Moylan v. Dewan

149 Iowa 617
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 Iowa 617 (Moylan v. Dewan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moylan v. Dewan, 149 Iowa 617 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The argument on behalf of appellant has extended quite beyond the issues presented in the pleadings and tried' in the court below. Bridget Moylan was ap-. pointed administratrix of the estate of her deceased brother, James Carroll, who died in 1905. So far as known 'to any of his relatives he was unmarried and childless. He left an estate consisting wholly of moneys amounting to $2,317. The administratrix .filed a report showing expenditures which left a balance in her hands of $1,674.24. She averred that out of this sum the collateral inheritance tax was yet to be paid. She also averred that Michael Moylan and Julia Dewan had filed claims against the estate for $195, each of which she had allowed. She asked also that an allowance be made to her • attorney as attorney’s fees. She also called the attention of the court to the claim of [619]*619Catherine Carroll as already indicated. She asked that a time of hearing be set, and that the court provide by order as to- the notice which should be. given of such hearing. The court entered a proper order providing for the publishing of a notice to all parties interested, and notice was published accordingly. Later Catherine Carroll duly appeared in person and by her guardian, Jerry Dewan, and averred that she was the only child of Patrick Carroll, now dead, a brother of the deceased James Carroll. She also averred that Bridget Movían, the administratrix,, and Julia Dewan, both sisters of the decedent, were the only other persons who were entitled to share in the estate, and that she and the said sisters of the decedent were entitled each to one-third of the same. On her behalf proof was offered that Catherine Carroll was the only daughter of Patrick Carroll and that Patrick Carroll was the brother of James Carroll. Several objections to offered testimony were made in the course of the trial by administratrix, and the adverse rulings of the trial court are now presented for our consideration. It may as well be said here that the relationship of Catherine Carroll to the decedent was proved beyond all reasonable doubt, regardless of any objectionable evidence in the case. At the time of the death of James Carroll, Catherine and her mother were residents of Middlesboro, England. As a result of correspondence with the relatives in Iowa, Catherine and her mother, in May, 1905, came to Bayard, Iowa, to the home of Julia Dewan, the sister of James Carroll. The mother remained about a month and returned to England, but Catherine has continued to live at Bayard ever since. Neither Catherine nor her mother had ever before seen .any of the father’s relatives. Mrs. Dewan had an old picture of her brother Patrick, which was recognized by the mother of Catherine as that of her former husband, although she did not recognize it when she first saw it. Some sixteen years prior, a brief correspondence of two or three letters had passed [620]*620between Patrick and Mrs Dewan. The letters on behalf of Mrs. Dewan were written by her husband, Jerry Dewan, who is now the guardian of Catherine Carroll. These letters, three in number, continued in the possession of the widow of Patrick until after the death of James, and according to her testimony she sent them to the sister, Julia Dewan. This fact is not denied by Mrs. Dewan, although she does deny that she ever authorized her husband to write for her. It is undisputed that there was a brother, Patrick Carroll, and that he lived in England, and that he was supposed to be dead, and that he was supposed to have left a wife and child. It does not appear that any question was ever raised as to the identity or relationship of Catherine until the administratrix’s report was filed, and we are impressed from the record that the whole controversy on this question is the result of an afterthought. The deposition of the mother of Catherine has been introduced in evidence. In her testimony she has given the family history of her husband as she got it from him. The principal objections urged are directed against this testimony as being hearsay.

1. Evidence: pedigree: family history: admission. I. It is sufficient to say that evidence relating to pedigree and genealogy, and family history, usually consists of hearsay, and presents an exception to the general rule on that subject. Such declarations are received in evidence as being the natural . effusions of a party who must know the truth, and who speaks on an occasion when

his mind stands in an even position, without any temptation to exceed or fall short of the truth. Whitlock v. Baker, 13 Ves. 514. As a general rule such information or statements concerning which a witness may testify must have antedated the litigation and the controversy, so that they could not have been induced thereby. They must be ante litem motam. Por a full discussion see: 16 Cyc. 1225, 1230; Alston v. Alston, 114 Iowa, 29; 2 Greenleaf [621]*621on Evidence (16th Ed.) section 114. We think there was no error in admitting the testimony complained of.

It is urged in argument by appellant that the evidence on behalf of Catherine is insufficient because there was no proof that Patrick and James Carroll were legitimate sons of the same parents, and because it appeared in the evidence that there was a cousin, Patrick Carroll, who also lived in England. We are unable to see merit in either contention. If it was incumbent upon Catherine to show the legal marriage of her grandparents in order to entitle her to inherit from her uncle James, it was quite as necessary that the same facts should be shown by Mrs. Moylan and Mrs. Dewan as a condition to their inheritance. It is also urged that there was testimony tending to show that two deceased sisters left surviving children, and that, therefore, others might be entitled to a share in this estate. No such claim was made-in the trial court. In the pleading of the claimant she averred that there were no other heirs than herself and her two aunts. No issue was taken upon this allegation and the case was tried below on this assumption. The same may be said of the claim of appellant in argument, that there is no proof that James Carroll was, in fact, childless and unmarried at the time of his death.

2. Estates of decedents: allowance of claims. II. The trial court disallowed the claims of Michael Moylan and Julia Dewan for $195 each. Complaint is made of that part of the order. The claimants themselves did not appeal. The administratrix as such had no interest in the allowance of the claims. She had not paid the same nor become liable thereon in any way in the administration of the estate. It was t-o her interest, therefore, as administratrix, and to the protection of the estate in her hands, that the claims should be disallowed. Whether the order was in fact erroneous or otherwise, she at least, has no ground of complaint.

[622]*6223. Same: distribution: inheritance tax. III. The trial court found that Bridget Moylan, Julia Dewan, and Catherine Carroll were entitled to take each one-third of the net estate and ordered distribution accordingly. The order included the finding that each was entitled to $527. These figures appear to have been taken from the administratrix’s report after deducting therefrom $25, attorney’s fee for a former attorney, and $66, costs in the present action. It is urged that the court erred in that it failed to take account of the collateral inheritance tax, and in that it failed to allow attorney’s fees for the present attorneys of the administratrix.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Iowa 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moylan-v-dewan-iowa-1910.