In re the Estate of Crawford

11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 605
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 605 (In re the Estate of Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Crawford, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 605 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Parker, J.

Error to the judgment of the court of common pleas disallowing certain exceptions to the account of William R. Stafford, as executor.

In this litigation two cases have been consolidated, viz., Nos. 1412 and 1426. In the early part of 1891, Mabel Crawford died, leaving a will by which she made numerous bequests and by which she appointed Clay Crawford, of Toledo, Ohio, and William R. Stafford, of Port Hope, Michigan, executors.

On May 22, 1891, this will was admitted to probate in Rucas county, Ohio, and on the same day, on the application of Clay Crawford, letters testamentary were issued to .said Crawford and Stafford by the probate court of Rucas county. No bond was required or given.

On June 19,1891, a petition was filed in the court of common pleas of said Rucas county, attacking the validity of this will. This contest lasted until the January term, 1893, of that court when the validity of said will was finally established.

The great bulk of this estate was situated in Huron county, Michigan, and consisted mostly of real estate. After this will contest was commenced, and on July 8,1891, William R. Stafford was duly appointed special administrator of this estate by the probate court of Huron county, Michigan, and qualified and acted as such special administrator until after the validity of said will was established in Rucas county, Ohio.

The statutes of Michigan provide for special administration in cer-' tain cases. One of the questions here is, whether this was a case coming within the purview of the Michigan statutes on the subject.

After the validity of said will was established, it was allowed, filed and recorded in the probate court of Huron county, Michigan, and on May 17, 1893, letters of administration were issued to said William R. Stafford by the probate court of Huron county. He had already been granted special letters of administration, but at this time he was made administrator with the will annexed, a general administrator. These letters were in the usual form, and among other things, required said Stafford to render a just and true account of his administration to said court, etc. He afterwards gave a bond in the sum of $5,000.

On December 27, 1892, said Stafford filed a partial account of his doings as said special administrator in the probate court of Huron county, Michigan.

On August 4,1896, said Stafford filed in the probate court of Huron county, Michigan, his final account as special administrator of said estate.

On August 4, 1896, said Stafford filed his first account as executor, or administrator with the will annexed, of said estate in the probate court of Huron county.

To all of these accounts exceptions were filed by Clay Crawfoid as executor, which exceptions stated that said Crawford represented himself and also the Protestant’s Orphan’s Home of Toledo, Ohio. Ti es - exceptions were heard in the probate court of Huron county, Michig n, and partially sustained. Both Crawford and Stafford appealed the wlio.e [608]*608matter to the circuit court for said county of Huron. These accounts and exceptions were heard by said circuit court at its March term, 1897, and said circuit court overruled said exceptions and fully approved and sustained said accounts.

Said Crawford took the case to the Supreme Court of Michigan, which court, at its October term, 1898, affirmed the findings and judgment of the circuit court of Huron county, but the report of the case, in 118 Mich., p. —, shows that this was not on the merits, but because of certain omissions from the record, that is, certain defect in the steps taken by the appellant, whereby the case was not properly before the court on the merits. Mr. Stafford had very little to do with the estate situate in Ohio, Mr. Crawford attending to that branch of the administration.

On October 28, 1896, the probate court of Lucas county, Ohio, notified said Stafford, executor, to file his account as such executor, in that court.

On November 10, 1896, in pursuance of said notice, Stafford filed in the probate' court of said Lucas pounty, a report of the proceedings of the probate court of Huron county, Michigan, whereby he was appointed special administrator of said estate, and also of the issuing of letters testamentary to him by said probate court of Huron county after the allowance, filing and recording of said will of said Huron county; and also reported therewith a full and complete copy of the several accounts that he had filed in said probate court of Huron county; and also therein stated that exceptions had been filed to said accounts' and that the matter was then pending and undisposed of in the circuit court for said Huron county, Michigan.

It thus appearing to the probate court of Lucas county that these accounts of said Crawford were pending and unsettled in the courts of Michigan, it was ordered by that court, on January 12, 1897, that the hearing as to the same be continued until the further order of the court, which seems to have been intended to mean until the Michigan courts had passed upon said accounts.

After these accounts had been fully sustained by the courts of Michigan, the Protestant’s Orphan’s Home of Toledo, Ohio, a legatee under the will of said Mabel Crawford, filed its exceptions in the probate court of Lucas county, Ohio, to each- and all the items contained in the copies of the accounts filed in Huron county, Michigan, as reported for the information of the probate court of Lucas county, Ohio, by said Stafford as above set forth.

Upon the hearing in the probate court of Lucas county, Ohio, that court held that said Stafford as executor under the Ohio appointment, was liable to account to it for the sum of $29,835.51, being in full of the proceeds of the Michigan property, real and personal, without deduction of any credits, that had-come into the hands of Stafford and had been accounted for by him as special administrator and as administrator with the will annexed, to the courts of Michigan.

This property had never been in Lucas county, or in the state of Ohio, and, according to the accounts of Stafford, approved by the courts of Michigan, the proceeds thereof had all been expended and paid out by said Stafford in the administration of his trust in Michigan. On the appeal of Stafford to the court of common pleas of Lucas county, Ohio, that court disallowed the exceptions of plaintiffs in error to so much of the report as applied to the assets of the Michigan property, and to so [609]*609much as had been approved by the courts of Michigan. On account of this action of the court of common pleas this proceeding in error is ■prosecuted here.

By the action of the court of common pleas of Tucas county, the American Missionary Association of New York City, New York, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, of Boston, Massachusetts, and the Washington Street Congregational Church of 'Toledo, Ohio, were allowed to come in and be made parties and recognized as excepting to the accounts through the Protestant’s Orphan’s Home of Toledo, Ohio ; so that proceedings in error are prosecuted here, not only on behalf of the Protestant’s Orphan’s Home of Toledo, Ohio, but on behalf of the other institutions named, all joining as plaintiffs in ■error. ,

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-crawford-ohiocirct-1901.