Long v. Bowersox

8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249, 19 Ohio Dec. 494, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 16
CourtWilliams County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249 (Long v. Bowersox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Williams County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Bowersox, 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249, 19 Ohio Dec. 494, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 16 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Kiulits, J.

This cause is before the court on general and special demurrers to the petition. The petition sets out three alleged causes of action. For her first cause of action plaintiff says that she is the widow of John P. Long, deceased, and that in June, 1906, being herself unversed in the law and procedure therein, she employed defendant to attend to all her legal business generally, and that such employment was by defendant accepted and entered upon; that defendant was then, had been for a long time and still is, engaged in the practice of law in Williams county, Ohio, as a member of the bar of this state. That in the month of December, 1906, John P. Long, her husband, being then deceased, “the defendant having been then continuously in the' employ of the plaintiff since the said date first aforesaid, she instructed the defendant as attorney to prosecute a motion and application on behalf of this plaintiff in the probate court of Williams county, Ohio, for the appointment of this plaintiff as ad-ministratrix of the estate of the said John P. Long, aforesaid”; that defendant filed such application December 27, 1906.,> and thereafter, in all proceedings following the same, he acted as [251]*251plain-tiff’s attorney. That at said last named time “defendant had within his personal knowledge certain information, ’ ’ hereinafter set forth in this pleading, which it was important that this plaintiff should receive, and the plaintiff says, that “this defendant willfully concealed from the plaintiff the said information which was within his personal knowledge, and that this defendant was thereby guilty of fraud.upon the plaintiff, and this plaintiff further says, that the defendant could, by the exercise of due diligence, care and skill, and by invoking to the benefit and use of this plaintiff the said information that was within his knowledge, have obtained the allowance of said motion and application and the appointment of this plaintiff as administratrix as aforesaid, but that he negligently and unskillfully conducted said proceedings aforesaid; that said application was not granted, whereby plaintiff was deprived of her right to be appointed as said administratrix, and was put to great c®sts and expense and greatly damaged, as will more particularly appear hereinafter in this pleading.'”

The petition, in this first cause of action, details the death of her husband’s father, George E. Long, and the terms of his will, all of which is fully covered by the opinion of this court at the February, 1908, term of this court, in Gillis v. Long, 8 N. P.—N. S., 1, wherefore we will not quote such part of the pleading here, and proceeds to aver that Parker W. Long, her husband’s brother, executed a will in July, 1902, wherein he attempted to give all his property absolutely to his mother, Harriet Long; that the defendant drew this will for Parker and was one of the subscribing witnesses, and read the will to the testator and to Iíarriet, and then and there delivered the same to Harriet; that Parker died November 30, 1902, leaving this will in the' possession and control of Plarriet, and that at said time there were living of the Long family, the mother Harriet, John, and John’s wife, this plaintiff; that John P. Long died in August, .1906, and that a dispute having arisen between plaintiff and Harriet respecting plaintiff’s claims in John’s estate, November 12, 1906, Harriet caused the will of Parker to be offered for probate, but failed to cause plaintiff to be notified of such intended probate, and that the will was admitted to probate November 14, 1906, [252]*252without the knowledge of plaintiff; “that this defendant knew that this plaintiff had not been made a party to the probating of said paper writing aforesaid, and that this defendant knew that this plaintiff had no knpwledge of the probating thereof; and that this defendant knew that the interests of this plaintiff in the estate of the said John P. Long aforesaid were materially af-fécted by the probating of said paper writing aforesaid, and that this defendant notwithstanding the premises did appear in open court and assist in the probating of said paper writing aforesaid; and that this defendant did willfully conceal from the plaintiff the knowledge the defendant had of the paper writing aforésaid and of its having been admitted to probate.”

This cause of action then sets up the fact that when her application for letters of administration was filed with the probate court by defendant the law of Ohio provided (Sec. 5943, Rev. Stat.), that a devisee who had knowledge of the will under which he was beneficiary, or who had the same in his power to control, should lose his devise if lie neglected to cause the will to be offered for probate within three years after testator’s death, and that the defendant herein- then had knowledge of such law, and that he then knew that -the will of Parker had been in the power and control -of Harriet for more than three years after Parker’s death, -and that she was the sole devisee and legatee thereunder, and that she had failed to cause it to be offered for probate for more than three years, “and that notwithstanding the premises this defendant carelessly, negligently and willfully failed to acquaint plaintiff with the information aforesaid that was within his knowledge^' and this defendant carelessly, negligently and willfully failed to acquaint plaintiff with the provisions of said section of the statutes aforesaid, or to invoke the same in said proceedings to her use and benefit, by reason whereof the probate court aforesaid refused to all-ow the said application, and did refuse to appoint this plaintiff administratrix as would not have been the cáse had defendant not carelessly and negligently acted as aforesaid”; that by reason of -this state of facts plaintiff was put to the expense of -$708 in court costs and traveling expenses in the endeavor to secure the administration of this estate, and also, because of the premises “a long -continued expensive and [253]*253unnecessary litigation ensued to tbis plaintiff,” to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $6,115.30, “in the employment of attorneys, traveling expenses, court costs, interest on moneys and loss of time from- her legitimate employment.”

“For a second cause of action the plaintiff, repeating all and singular the allegations in the first cause of action herein, ’ avers that one Gillis, having become the administrator of her husband’s estate, made application, to the defendant’s knowledge, to sell certain of the real estate devised to her deceased husband, John P. Long, and that said application was granted, and that, at such time, October 17, 1907, the law of Ohio, to defendant’s knowledge, provided that lands to be sold on the application of an administrator of an estate should be offered upon terms of one-third cash, and one-third in one year and one-third in two years, and not otherwise, yet, to the knowledge of defendant, Gillis caused the order of sale to be entered for cash in hand, and that “defendant carelessly, negligently and purposely failed to advise plaintiff” of the statute or to invoke the same to the use and benefit of plaintiff, and that “by reason of the premises this plaintiff, upon discovery of the character and terms of said order of sale aforesaid, was put to great expense in the sum of $.160 for attorney’s fees, traveling expenses and loss of time from her legitimate employment in securing the vacation of said order of sale aforesaid.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249, 19 Ohio Dec. 494, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-bowersox-ohctcomplwillia-1909.