Ladd v. Stephens

48 S.W. 915, 147 Mo. 319, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 48 S.W. 915 (Ladd v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladd v. Stephens, 48 S.W. 915, 147 Mo. 319, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 147 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— Appeal from the final settlement of W. Speed Stephens and Lon V. Stephens, administrators of the estate of their father, Joseph L. Stephens, deceased.

The parties complaining are Eannie E. Ladd (the former widow, by second marriage, of Joseph L. Stephens, since remarried to William M. Ladd), William M.Ladd her husband, and Curtis G. Stephens and Joseph L. Stephens, minors, children of the second marriage, by their curator, etc., and the defendants are William Speed Stephens and Lon V. Stephens, children of the first marriage, as administrators of their father’s estate

By his first marrige Joseph L. Stephens had six children,, who survived him, namely, William Speed Stephens, Lon V. Stephens, Mittie N. Stephens (now Mrs. Leonard), Alexander H. Stephens, Rhoda E. Stephens (now Mrs. Johnson), and Maggie B. Stephens (now Mrs. Moore).

In 1878 Joseph L. Stephens married Miss Eannie Jones, by which union there were born Curtis G. and Joseph L., who are still minors.

There was an ante-nuptial contract between Joseph L. Stephens and Miss Eannie Jones, by which it was agreed that instead of dower, she should retain her own property, and if 'she survived him, she should take a child’s share of his property, for life, remainder after her death, to go to the heirs at law of Joseph L. Stephens.

Joseph L. Stephens died on August 11, 1881, and on the fifth of September, 1881, his two sons, defendants herein, were appointed and duly qualified as the administrators of his estate. Within two years thereafter the estate was substantially administered, the debts paid, and nearly all of the prop[327]*327erty distributed under tbe direction of the probate court. The administrators advertised that they would make final settlement at the September term, 1883, but at that time no trustee for Mrs. Ladd, and no curator for the minor children of the second marriage had been appointed, so the matter was allowed to remain open until the December term, 1884, when the probate court continued the final settlement until further order of the court. At the suit of Mrs. Ladd, the circuit court of Cooper county on November 14, 1885, appointed J. T. Pigott her trustee. The administrators advertised a second time that they would make final settlement at the March term, 1893, and at that term filed their statements, vouchers, notice, etc., and the matter was set for June 16, but was continued from day to day until June 22, 1893, on which day Mrs. Ladd and her minor children filed exceptions to the final settlement, setting up the following claims:

1. That Mrs. Ladd claimed one-ninth of the estate absolutely.

2. That when W. Speed Stephens, Lon Y. Stephens and Mittie Leonard, respectively, became of legal age, their father advanced them a large sum of money, unknown, but believed to be more than five thousand dollars each.

3. That their father educated W. Speed Stephens, Lon Y. Stephens, and Mittie Leonard, at an expense of over $3,000 each.

The exceptors asked that the alleged advances be brought into hotchpot,or failing so to do, that these heirs be debarred from any distributive share of the estate; that the court ascertain an amount equal to the sums expended by their father for the education of the three children aforesaid, and allow a similar amount for the education of the minor children of the second marriage; that the court appoint an expert accountant to verify the settlements of the administrators and ascertain whether any error or omission or improper charges or allowances were embodied in the settlements; that a large [328]*328amount of worthless stocks were inventoried at their face value of more than $165,000, and asked the court to ascertain what, if any, commission the administrators had charged on these worthless stocks and other worthless notes or accounts.

The probate court heard the exceptions, and on July 8, 1893, overruled them, and approved the final settlement, and exceptors appealed. After the case reached the circuit court, exceptors (on October 16, 1893), applied for a change of venue, which (on January 30, 1894), was granted, and the-case was sent to the circuit court of Howard county. By consent of parties, and on order of the court, Thomas B. Wright was appointed referee, and the cause continued from term to-term until March 26, 1895, when the referee filed his report.

The referee began the hearing on June 28, 1894, and continued it from time to time, and concluded it on August 20, 1894. Thereafter on September 21, certain other facts were agreed to by stipulation, in which it was also agreed that the case should be finally closed and submitted to the referee. W. Speed Stephens and Lon Y. Stephens, were examined orally at great length, and Mrs. Mittie Leonard’s testimony, as was also that of Mrs. Fannie Ladd, was submitted in writing.

On the thirtieth day of July, 1894, exceptors filed before the referee., thirteen additional exceptions, and on the eighth of November, 1894 (forty-eight days after the case before the referee was finally closed), the exceptors handed the referee fifty-one additional exceptions. No objection-was made by defendants to this loose practice, and the referee-considered and acted on all the exceptions, and on the twenty-sixth of March, 1895, he made his report to the circuit court. He sustained the exceptions numbered 1, 2, 5, 6 and 7, relating to stocks given by J. L. Stephens to W. Speed Stephens,. Lon Y. Stephens and Mittie Leonard, held them to be advancements, and not gifts, required them to be brought into[329]*329hotchpot, and charged the administrators $15,000 in respect thereof. lie sustained exception number 9, relating to two mirrors, and one leather back chair, which had been appraised at $215, and which the administrators had purchased at public sale for $110, and charged them with $105, difference between the price they brought at public sale, and what the referee found to be their true value. He sustained exception number 22, and charged the administrators with $265, which he found to be the difference between the face value and the actual value of stock of the Central National Bank of Boon-ville, which the administrators had sold to J. M. Nelson, in order to distribute the personal property under the order of the probate court. Thus the referee surcharged the administrator’s account with $15,370, and he readjusted the commission account of the administrators by allowing them $5,523.39, and found a balance in the hands of the administrators of $9,816.61, which he divided as follows: one-eighth to Mittie Leonard; one-eighth to Ourtis G. Stephens; one-eighth to Joseph L. Stephens, and five-eighths to W. Speed Stephens and Lon Y. Stephens (they having two-eighths in their own right, and three-eighths as assignees of Alexander H. Stephens, Rhoda and Maggie B. Stephens, under a disclaimer and release executed by them on July 17,1891).

The exceptors filed thirty-one exceptions to the report of the referee. The circuit court of Howard county, Hon. John A. Hockaday, Judge, presiding, heard the exceptions and overruled them, and entered judgment approving the final settlement; and made final distribution as recommended by the referee. The exceptors filed a motion for new trial, specifying seventeen errors of the circuit court. The motion for new trial being overruled, the* exceptors appealed to this court.

I.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W. 915, 147 Mo. 319, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-stephens-mo-1898.