Marshall v. Coleman

58 N.E. 628, 187 Ill. 556
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 58 N.E. 628 (Marshall v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Coleman, 58 N.E. 628, 187 Ill. 556 (Ill. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—The appellees in this case attack certain items in the final report of appellant, as administrator of the estate of their deceased brother, Edward B. Goodner. These items represent moneys, paid out by the appellant as such administrator upon certain claims filed against the estate. It is charged, that these claims were improperly allowed by the appellant as such administrator, and that he was guilty of fraud and collusion in so allowing the same, and neglected his duty in not presenting proper defenses thereto. The two main items, contested by the appellees, are $1560.00, with interest thereon, paid upon a claim filed by Harriet E. Marshall, mother of appellant and grandmother of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman; and $3500.00, refunded by the appellant out of the moneys of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, to appellant’s brother, James E. Marshall, administrator of the estate of Edward B. Marshall, deceased, father of, appellant and grandfather of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, being the half of an advancement of $7000.00, alleged to have been made by Edward B. Marshall, deceased, in his lifetime to his daughter, Melvin a E. Goodner, and her husband, Lyman T. Goodner, sister and brother-in-law of the appellant, and mother and father of the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman. The contest here is not between the holders of these claims, or of the judgments entered by the county court allowing these claims, on the one side, and the administrator of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, on the other. The contest here arises out of exceptions, made to the final report of the appellant, as administrator, by the appellees, as heirs of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased. The claims objected to were allowed by the county court originally; and it is claimed by the appellant that, having been allowed, they were judgments entered in regular form, and cannot be attacked in the county court through exceptions to the final report made to that court.

When the exceptions' were filed by appellees, the estate had not been closed, and the administrator presented his final report in answer to a citation, requiring him to do so. This final report recapitulated the items in four reports previously made by him to the court. The whole matter was within the control of the county court, and, upon exceptions to the final report, the items in the former reports were subject to review and correction by the county court.

The general rule, as announced in the text-books, is that “a partial or annual account is only a judgment de bene esse, often rendered ex parte, and only prima facie correct. On final settlement it may be opened to correct errors due to fraud or mistake, although the error was not excepted to or appealed from when the partial account was rendered.” (7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—1st ed.— pp. 442-446). The allowance of a claim by the county court is not conclusive against the heir excepting to the administrator’s final report, when such allowance is subject to impeachment for fraud or collusion in a court of equity. (In re Corrington, 124 Ill. 363; Ward v. Durham, 134 id. 195; Shepard v. Speer, 140 id. 238; Schlink v. Maxton, 153 id. 447). A judgment, allowing a claim against the estate of a deceased person, is only conclusive against the heir-at-law, or devisee, in respect to personal estate, where there has been no fraud or collusion in the rendition of such judgment. (Ward v. Durham, supra). The heir always has a standing in court to institute a proceeding to set aside the allowance of a claim by the probate court through fraud; and the county court, in the settlement of estates of deceased persons, exercises an equitable jurisdiction. (Schlink v. Maxton, supra, and cases there cited). In Bliss v. Seaman, 165 Ill. 422, the facts showed, that the appellees there introduced in evidence the several reports and accounts of an executor, which had been approved by the probate court, and then introduced testimony for the purpose of contradicting and surcharging said reports and accounts; and it was there contended, that the adjudications of the probate court, and orders made by it approving the different reports and partial settlements, were final and conclusive judgments and not subject to collateral attack, and that said reports and accounts could not be impeached in the manner, in which the reports and accounts of appellant are sought to be impeached by the exceptions, filed in the case at bar to the final report of appellant as administrator; and this court there said (p. 428): “The statute (sec. 112, chap. 3) makes provision that all executors and administrators shall, every year, exhibit accounts of their administration, but that no final settlement shall >be made and approved by the court unless-the heirs of the decedent have been notified thereof. A partial or annual account of an executor or administrator is usually an ex parte proceeding, and is only a judgment de bene esse and only prima facie correct, and, although not excepted to or appealed from, is open to subsequent correction or challenge. ” We are, accordingly, of the opinion that, as the estate of the deceased, Edward B. Goodner, was not closed, the county court of Marion county had a right, when appellant’s final report was presented for approval, to hear testimony for the purpose of contradicting and surcharging his former reports and accounts as administrator, and to surcharge and correct the same, if the testimony so introduced justified such actioh.- (Millard v. Harris, 119 Ill. 185; Long v. Thompson, 60 id. 27; Curts v. Brooks, 71 id. 125).

Second—The amount of the claim of Harriet E. .Marshall, mother of appellant and grandmother of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, which was allowed against the estate of EdwTard B. Goodner, deceased, was $1926.85. As to $366.85 of this amount there seems to be no dispute. The contention is as to $1560.00 of the claim, recited on its face to be for “care and maintenance from April 17, 1880, to April 17,1890, of Edward B. Goodner, 520 weeks, at" $3.00 per week.” In regard to this claim the Appellate Court say in their opinion: “That the claim was conceived in fraud, and that appellant knew it and assisted in carrying out the scheme, the evidence leaves little doubt iu our minds.” The same conclusion in regard to the claim, thus announced by the Appellate Court, was reached by the county court and the circuit court. After a careful examination of the record, we concur in what is thus said by the Appellate Court.

This claim of $1560.00 was made out by James E. Marshall on June 20, 1892, two months before any administrator was appointed upon the estate of his nephew, Edward B. Goodner. The evidence shows that, after James E. Marshall made out this claim, he presented it to his mother, and obtained her oath to its correctness. It was made out two years after the death of Edward B. Marshall. The appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, was present when the claim was presented to her grandmother by her uncle, James E. Marshall. James E. Marshall figured up how much his nephew’s board would be for about thirteen years, and, when appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, expressed her surprise, and asked whether her grandmother was going to charge her brother’s estate for his board, James E. Marshall answered: “No, this will be figured up, and your grandma will sign a receipt, which will be all right to make it look as though she received the money. It will be taken out of your mother’s estate to protect your interest from this little half-sister.” When James E. Marshall left, Mrs. Harriet E.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.E. 628, 187 Ill. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-coleman-ill-1900.