In Re Will of Porter

210 So. 2d 773, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1519
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1968
DocketNo. 45113
StatusPublished

This text of 210 So. 2d 773 (In Re Will of Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Will of Porter, 210 So. 2d 773, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1519 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

RODGERS, Justice:

ON MOTIONS:

Anna Seraphina Porter, a resident of Jackson, Mississippi, departed this life on June 6, 1964. She had executed and published her will on January 12, 1951. Prior to her death, the First National Bank of Jackson, Mississippi had been appointed and was duly qualified and acting as the guardian of the estate of the testatrix. After the death of the testatrix, Jean Gale Neumann filed a petition in which she alleged that she was named one of the executors in the will of testatrix and that the will of testatrix was in the possession of the above-named First National Bank of Jackson, Mississippi. The Chancery Court of the First Chancery Court District of Hinds County, Mississippi allowed the probate of the instrument as the last will and testament of Anna Seraphina Porter in common form and issued letters of executorship to the petitioner. A petition, assigned Cause by the executrix asking the court to allow No. 69,113 in the lower court, was filed the will to be probated in solemn form, to construe the will, and to determine the rights of Frank Vacek, nephew of the testatrix and son of Alzbeta Vackova (Vacek), one of the beneficiaries under the will. The other beneficiary named in the will was Frantisek Havranek. Both Alzbeta Vacek and Frantisek Havranek were residents of Prague, Czechoslovakia.

The bank filed an answer and cross bill in which it admitted that Frantisek Vocak is one and the same person as Frank Va-cek, a temporary resident of California, but the bank contended that the testatrix was a non compos mentis, incapable of exercising a power of appointment given her under the will of her late husband, Robert Porter. The bank prayed that the court determine the interest of the executrix, [775]*775Jean Gale Neumann, and that of the defendants, Alzbeta Vacek, Frank Vacek, and Frantisek Havranek, in the assets held by the bank.

Frank Vacek filed his answer to the petition of the executrix and the cross bill of the bank, stating that his mother, Alzbeta Vacek, wanted him to have her share of the estate. He further alleged that if her part of the estate were sent to Czechoslovakia it would be confiscated by the government. He asked to be- appointed a co-executor of the will of his aunt. He contended that the jewels of his aunt should be turned over to him. The will was probated in solemn form by the decree of the chancery court. The executrix was ordered to liquidate the estate, and the court decided that the estate belonged to Alzbeta Vacek and Frantisek Havranek, the sister and a nephew of the testatrix. The court decided that Frank Vacek had no interest in the estate.

The will of the testatrix expressly provided, however, that if Alzbeta Vacek did not survive the testatrix, her half of the estate would go to her nephew, Frank Vacek. The chancellor ordered the bank to hold the funds until such time as persons in the United States lawfully claimed the assets of the estate, or until the dev-isees or someone acting for them claimed such estate.

In the meantime one Sam F. Fink, as attorney-in-fact for the two devisees, Alz-beta Vacek and Frantisek Havranek, filed a cause of action, No. 65,816, and alleged that the assets of the estate could and would be delivered to the devisees in Czechoslovakia, and further requested that the assets of the estate be delivered to him for the devisees. The two causes of action, No. 69,113 and No. 65,816, were consolidated for trial by the chancellor. All parties, including the executrix, the bank, and Frank Vacek, filed answers to the claims of Sam F. Fink, attorney-in-fact. Frank Vacek was permitted to be made a party defendant in view of his claim that his mother was forced to sign a power of attorney. Upon final hearing, the chancery court entered a decree denying the claim of Frank Vacek to the estate of his mother, Alzbeta Vacek, and directing the First National Bank of Jackson, Mississippi to turn over the money and jewelry held by the bank as proceeds of the estate of Robert Porter and Anna Seraphina Porter to Sam F. Fink, attorney-in-fact, for dev-isees Alzbeta Vacek and Frantisek Hav-ranek for the purpose of distribution to them.

The court required the attorney-in-fact, Sam Fink, to post a surety bond for the faithful performance of the decree requiring delivery of the estate to the devisees. Frank Vacek appealed from this decree, and this Court allowed the appellant to appeal with a supersedeas bond. The bond was not posted, but the bank refused to deliver the estate pending appeal to this Court.

Thereafter this Court overruled a motion of Sam F. Fink to dismiss the appeal of Frank Vacek. Later, Frank Vacek filed a plea in this Court styled “Motion to Remove Sam F. Fink from Cause as to Alz-beta Vacek.” This plea alleged under oath that the movant Frank Vacek’s mother, Alzbeta Vacek, had died on December 25, 1967, subsequent to the final decree in the chancery court, and that Frank Vacek is the only son. In this plea it is contended that the substituted power of attorney given to Sam F. Fink had been revoked by the death of movant’s mother, and the plea requested that Sam F. Fink be removed as a party of interest insofar as the inheritance of Alzbeta Vacek is concerned. Sam F. Fink answered the plea and denied that the movant, Frank Vacek, was the only heir of his mother, but admitted that the power of attorney-in-fact given to him had been revoked by the death of Alzbeta Va-cek. He admitted that the case should be remanded to the trial court for determination of the ownership of the property belonging to Alzbeta Vacek, deceased.

[776]*776Thereupon Sam F. Fink filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as to the estate of Frantisek Havranek for the reason that the appellant, Frank Vacek, is no longer an interested party in the appeal, because, it is said, his appeal was based upon his claim to the estate of his mother, Alzbeta Vacek, who is now dead. Thus his appeal insofar as Frantisek Havranek is concerned is merely an appeal of amicus curiae, and an amicus curiae has no standing to appeal from a judgment of a trial court. The appellant denies this and contends that he was made a party intervenor in the trial court and that he should also be permitted to continue the appeal insofar as his cousin’s estate is concerned because, it is alleged, if this is delivered to Frantisek Havranek in Czechoslovakia, it will be confiscated by the Government of Czechoslovakia.

A careful examination of the entire record in this case convinces us that both pleas filed by the appellant and the appellee should be sustained, and that the appeal should be reversed under the conditions hereafter mentioned.

First. We examine appellant’s plea designated as a “Motion to Remove Sam F. Fink from Cause * * This plea raises facts which accrued after the judgment and decree in the trial court.. These facts are unknown to this Court. They are outside the record on appeal, and must be presented by a plea in bar. We said in Insured Savings & Loan Association v. State ex rel. Patterson, 242 Miss. 547, 557, 135 So.2d 703, 707 (1961), that: “ * * * (M)atters which do not appear of record, or which occur after the final judgment or decree, should be presented by a plea in bar. 2 Am.Jur., Appeal and Error, Sec. 205, p. 971. Our Court has consistently followed this rule.” (We cited many cases.)

In the instant case the appellant filed an affidavit to the so-called motion alleging that his mother had died after the decree of the trial court and that appellee admits this fact and agrees that his power of attorney has ceased to be valid.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Insured Savings & Loan Assn. v. State, Ex Rel. Patterson
135 So. 2d 703 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1961)
Hancock County v. State Highway Commission
193 So. 808 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1940)
Jones v. Cashin
98 So. 98 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 So. 2d 773, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-porter-miss-1968.