Robbins v. Swain

7 Ind. App. 486
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1893
DocketNo. 750
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 Ind. App. 486 (Robbins v. Swain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robbins v. Swain, 7 Ind. App. 486 (Ind. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinions

Davis, J.

No claim or pleading was filed in the court below, and the rights of the parties are to be determined on the agreed case under section 553, R. S. 1881.

Omitting the formal parts, the agreement is as follows:

"It is agreed that Charity Middleton, the decedent, made and executed her last will, which has been duly admit[487]*487ted to probate in the Randolph Circuit Court, a copy of which * * * is filed and made a part of this agreement; that said will was made on the 3d of October, 1874; that afterwards, to wit, on the 27th of February, 1887, the said Charity Middleton made a codicil to her said will, which is probated with it * * * ; that the said Charity Middleton died on the 22d day of February, 1890, having made no other will except the will and codicil above mentioned; that said decedent left no children or child surviving her, nor did she leave any husband living; that she left surviving her one brother, William H. Swain, the above-named executor; that the above-named Minerva Robbins is a niece of said Charity Middleton, deceased; that the bequest to the said Minerva Robbins, mentioned in the first item of said will, has-not been paid by the executor, or any one else, since the death of said decedent, and is still due and owing to her, and should be paid in full, unless the same or a portion thereof has been advanced by the payment to said Minerva Robbins, by said Charity Middleton, before the execution of said will, of certain moneys, as evidenced by two receipts found in the possession of said William EL Swain at the death of said Charity Middleton, of which receipts the following are true copies:

“ ‘March 1, 1868. Received of Charity Middleton one hundred dollars, as part of such amount as she may see fit to bequeath to me at her death.
‘Minerva Robbins.’
“ ‘August 25th, 1869. Received of Charity Middleton thirty dollars, as part of such amount as she may see proper to bequeath to me at her decease.
‘Minerva Robbins.’
“The receipts were taken by the said William 'EL Swain, who, as the agent of said -Charity Middleton, paid the money for which the first receipt was given to [488]*488Minerva Robbins, and it is not known whether the said Charity Middleton ever saw them, or not; that the receipts were taken in the form that they were, at the suggestion of Swain, as her agent, and with her knowledge and by her direction, and she knew that they were so taken; that the $30 receipt was given for a cow which the said Charity gave to'the said Minerva; that frequently, after making her will, the said Charity stated to different parties that she intended the said Minerva to have two hundred dollars out of her estate at her death.”

Item first of the will reads as follows:

“I give my beloved niece, Minerva Robbins, of Jay county, Indiana, the sum of two hundred ($200) dollars.”

The agreement is in all respects in proper form and duly verified.

On the filing of the agreed case, the court rendered judgment in favor of appellant for seventy dollars only, and appellant, having reserved proper exceptions, duly prosecutes this appeal.

At this point we are confronted with an important preliminary inquiry which has not been raised by counsel, but which we are required to consider in order to determine on what basis to proceed in our investigation of the questions involved.

It was held by this court, on the 13th of September, 1892, in Henes, Admr., v. Henes, 5 Ind. App. 100, 31 N. E. Rep. 832, that the court acquires jurisdiction in claims against decedents’ estates only in the manner pointed out in the act concerning such estates, and that section 553, supra, has no application to claims against decedents’ estates, and, in the language of the court, “It could not have been intended that an administrator or executor should be clothed with authority to bind by such an agreement the heirs and creditors of the estate he represents.”

[489]*489In that case a claim based on a note executed by the decedent in his lifetime had been filed against the estate. The claim, or complaint, after the cause reached the docket of the trial court, was duly amended. Subsequently the parties filed an agreed statement of facts, and the court said: “It follows, we think, that the parties had no authority to submit the cause under section 385, Elliott’s Supp., even if they attempted to do so, which is by no means clear from the record. The agreed statement of facts must be treated, therefore, simply as evidence.”

There is a material difference between an agreed case and a case where there is simply an agreement as to the facts. Elliott’s App. Proced., section 224.

In this connection, and as applicable to the case before us, we quote from the opinion of Judge Elliott in a recent case decided by the Supreme Court:

“Both parties assert that this is an agreed case under the statute; upon that theory they submit the case to us, and it was submitted to the trial court upon the same theory. Accepting, without investigation or decision, the statement of both parties, that this is an agreed case under the statute, and taking as our guide the rule that parties are bound by the theory which they assume to be the correct one, we shall treat this case as an agreed case. Carver v. Carver, 97 Ind. 497 (516); Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Wood, 113 Ind. 544 (564); Brink v. Reid, 122 Ind. 257. When parties agree upon a theory we can not, with propriety, deny their agreement, except, perhaps, when it is plainly necessary to do so in order to prevent manifest injustice.” Booth v. Cottingham, Guar., 126 Ind. 431.

That was an action against the guardian of a person of unsound mind, growing out of service alleged to have [490]*490been rendered tbe ward and his wife, by a physician, under the administration of a former guardian.

The case in hand is not analogous to the case of Henes, Admr., v. Henes, supra, and, strictly speaking, this is not an action ‘ ‘for the recovery of any claim against the decedent” within the purview of section 385, supra. The decedent, at her death, was not indebted to appellee. The rights of appellee, if any, arise under the will, and not by virtue of any claim due or not, existing at the death of the decedent. This is more in the nature of a proceeding to determime the construction of the will and the rights of appellee thereunder.

Whatever view, however, may be taken of the nature of the action, we have determined to inquire into the questions involved, on the theory, as enunciated by Judge Elliott, “that this is an agreed case under the statute.” Where the parties act upon the theory, in the trial court, that the case is an agreed case, they will be held to that theory on appeal, although the case may not come within the statute. Elliott's App. Proced., supra.

There is no statement or agreement as to what the intention of any of the parties may have been, and the court, on the theory on which the case is submitted and presented, is to determine the intention of the respective parties from the evidence as recited in the agreement, without the aid of any presumption in favor of t*he judgment of the court below. Indianapolis, etc., R. R.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ind. App. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-swain-indctapp-1893.