Mendenhall v. Burnette

49 P. 93, 58 Kan. 355, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 5, 1897
DocketNo. 10764
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 P. 93 (Mendenhall v. Burnette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendenhall v. Burnette, 49 P. 93, 58 Kan. 355, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 110 (kan 1897).

Opinion

Allen, J.

This is an action to compel the Clerk of the District Court of Cowley County to issue an execution on a judgment, in favor of the plaintiff against M. L. Read and numerous other parties, rendered in the lifetime of Read, who died soon after its rendition.

The Judge of the District Court and Read’s executors are made parties defendant, it being alleged [356]*356that, in a suit brought by the executors against the sheriff to restrain the service of a former execution, Burnette, as Judge of the District Court of Cowley County, had held that execution could not lawfully be issued to enforce the judgment. The question as to the propriety of making the Judge of the District Court and the executors parties defendant where no performance of duty is demanded of them, is suggested, but not seriously urged, as a ground for dismissal of the action. Whatever may be said in that respect, it is clear that the principal question in the case is one concerning the duty of the Clerk to issue the execution, and that he is a proper and necessary party to the determination of the case. There certainly is no impropriety in making the executors, whose interests are at stake, also parties to the proceeding, in order that 'they may be heard and may protect their interests.

The judgment sought to be enforced was rendered on the sixteenth of July, 1891. M. L. Read died on the thirtieth of September, 1891. On the nineteenth of September, 1892, the judgment was revived against W. C. Robinson and S. H. Myton, as executors of Read’s will. Prior to that time proceedings in error had been instituted in this court to reverse the judgment, and a bond had been duly given to stay execution. The petition in error was afterwards dismissed. Thereafter, on the eleventh of June, 1896, the plaintiff caused an execution to issue on the judgment, which was levied by the sheriff on various tracts of real estate in Cowley County, owned by Read at the time of his death and on which the judgment was then a lien. The executors, on the ninth of July, 1896, made application to the probate court for authority to sell the same lands for the payment of debts, expenses and legacies, which was granted on the twenty-seventh of July. On the following day, the executors [357]*357brought suit in the District Court of Cowley County against the sheriff, to enjoin him from selling the property levied on. On their petition, the probate judge granted a temporary injunction, which the Judge of the District Court, on motion heard before him, refused to vacate, and on a demurrer to the petition in the injunction case, the District Court made a like ruling, overruling the demurrer.

The question involved in the case is a nice one. May a judgment rendered against a person in his lifetime be enforced by execution against his lands after his death, and after revivor against his executors? Very full and satisfactory briefs are presented by counsel, and we have the satisfaction of an able presentation of both sides of the controversy. On behalf of the defendant it is claimed that the jurisdiction of the probate court over the estate of a deceased person is exclusive, except as to property subject to a specific lien. Attention is called to various provisions of the statutes bearing on the management of estates of deceased persons. By the General Statutes of 1889, paragraph 2116, it is provided :

“ The- probate courts shall . . . have and exercise the jurisdiction and authority provided by law respecting executors and administrators, and the settlement of the estates of deceased persons.”

By the act respecting executors and administrators and the settlement of estates of deceased persons, executors and administrators are required to return an inventory, not only of the personal estate to be administered, but also of the real estate of the deceased.

Section 114 of said act provides :

“As soon as the executor or administrator shall ascertain that the personal estate in his hands will be insufficient to pay all the debts of the deceased, and the charges of administering the estate, he shall apply to the probate court for authority to sell the real estate [358]*358of the deceased, or any interest he may have in any real estate, situated within this state, subject to the payment of debts.”

By section 80 of the same act, demands against the estate of a deceased person are classified; the fourth class being ” judgments rendered against the deceased in his lifetime; but if any such judgments shall be liens upon the real estate of the deceased, and the estate shall be insolvent, such judgments as are liens upon the real estate shall be paid without reference to classification, except the classes of demands mentioned in the first and second subdivisions of this section shall have precedence of such judgments.”

Section 86 provides that a demand against an estate may be established by judgment of a court of record and a copy of the j udgment exhibited to the probate court, but that the estate shall not be liable for costs in a proceeding commenced within one year after the date of the letters of administration. Provision is also made, in section 134 of the act, for the sale by executors and administrators, under the direction of the probate court, of the lands of the decedent for the payment of his debts, and for the application of the proceeds of such sale.

“ § 134. The money arising from the sale of real estate shall be applied in the following order: First, to the discharge of the costs and expenses of the sale and percentage and charges of the executor or administrator thereon, for his administration of the same ; second, the payment of mortgages and judgments or other liens or claims upon the estate sold, according to their respective priorities, so far as the same operated as a lien on the estate of the deceased at the time of his death, which shall be apportioned and determined by the court; third, to the discharge of claims and debts, in the order mentioned in article five of this act.”

It is contended that by these provisions the Legis[359]*359lature lias confided the entire management of the estate of a deceased person, not incumbered with specific liens at the time of his death, to the probate court; that divided control is not desirable, and was not contemplated by th'e Legislature, but that it is the policy to vest in one tribunal full jurisdiction, to the end that the property may be best preserved and distributed to those entitled to it or to the proceeds of the sale of it. On the other hand, the plaintiff cites section 439 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads:

“If either or both parties die after judgment, and before satisfaction thereof, their representatives, real' or personal, or both, as the case may require, may be made parties to the same, in the same manner as is prescribed for reviving actions before judgment; and such judgment may be rendered, and execution awarded, as might or ought to be given or awarded against the representatives, real or personal, or both, of such deceased party.”

And also section 512, which provides :

“The death of a person under arrest in an execution does not satisfy the judgment; but an execution may issue thereon as if no arrest had been made.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P. 93, 58 Kan. 355, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendenhall-v-burnette-kan-1897.