In re Estate of Seymour

3 Ohio N.P. 81, 4 Ohio Dec. 450, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 81 (In re Estate of Seymour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate Court 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 Seymour, 3 Ohio N.P. 81, 4 Ohio Dec. 450, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

A motion was made in this court, on the 6th day of February, 1896, to require F. W. Leek, sheriff of Cuyahoga county, to show cause why he •should not be attached as for contempt of court. The motion is verified -and sets up the fact that J. 0. Raeder, administrator with the will annexed of Charles H. Seymour, says: “In the action of the Co-operative Stove Company against Charles H.Seymour, executor of the last will and testament of 0. H. Seymour, deceased, commenced in the court of common jileas of Cuyahoga coun|y on the 5th day of February, 1896, brought on a contract claimed to have been made by said C. L. Seymour with the Co-operative Stove Company, said Leek, as such sheriff, after being notified that the property hereinafter mentioned was in the exclusive possession of the defendant as administrator, and after being forbidden to do the same, forcibly breke open the doors of the store-room in which was the personal property of said estate,in jiossession of the mover as such administrator, and took exclusive possession of the same under a writ of attachment issued in said case, based on the alleged misconduct of said C. L. Seymour, and took exclusive possession, and thereby prevented him from taking an inventory thereof, as by the order of this court he was bound to do, and from closing up the business carried on in said storeroom, as by this court he was ordered to do.”

There is no doubt about the facts in this case. An order of attachment was issued, under the statute providing for attachments, ujion affidavit of an creditor, by the clerk of the court of common pleas, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, and in virtue of that writ, with knowl[82]*82edge of the fact that this property belonged to the estate of C. H. Seymour and as such was in the hands of J. 0. Itaeder, administrator with the will annexed — being notified and warned that the property was held by him under a special order' of the probate court, directing him to take an inventory of the property, to sell the same and settle with the creditors, and to pay all the expenses and debts of the estate, nevertheless forcibly ejected the administrator from the premises, turned out his employes, and took possession of this property vi et armis. And the question now is, whether he was, in so doing, guilty of a contempt of this-court.

There is only one ground upon which it can be claimed that he was guilty of such contempt, and that is the grounds provided in section 5640 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, under chapter 4, title 1, division 7, providing for proceedings in contempt of court; and that section provides:

“A person guilty of any of the following acts may be punished as for a contempt:
“1. Disobedience of, or resistance to, a lawful writ, process, order, rule, judgment or command of a court or an officer.
“2. Misbehavior of an officer of the court in the performance of his official duties, or in his official transactions.
“3. A failure to obey a subpoena duly served, or a refusal to be sworn, or to answer as a witness, when lawfully required.
“4. The rescue,or attempted rescue, of a person or of property in the-custody of an officer ty virtue of an order or process of court held by him. ”

I need not read the remainder of the section. I have now read all the provisions of this section which can possibly bear on this case.

If the sheriff is guilty of any contempt, he is guilty of the contempt of “rescuing property” in the custody of an officer by virtue of an order or process of this court. Now, while this writ of attachment may have-been absolutely invalid as a warrant for the sheriff, to seize the property in the hands of an administrator, which is undergoing administration under the la\v — -it being deemed to be property in the custody of the law, and has been so held by innumerable authorities, and has been so held by the court out of which this writ issued — nevertheless, that does not settle the question of whether, where the officer acts under color of such writ, and seizes property in the hands of a general administrator, he was obstructing any process of the probate court, or has so interfered with an officer of the court in the discharge of his duty, as that he may be said to be in contempt of the court. I think that is a very serious question, and in an ordinary case, I would have no hesitancy in finding that, as touching the contempt of the person who acts in good faith, under a writ of that kind, duly issued, under color of which he seizes property, being the assets of an estate in the hands of an ordinary administrator, and in no sense executing any special order of the court-, however illegal it would be, he would not be guilty of any contempt of court. To so hold would-be a far fetched proposition. But that is not the question here; and it will be time enough to pass on such a state of facts when it arises.

In the first place, the person who is obstructed in the exercise of his-duties, must be an “officer of the court.” Now, an administrator is not an “officer of the probate court.” The very nature of his appointment — the-very nature of his authority, and the source of his authority, do not at all constitute him an officer under the special orders of the probate court. He may be, in a general way, in his official conduct somewhat subject to the-orders of the probate court. While the probate court, under its general jurisdiction, may “direct his conduct, ” and require him to “settle his accounts,” he is not a special officer of the probate court, in the same sense [83]*83as a receiver. A receiver is an officer of the court. An administrator is á very peculiar and very different kind of trustee. He is not under the control of the court — he can reject or allow claims without any order of the court; he is not, in a sense, an officer of the court like a master in chancery, or a person under the special order of the court. A receiver is subject to the orders of the court — he is the hand of the court; but an administrator is an independent officer, deriving, his authority from the law, and exercising it by reason of the law. He is the representative of the decedent — he takes his place; he stands in the commercial world as the decedent, performing his contracts, taking into his possession all the property of the estate, and dealing with it as the law directs, and not as th.e probate court specifically directs. He is not, therefore, such an officer of the court that it can be said, with any degree of reasonableness or justice, that the obstruction of the administrator-in the discharge of his duties,, is a contempt of the probate court. Therefore, in order to find that the sheriff here has committed a .contempt, the court must find that this administrator is charged with a special duty. That in fact he holds the special warrant of the probate court to do some special and particular thing with this estate; and is in so far clothed with th.e express authority of the court.' Now, what are the fcts? C. L. Seymour was qualified four years ago, under the will of C. H.. Seymour, as executor. He took out letters testamentary. A part of the property of the estate was a store, which was in operation at the time of the death of the decedent — a mercantile business. And in the discharge of his duty, under the will, the executor was charged with the duty of conducting that business until a certain event should occur — so long as it should be found profitable, or until a minor child, who was then about sixteen years old, should become twenty-one years of age.

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3 Ohio N.P. 81, 4 Ohio Dec. 450, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-seymour-ohprobctcuyahog-1896.