Parker v. Parker

203 N.E.2d 513, 2 Ohio Misc. 93, 30 Ohio Op. 2d 551, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1965
DocketNo. 653851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 203 N.E.2d 513 (Parker v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Parker, 203 N.E.2d 513, 2 Ohio Misc. 93, 30 Ohio Op. 2d 551, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

AndRews, Chief Referee.

This matter arises upon a petition to vacate an order of this court approving the final and distributive account of Louis G-. Parker (referred to in the petition as “Lewis” G. Parker), executor of the estate of John L. Parker. The petition alleges that the account is not a true and correct account by reason of the fact that the executor accepted payment of $1,500 on a promissory note which was not an estate asset, and did not deliver to petitioner, a payee on the note, the sum received in payment, but accounted for it as estate funds. The petitioner asks that the order of this court be vacated and that the executor be ordered to deliver the funds to petitioner, and for such other orders as may be just and proper. In his answer, the executor denies all the allegations of the petition not matters of record in this court.

On April 23, 1964, a hearing was held before another referee, following which the parties filed briefs.

On October 21, 1964, a journal entry was filed, signed by the presiding judge of this court, ordering that the journal entry approving the final and distributive account be vacated and set aside, in accordance with Section 2325.02, Revised Code. On the same date, the presiding judge, by memorandum, referred to me all other questions raised by the petition, “for disposition under the statutes.” The memorandum also provided that journalization of the vacation order await final determination by the court, following receipt and review of my findings.

John L. Parker died on August 24, 1962, leaving a will executed on July 12, 1962. The will was probated on September 28, 1962, and, on the same date, testator’s son Louis G. Parker was appointed executor.

Testator left surviving him a wife, Antonia F. Parker, and four children, Louis G. Parker, John H. Parker, Beth Parker Zack, and Rosemary Dormendo. Mrs. Antonia Parker was the children’s stepmother.

By Item II of his will, testator bequeathed to his wife the household goods, furnishings, and equipment in and about his residence at the time of his death. By Item III he devised to her during her life or widowhood, the residence property, with [95]*95remainder in fee to the four children, share and share alike. By Item IV, all the residne of his estate was left to his four children, share and share alike.

The evidence adduced at the hearing shows an nnnsnal situation so far as the promissory note is concerned. For the moment, in summarizing the evidence, I will not include the testimony of Antonia Parker, to all of which testimony counsel for the executor objected.

Counsel for the petitioner offered in evidence a negotiable promissory note for $1,500, dated December 23, 1961, and payable to the order of “John L. Parker or Antonia F. Parker,” with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum for a period of two years. The note was signed by Beth P. Zack and Jay Chesler Zack, as makers. They are husband and wife. There being no time of payment expressed on the instrument, it was a demand note.

Mrs. Beth P. Zack testified that the note was in her handwriting. A copy of the note was substituted and admitted in evidence as applicant’s exhibit 1. For clarity I will refer to this note as note A. Mrs. Zack’s testimony discloses that actually she wrote two notes for the same transaction. I will refer to the other note as note B. Mrs. Zack calls note B the “original” and note A the “copy.” She kept note B “at home,” but delivered note A to her father, the testator.

Unfortunately, note B is not in evidence. Although a photostatic copy of it was offered, the referee excluded it under the “best evidence” rule. However, it was referred to without objection in the testimony.

There appears to be no doubt that notes A and B were identical except for a slight difference in the manner in which Mr. Zack signed his name. Clearly, Mr. and Mrs. Zack executed their promissory note in duplicate.

The note was given for a loan of $1,500, made by the testator to his daughter, Beth Zack, and her husband. This obligation to the testator did not appear on the inventory and appraisal or on the application for determination of the inheritance tax, because the executor knew nothing about it at the time. His testimony is most confusing as to when he learned about the loan, but the time of his acquiring this knowledge is not important in the solution of the present problem.

[96]*96Likewise, there is confusion about whether an item in the amount of $1,475 on the application for determination of the inheritance tax represented this loan. Again, I do not think it matters, although the record and documents indicate to me that the $1,500 item was not included.

The $1,500 was paid to the executor sometime in October 1963, and the item appears on the final and distributive account as “10/ /63 Beth Zack, repayment of loan $1,500.” The executor describes this as “the repayment of a loan that I didn’t know existed.”

The final and distributive account also shows the transfer of a life estate in the real property to the widow, with remainder to the children, and a distribution of one-fourth of the residuary estate to each child. Three children received $6,366.49 each, and one child received $6,366.50. There is nothing indicating transfer of any cash to the widow, and she has received no payment on the note. The final and distributive account was filed on October 25, 1963, and approved on December 9, 1963.

It will be recalled that Beth Zack testified that she kept the “original,” which I have designated as note B. Consistently with this testimony, the executor said that he did not see the note until Beth paid it off and “signed it paid.”

Up to this point I have given no consideration to the testimony of Mrs. Antonia Parker, the widow and petitioner. When she was called as a witness, counsel for the executor entered an objection “to all testimony by any parties in this action against the executor.” The referee stated that he would allow the testimony, “reserving the right, of course, subsequently to determine as to whether it is admissible or whether it should be stricken # * Thereupon, counsel again objected to all Mrs. Parker’s testimony and to the ruling of the referee. During the examination of Mrs. Parker, counsel made some specific objections to certain testimony, and at the conclusion of her examination, he again objected to all of it. The referee adhered to his previous ruling.

Naturally, counsel’s general objection was based upon Section 2317.03, Revised Code, known colloquially as the “dead man’s statute.” That section provides: “A party shall not [97]*97testify when the adverse party * * # is an executor # * # of a deceased person except: * *

It is obvious that Mrs. Antonia Parker and the executor are adverse parties. Mrs. Parker claims that the $1,500 belongs to her, whereas the executor claims that it belonged to the estate, and that he properly received, accounted for, and distributed it. The statute has reference to the adverse character of the parties at the time of trial rather than at the time of the transaction. 56 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d, Witnesses, Section 162.

Counsel for Mrs. Parker contends that her testimony is admissible under exception (E) of Section 2317.03, Revised Code, which reads:

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Bluebook (online)
203 N.E.2d 513, 2 Ohio Misc. 93, 30 Ohio Op. 2d 551, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-parker-ohprobctcuyahog-1965.