McVeigh v. Fetterman

95 Ohio St. (N.S.) 292
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1917
DocketNo. 15260
StatusPublished

This text of 95 Ohio St. (N.S.) 292 (McVeigh v. Fetterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McVeigh v. Fetterman, 95 Ohio St. (N.S.) 292 (Ohio 1917).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

The defendant in error, Mary Fetterman, on May 21, 1915, filed in the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county her application to vacate the finding and judgment of that court, entered December 27, 1912, sustaining the will of [293]*293LaFayette Kickland. The action to contest said will had been instituted November 22, 1911, the defendant in error having been made a party and served by publication.

The question presented in this case is whether Section 11632, General Code, applies to a proceeding to contest a will in such way as to authorize the order and action sought by the defendant in error. The common pleas court held that it does not, and denied the application of the defendant in error, while the court of appeals held that it does so apply and ordered that the judgment theretofore entered in the common pleas court be opened up, the case reinstated on the docket, and the defendant in error permitted to file her proffered answer, wherein she seeks to have set aside the instrument probated as the last will and testament of LaFayette Kickland.

Section 11632, General Code, permits a party against whom a judgment or order has been rendered without other service than by publication in a newspaper, to have the judgment opened up and be let in to defend, within five years after the date of such judgment or order.

The disposition of property by will, proceedings in probation thereof, and the right to institute and maintain an action to contest a will duly probated, are all governed and controlled by statute.

Section 12079, General Code, authorizes any person interested in a will or codicil admitted to probate, to contest its validity by a civil action in the common pleas court of the county in which the will is probated.

[294]*294Section 12087, General Code, requires that an action to contest a will or codicil shall be brought within one year (at the time this will was probated, two years) after its admission to probate. This provision contains a saving clause in favor of persons within the age of minority, of unsound mind, or imprisoned, and persons in these classes may bring such action within one year (formerly two years) after the removal of the disability. ■

Section 10519, General Code, provides that if it appears that a will offered for probate was duly attested and executed, and that the testator at the time of executing it was of full age, .of sound mind and memory, and not under restraint, the court shall admit the will to probate.

Section 10531, General Code, at the time of the probation of the will in question, provided as follows :

“If, within two years after probate had, no person interested appears and contests the validity of the will, the probate shall be forever binding, saving, however, to infants, and persons of unsound mind, or in captivity, the like period after the respective disabilities are removed.”

Under the mandatory provisions of this section a will duly probated is thereby fully established; and, under the clear and unequivocal terms of the statute above quoted, it shall be forever binding unless set aside as a result of proceedings instituted in the manner and within the time required by statute.

No right exists to maintain an action to contest a will except as it is specifically provided by statute, [295]*295and the right thus conferred is subject to the conditions and limitations imposed. The right granted and the condition imposed go together; the one cannot be enjoyed without the restrictions and limitations o± the other.

As very pertinently stated in the opinion of the court in Medell v. Snyder, 71 Kans., 590, 594: “Therefore, the jurisdiction of the district court under the wills act is an innovation of purely statutory origin. Likewise, the right of a party to invoke such jurisdiction is purely a statutory creation. One of the conditions attached to the exercise of the jurisdiction thus provided for, and the right to call it into exercise, is that proceedings be instituted within two years. Time is of the essence of the power and the right, and lapse of time operates to extinguish both, rather than as a mere bar to a remedy.”

The decision of this court in the case of The Pittsburg, Cincinnati & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Hine, Admx., 25 Ohio St., 629, similarly construes a provision somewhat analogous contained in a statute authorizing an action for damages sustained by reason of death caused by a wrongful act.

It is there held that “under the ‘act requiring compensation’ for causing death by wrongful act, neglect, or default (S. & C. 1139, 1140), which gave a right of action, provided such action should be commenced within two years after the death of such deceased person, the proviso is a condition qualifying the right of action, and not a mere limitation on the remedy.”

[296]*296The provisions of the statute above cited relating to an action to contest a will clearly constitute more than a mere limitation upon the time of instituting the action, for it is expressly provided that a will duly probated and not contested within two years shall be forever binding. That period had long passed when the defendant in error filed her application in this case. In our opinion no weight whatever should be accorded the fact that an action had previously been instituted to contest such will, resulting in a judgment sustaining it. Surely the defendant in error, who now seeks opportunity to attack the validity of the same will, though by way of a so-called answer in the former proceeding, is in no different or better situation than if no such action had previously been instituted; nor can she have any greater rights than if she had not been made a party at all. The rights of one not a party “stand wholly unaffected by the proceeding.” (Holt et al. v. Lamb et al., 17 Ohio St., 375.) The only right the defendant in error possessed as an heir of the testator was the right conferred by statute to maintain an action to contest said will, provided she proceeded within the time specified. She has not been deprived of that right; but she failed to assert it within the prescribed period and the probate of the will became “forever binding.”

This view is not antagonistic to the decision of the court in Bradford v. Andrews et al., 20 Ohio St., 208, or in Sears v. Stinehelfer, 89 Ohio St., 163. In the former case the court held that where an action to contest a will was brought within the statutory period the plaintiff could not defeat the [297]*297contest by dismissing his petition, notwithstanding some of the parties were not'brought into the case until after the period of limitation had expired; but the court in announcing its conclusion in that case directs attention to the very significant fact disclosed by the record that a cross-petition also challenging the validity of the will involved in that action was filed before the period of limitation had expired or the original petition had been dismissed. The case was pending, and the court held merely that the action should proceed to trial and judgment upon the cross-petition and answers thereto.

In the case of Sears v. Stinehelfer, supra,

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Related

Case of Broderick's Will
88 U.S. 503 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Medill v. Snyder
81 P. 216 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
95 Ohio St. (N.S.) 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcveigh-v-fetterman-ohio-1917.