Petitt v. Morton

162 N.E. 627, 28 Ohio App. 227, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 549, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 494
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 627 (Petitt v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petitt v. Morton, 162 N.E. 627, 28 Ohio App. 227, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 549, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 494 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

Sullivan, P. J.

These are proceedings in error from the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, and the question is whether the court committed prejudicial error in overruling a demurrer to the first ground of defense of the answer filed by the defendants, which traversed the allegations of an amended petition, wherein it is sought, on the part of the petitioner, Morton Petitt, to have a trust declared in the defendant Morton, in favor of the *229 plaintiff, in what is known as the Savoy Hotel property, located on Euclid avenue in the city of Cleveland, in the downtown section, and which is claimed to be very valuable property.

In 1905, Milton Morton, father of defendant, William C. Morton, executed a will and testament, which is said to be the last will and testament of the decedent, Milton Morton, which will was admitted to probate in due form in the same year. It is claimed that this will is an instrument of no legal force and effect, because it was forged by the defendant and fraudulently probated by him, and under it he and his sisters, the co-legatees and only heirs at law, took custody, possession, and control of the property, and now hold the legal title thereto by virtue of said'will thus probated.

It appears that earlier on the same day that this will was made, there was another will made which named as devisee a nephew of the decedent, the plaintiff in error, Morton Petitt, and it appears that the forgery was not discovered until years after-wards, when the statute of limitations had run against the right to contest the will under the statute. The plaintiff uses this unprobated will as a basis for the declaration of the trust, according to the allegations of the amended petition, and, specifically, the relief sought is a decree in equity declaring the defendant Morton a trustee ex maleficio for the plaintiff as to the rents and profits which have come into the possession of the heirs at law, and an accounting.

The answer has two defenses, but the first one is the only one material to the issue raised by the demurrer, and, in substance, it is that the plaintiff has *230 no capacity to sue or to maintain Ms action because tbe unprobated will has never been admitted to probate under the statute, or otherwise, in the county of Cuyahoga, where the property is located. The demurrer was filed to this first defense, and, being general in its nature, alleged that the answer was insufficient in law to constitute a valid ground of defense to the cause of action incorporated in the amended petition, and, this demurrer having been overruled by the common pleas court, and the plaintiff not desiring to plead further, judgment was rendered in behalf of the defendants, and by these proceedings it is sought to reverse the judgment of the court in overruling the demurrer as it applies to the first gróund of defense.

Thus the vital question is whether a court of equity, under the unprobated will, can declare a trust on the ground of fraud, and in that manner ultimately have declared invalid the will in favor of the heirs at law, duly probated under the statute, under which occupancy, possession, and rents and profits ensue.

There was no effort to attempt to probate the will maMng the nephew the devisee, as it is admitted that under the law the probate court would not and could not, without independent proceedings in a court of equity, probate the same, and it is conceded that, by the dates in the record, the time for contesting the will probated has for a period of years elapsed under the limitations enjoined by the statutes.

Tinder the holding in the case of Stafford v. Todd, 17 Ohio App., 114, proceedings to probate the prior will might have been attempted, and upon an order refusing the probate thereof appeal might have *231 been had, even though the probated will itself was a living and operating instrument which conveyed the legal title through the defendants in error. The course which is suggested by the syllabus in that case was not adopted, for the reasons herein noted, to wit, that probate would have been refused, and that, independent of any such action on the part of the probate court, the plaintiff had a right, on the grounds of fraud and forgery, as in the instant proceedings, to establish proceedings to declare a trust upon the structure of the unprobated will, and eventually, through proceedings in equity, to set aside the probated will by declaring a trust, and through some subsequent process to secure under the Ohio statutes the probate of the unprobated will, because it is conceded that it is only the probate court or the common pleas court that has the power to probate the last will and testament of a deceased person.

This proceeding, intimated in the syllabus of Stafford v. Todd, supra, is as follows:

“Where a will is probated by an order of the probate court, and a later will is afterwards filed for probate, and where proceedings are pending in the court of common pleas on appeal, such proceedings will not be enjoined at the suit of those interested in the will first probated.

“The proponents of the later will by filing that will for probate, and by perfecting an appeal in the court of common pleas from an order of the probate court refusing to' probate such later will, are pursuing a remedy authorized by law.

“The order of probate of the first will is not conclusive as against proper proceedings pending to establish and pipbate such later will.”

*232 We call attention to this authority mainly for the reason that it is an Ohio authority, and the proceeding, at least intimated by the syllabus, was not pursued by the petitioner, but he relied wholly upon his right under the law to establish a trust in the premises, which, in its final analysis, if the proceedings were pursued, would declare the probated will a nullity and prepare the way for the proving of the unprobated will in the only courts authorized by the statute, as herein noted.

This only has a bearing upon the case with respect to the question whether, under the facts as they are in this case, a forged will, because it is probated, of legal necessity has precedence in operative force over an unprobated will which is genuine.

From all the authorities it is clear and conclusive that title to property does not pass in Ohio under an unprobated will, and, in fact, no interest whatsoever passes, either legal or equitable, in any such instrument. In other words, under the statute, even the last will and testament of a decedent has no force or virtue in law until it is probated, and, consequently, until then has no legal standing as a basis for a suit in any court, or as a basis for any claim to the property, or an interest therein, on the part of the devisee of such an instrument. It is a mere scrap of paper, inert and lifeless, until it is clothed with the garment of the law. It is a mere carcass until infused with the blood of probate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 627, 28 Ohio App. 227, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 549, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petitt-v-morton-ohioctapp-1928.