedings, and that on January 28th, Leonard learned from an Auglaize county resident who was employed in his own office, that there was a possibility that Rural Route 1 out of the Lima Post Office might actually include territory in Auglaize county, and that a telephone call to the Probate Court of Auglaize county disclosed that an executor for the deceased Clarence Lathrop had been appointed five months and eleven days previously.

The petitions further allege that the claimants were all residents of Minnesota, passing through Ohio at the time of the accident, and had no actual notice of the appointment of an executor except through their attorney, Leonard, over five months after the executor was in fact appointed; that claimants and their attorney actually believed the decedent was a resident of Allen county, Ohio, until January 28, 1955, after the four months statutory period for presenting claims to an executor had expired, and that reasonable diligence was exercised by claimants and on their behalf to determine if an executor had been appointed.

The probate court sustained demurrers to the petitions and held as follows:

“* * * that the claimant had knowledge of the decedent’s death and that such knowledge was acquired in sufficient time to present the claim within the period prescribed by §2117.06 R. C.:
“The court is further of the opinion that under the facts and circumstances as evidenced in the pleadings in this cause there is no justification for the court in permitting this claim to be filed at a later date under and by virtue of §2117.07 R. C., which in substance says the court may allow a claim to be presented after the four month period if either of the conditions exist, namely: the claimant had no knowledge of the death of the decedent or no knowledge of the appointment of the executor or administrator, and since both the petition and the amended petition show on their face timely knowledge of the death of the decedent, the demurrer is therefore sustained.”

*460 From this order, this appeal is prosecuted.

We are therefore presented squarely with the question of whether the mere knowledge only of the death of the decedent by the claimant shortly after it occurred, is, in and of itself, sufficient to bar the presenting of a belated claim within the provisions of §2117.07, subsection (a), R. C.

The provisions of the above section were under consideration by this court in Case No. 1506, Court of Appeals of Crawford County, entitled, In re Estate of William C. Christman, Deceased: Damon E. Ledley, plaintiff v. M. E. Christman, Admr., defendant, decided August 3, 1955, 100 Oh Ap 133.

The facts in that case are somewhat similar to the one here at issue in that both claimant and decedent were involved in a serious automobile accident. Both were taken to the same hospital in Galion, where decedent died the same evening. The claimant was a resident of Mt. Gilead in Morrow County, while the decedent was a resident of Crawford County. The petition of the claimant alleged that he had no actual knowledge of the appointment of the administrator until after the statutory time for presenting claims had expired and that he was under legal disability during the major portion of such statutory period.

The evidence showed that before the funeral of the decedent, the claimant was informed of the death of the decedent and his place of residence. However, it is obvious that if claimant was under legal disability, the fact that he was told of decedent’s death and place of residence could not be controlling. Since the claimant made no claim that he did not know of the death or the residence of the deceased, the controlling issue was whether the evidence establishd any legal disability under subsection (B) of §2117.07 R. C., as that term is defined in §§2131.02 and 1.02 R. C., and interpreted by the Supreme Court in the cases of Bowman v. Lemon, 115 Oh St 326; and Lowe, Gdn. v. The Union Trust Company, 124 Oh St 302.

This case, however, must be decided entirely within the purview of the holding of the Supreme Court as enounced in the case of In re Estate of Marrs, 158 Oh St 95, by which we are bound.

In that case the collision between the tractor-trailer of Marrs and a bus of Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines occurred in the vicinity of Ashland, Ohio, and a general agent of the claimant, Greyhound Lines, made an investigation very shortly after the collision, in which he learned the name of the decedent-owner Marrs, and that his residence was in Shelby county, Ohio. After negotiations with the holders of P. U. C. O. permits for operation of the tractor-trailer, and the interested insurers, the bus company filed a petition in the Probate Court of Shelby County some eight months after the appointment of the administrator for Marrs, for permission to file a belated claim. The agent for the claimant admitted by deposition that he caused no investigation to be made nor sought or received any information as to the appointment of the administrator. So far as shown by the record, no one else made such an investigation for claimant.

Upon the above facts the Supreme Court proceeded to interpret that portion of the statute which reads as follows:

*461 “did not have actual notice of the decedent’s death or of the appointment of the executor or administrator in sufficient time to present his claim within the period prescribed by law.” (Emphasis by Supreme Court.)

The court held that the language employed is plainly in the disjunctive and that in its usual sense and meaning, the word “or” connotes the alternative — one or the other of two designated things. In holding that the word “and” could not be substituted for the word “or,” the court said (pp 99 and 100):

“To substitute the word ‘and’ for ‘or’ . . .

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Related

In Re Estate of Christman
136 N.E.2d 80 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1955)
Bowman v. Lemon
154 N.E. 317 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E.2d 212, 103 Ohio App. 392, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 458, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 482, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-lathrop-ohioctapp-1956.