Monia v. Monia

902 S.W.2d 379, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1363, 1995 WL 437699
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 25, 1995
DocketNo. 67258
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 902 S.W.2d 379 (Monia v. Monia) 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
Monia v. Monia, 902 S.W.2d 379, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1363, 1995 WL 437699 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

REINHARD, Presiding Judge.

Petitioners appeal the order by the probate division of the circuit court setting aside its previous order directing issuance of letters of admimstration of the estate of August R. Monia, Jr. (decedent). We reverse and remand.

Decedent died on April 7, 1993. He was survived by a wife and four children. On December 6, 1993, petitioners, two brothers of decedent, filed a petition seeking a circuit court order requiring admimstration of the decedent’s estate. Section 473.020, RSMo [380]*3801994,1 permits any interested person to apply to the court for the appointment of a personal representative if no application for letters is filed within twenty days of a decedent’s death by a person entitled under § 473.110. Petitioners asserted that they were interested persons due to their alleged right to demand an accounting of the decedent’s acts as an attorney-in-fact under durable powers of attorney for two deceased cousins.

A hearing was held in which petitioners appeared by counsel. The surviving wife and four children appeared by separate counsel to contest appointment (respondent here is one of decedent’s sons). The probate court held that petitioners’ ability to require an accounting made them interested parties in decedent’s estate. On December 16, 1998, the court issued an “ORDER DIRECTING ISSUANCE OF LETTERS ”. In pertinent part, this order stated:

It is thus Ordered that if the above named persons entitled to make application to serve as Personal Representative in this estate make proper application and qualify within seven (7) [days] of the date of this Order, Letters of Administration shall be issued accordingly. If the Will of the deceased is filed and application made for admission, Letters Testamentary will be granted upon proper application. It is farther order [sic], upon failure of any person entitled to priority to request appointment as personal representative, that Letters of Administration shall be issued to any competent and suitable person upon proper application, and in the default thereof, Letters of Administration shall be issued to the Public Administrator. (Emphasis added).2

The order further required the petitioners to deposit funds for the payment of court costs and publication “and such other sums as may be required by the court for the payment of reasonable fees and costs of administration.” There was no appeal of this order.

On September 15, 1994, respondent filed a motion seeking “to dismiss the ... cause or, in the alternative, set aside its Order Directing Issuance of Letters”. Respondent stated:

1. Decedent died on April 17 [sic], 1993.
2. Decedent’s will has been submitted to probate, but no person has made application for letters within the statutory period.
3. That under the law, no Letters of Administration can be issued after one year after the decedent’s death.3

The court held a hearing on the motion on October 4, 1994; the court then entered an order which stated:

[T]he court grants said Motion finding that section 473.070 RSMo 1989 prohibits the opening of a decedent’s estate where no application therefore has been made within one year of the death of the decedent. Pursuant to this Court[’]s Order of December 16, 1993, upon the Petition to Require Administration, Court finds that no party has applied for Letters of Administration or Letters Testamentary and that this court was not requested by Petitioners to appoint the Public Administrator and that Petitioners were informed by the Court that no person entitled to apply had made application for the opening of an estate. It is therefore ordered that the Motion to Dismiss is granted, and the Clerk is directed to close this file.

On appeal, petitioners argue that the December 16, 1993 “ORDER DIRECTING [381]*381ISSUANCE OF LETTERS” had ordered the appointment of the Public Administrator since no other competent and suitable person applied. The appointment of the Public Administrator, they contend, was not conditioned upon a request for such appointment. They state that pursuant to the order, the Public Administrator was appointed prior to the one year time limit of § 478.070 and, therefore, dismissal under that statute was error.

We begin by noting that if the court’s order appointed the Public Administrator, then the one year application limitation of § 473.070 would not bar administration of decedent’s estate. Section 473.743 describes the manners in which a duty is imposed on a public administrator to take charge of an estate. This section reads, in pertinent part:

It shall be the duty of the public administrator to take into his charge and custody the estates of all deceased persons, and the person and estates of all minors, and the estates or person and estate of all incapacitated persons in his county, in the following cases:
⅜ ⅜ ⅜; ⅜ ⅜: ⅝
(9) Where from any other good cause, the court shall order him to take possession of any estate to prevent its being injured, wasted, purloined or lost.

A court order of public administration is implicitly within the court’s powers in a § 473.020 request for administration where “in default of application and qualification” the court may issue letters “to some other person found suitable.” Application for letters by the Public Administrator from a § 473.743(9) order is unnecessary. “An order directing the public administrator to take charge is in the nature of his appointment as an administrator of the estate.” Borron, Missouri Practice, Yol 5B: Probate Law and Practice § 1811 (1992).4 Thus, we hold that, at a minimum, a court’s order of public administration within one year of a decedent’s death satisfies the one year application requirement of § 473.070.1.

The crucial issue, therefore, is construing the meaning of the court’s “ORDER DIRECTING ISSUANCE OF LETTERS ” — whether it required a request that the Public Administrator be appointed or whether the order itself provided for the appointment of the Public Administrator. We note a court may impose terms as a condition precedent to the enjoyment of the benefit of an order. 60 C.J.S. Motions and Orders § 56 (1969).5

A party to whom a favor has been granted by an order on conditions must, at his peril, take notice of the order and comply with the conditions, according to the fair construction of their meaning, and on such performance the order becomes absolute without any new order to that effect. Noncompliance with such terms or conditions gives a result equivalent to a denial of the favor. (Emphasis added).

Id.

The construction of a court order is a question of law. Estate of Ingram v. Rollins, 864 S.W.2d 400, 402 (Mo.App.E.D.1993). As a question of law, we are free to apply independent judgment to the construction of the order.6 Id. at 402-03.

The legal principle is firmly established that the operative effect of an order lies in the order or decretal portion itself, rather [382]

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Estate of Croom v. Bailey
107 S.W.3d 457 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
902 S.W.2d 379, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1363, 1995 WL 437699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monia-v-monia-moctapp-1995.