Meriwether v. Block

31 Mo. App. 170, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 161
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 Mo. App. 170 (Meriwether v. Block) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meriwether v. Block, 31 Mo. App. 170, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 161 (Mo. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Rombatxer, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In September, 1865, George D. Meriwether made his will, containing among others the following provisions : (1) Appointing his brother-in-law, Henry Y. P. Block, sole executor, and directing him to sell all real and personal estate in the manner, time, and place he may think best. (2) Directing the payment of a legacy of five thousand dollars to his cousin, Elizabeth M. A. Miller. (3) Constituting his son, Walker G., residuary devisee and legatee.

After making the will the testator married his cousin, the legatee Miller, and when he died, in 1874, he left his widow and son as sole legatees and devisees ’ of his estate under the provisions of the will above recited.

The executor named in the will took possession of the estate as such upon the decease of the testator, under letters testamentary, and has been in possession ever since.

On January 29, 1887, the plaintiff, residuary devisee as aforesaid, filed his complaint in the probate court, alleging that the executor was guilty of a violation of his duties, assigning a number of acts of mismanagement on his part, and praying for his removal. The defendant executor answered denying all charges of mismanagement, and stating as an affirmative defence, “that plaintiff and one M. A. E. Meriwether were the only heirs of said estate; that in 1885 the said M. A. E. Meriwether filed in the probate court of Lincoln county a complaint asking for the removal of defendant as executor of said estate, in which the same causes for defendant’s removal were urged as in the complaint of plaintiff in this suit; that-said former complaint was tried in the probate court, and on appeal was re-tried in the Lincoln [174]*174comity circuit court, at its March, term, 1886; that on said trial, there was a full, complete, and final determination of all matters and things set forth in said complaint, and that the decision of the said circuit court therein was, that there was no cause shown for the removal of defendant as executor of said estate, and said proceeding was dismissed; that plaintiff Walker Gr. Meriwether was present at the trial of said cause, and testified as a witness for defendant.”

On the trial of the cause in the circuit court (on .appeal from an order of the probate court removing the executor), the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show irregularities in the administration of the estate anterior to the trial of the cause of M. A. E. Meriwether against the defendant. These irregularities were of a character which, remaining unexplained, would have furnished ground for the executor’s removal. The plaintiff also gave evidence tending to show that since the institution of the former suit the executor had sold some real estate, part of the estate entrusted to him, for less than its reasonable value. But there was no evidence showing any bad faith on part of the executor in these sales, and it cannot be contended that the acts of the executor in making such sales, standing alone, furnished any ground for his removal.

The plaintiff also gave evidence tending to show the following facts : When Meriwether, the testator, died in 1874, the defendant lived on some lands in Pike .county known as the Aberdeen farm, consisting of about eight hundred acres in cultivation. Of this farm, the estate owned 21-32 parts, and the defendant’s wife the remainder, so that the defendant, by right of his wife, was a tenant in common to the extent of about one undivided third. The defendant continued to occupy this farm until its sale in 1886. He made settlements in the probate court in 1875, 1876, 1877, 1880, and 1885. In neither of these settlements did he charge himself with any rent of the Aberdeen farm. He testified on the' subject as follows: “At the trial of M. A. E. Meri[175]*175wether in 1886, in the Lincoln circuit court, she complained and urged as a ground of my removal that I had failed to charge myself with the .rent of the Aberdeen farm. I had asked Judge Bonfils, the probate judge of Lincoln county, who was probate judge when the administration begun, in reference to this, and he had informed me that all this matter of rent had better be adjusted in a final settlement. After this suit had been dismissed by the court, my attorneys informed me that I had better charge myself with the rent of the Aberdeen farm in my next settlement. As I was a party inteiested, I thought the rental value of the farm ought to be fixed by disinterested parties.” The defendant further stated: “In determining the rents which I ought to charge myself with for the Aberdeen farm, I thought it best to take the opinion of some disinterested men; with this in view, I asked Mr. Pew, Mr. Stoneberger, Mr. Wallace, and Mr. McCune, who were ■entirely disinterested and were acquainted with the farm, to get together and determine what would be a reasonable rental value for the farm since I had occupied it. I explained to them that I had only charged the estate for all new buildings and new fencing, and that any labor done by my own force on said buildings or fences, I charged nothing for that. I charged nothing for clover or timothy seed. They went themselves and agreed upon the amount which I carried into my settlement of October 13, 1886.”

The defendant also stated: “In the former trial, one cause for my removal, as urged, was that I had failed to account for any rent at all for the Aberdeen farm. The reason why this w'as not done was fully and satisfactorily explained to the judge who tried the ■case.”

It further appeared by the evidence, that the defendant had failed to charge himself with interest on moneys of the estate in his hands at any of the prior settlements, and had also failed to take credit for commissions on disbursements, but that, in his settlement [176]*176made in October, 1886, be did take credit for $1,663.20, on account of moneys disbursed for the estate, as shown by his various settlements since 1875, but did not charge himself with any interest.

When the defendant, introducing his evidence, disclosed that he intended to rely in part upon the former adjudication, the counsel for plaintiff made the following admission:

“It is here admitted by the counsel for the complainant that in the trial of the case of M. A. E. Meriwether against the defendant, there was a full and complete investigation of all matters growing out of the administration of said estate by defendant up to the date of said trial, to-wit, in April, 1886 ; that the same causes for removal of defendant as executor of said estate were urged in that case as are now urged in this case, except what has happened in said administration since said trial, and that the judgment in said former case stands unreversed and not appealed from.”

The record before us contains the following recital as to the further progress of the proceedings in this cause: “Thereupon the court held that all matters passed upon in said former trial were res judicata so far as this case is _ concerned, that the complainant in this case and M. A. E. Meriwether were privies, and that all testimony introduced by complainant in regard to the administration of said estate prior to the trial of said former suit, to-wit, in April, 1886, is excluded from this case, and the defendant required and instructed to direct his testimony to matters that have transpired since the trial of said cause.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Nelson v. Hammett
203 S.W.2d 115 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1947)
In re Ford
137 S.W. 32 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)
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90 P. 237 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1907)
Owens v. Link
48 Mo. App. 534 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
31 Mo. App. 170, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriwether-v-block-moctapp-1888.