Sporn v. Herndon

121 P.2d 602, 190 Okla. 149
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 13, 1942
DocketNo. 30306
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 121 P.2d 602 (Sporn v. Herndon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sporn v. Herndon, 121 P.2d 602, 190 Okla. 149 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Lincoln county reversing an order of the county court refusing to admit a will to probate.

William Sporn, a resident of Lincoln county, died September 4, 1940. On September 12, 1940, Helen Herndon, M. C. Sloan, and A. F. Minshall filed in the county court a petition for the probate of an alleged will of the deceased wherein they were named executors and trustees.

The purported will contained a provision as follows:

“I hereby nominate and appoint Helen Herndon, M. C. Sloan and A. F. Minshall as the executors of this my last will and testament to serve without bond, with full power and authority to do each and every act and thing necessary or proper to the full and complete administration of this my last will and testament.”

Adolph Sporn, brother, Emma Malone and Ida Keeler, sisters of deceased, filed a contest alleging, as grounds, mental incapacity of deceased; that the will was not signed, executed, published, attested or witnessed as required by law; [150]*150duress, menace, undue influence, and fraud; that the purported will is void for uncertainty and incapable of being enforced.

While the contest was pending in the county court, Carl L. Wright was appointed special administrator upon the application of contestants. Upon hearing before the county court, probate of the will was denied upon all the grounds set forth in the contest.

Helen Herndon, M. C. Sloan, and A. F. Minshall, as trustee and executor, and Helen Herndon, individually and as beneficiary under the will, and Wayne Lee Maxwell, by M. A. Cox as next friend, as beneficiary under said will, appealed to the district court on all questions of law and of fact.

Upon trial de novo the judgment of the county court was reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to admit the will to probate. From this decree, contestants, together with other heirs at law of said deceased, who had been made parties to the protest, appeal.

Two specifications of alleged error are presented.

The first is that the district court erred in overruling a motion to dismiss the appeal from the county court. The motion to dismiss was based upon the ground that Helen Herndon, M. C. Sloan, and A. F. Minshall, as trustees, were not aggrieved persons and had no right of appeal; that affidavit of interest was not filed by Wayne Lee Maxwell nor by Helen Herndon as required by sections 1399 and 1400, O. S. 1931, 58 Okla. Stat. Ann. §§ 723 and 724.

If the parties named in the will as executors had the right to appeal, it is unnecessary to consider the questions of failure to file affidavit of interest by the other parties.

Section 1397, O. S. 1931, 58 Okla. Stat. Ann. § 721, provides for an appeal to the district court from a judgment, decree, or order of the county court admitting or refusing to admit a will to probate.

Section 1398, O. S. 1931, 58 Okla. Stat. Ann. § 722, provides:

“Any party aggrieved may appeal as aforesaid, except where the decree or order of which he complains, was rendered or made upon his default.”

It is not contended that the order of the county court was rendered or made upon default of the proponents as executors named in the will.

Under statutes to the effect that appellate proceedings may be taken by an interested or aggrieved person or party, review of an order refusing to admit a will to probate may be had by an executor under the will, a special administrator with the will annexed, or a trustee under the will. 68 C. J. 1159. This is the general rule.

Cases in support of the text are cited from 13 states, one of which is Halde v. Schultz, 17 S. D. 465, 97 N. W. 369. In that case it is held:

“Under Rev. Prob. Code, sec. 346, granting the right to appeal to any person aggrieved by the action of the county court in admitting or refusing probate of a will, an executor is entitled to appeal.”

Examination of that case will disclose a record exactly like the one here involved except that it does not appear that a special administrator had been appointed.

In Re Hough’s Will, 120 Ore. 223, 251 P. 711, it is held:

“As a general rule, one named as executor in will, who is party to decree of probate court either refusing to admit will to probate or disallowing or setting it aside, may prosecute appeal therefrom, in view of Ore. L. secs. 549, 1143.”

And:

“Where decree prevented executrix from properly executing will, it was appropriate for her to appeal in interest of all concerned.”

In the opinion it is said:

“It is the duty of an executor to appeal if in good faith he is satisfied that the will has been improperly rejected.”

[151]*151Bell v. Davis, 43 Okla. 221, 142 P. 1011, quotes with approval from Re Bretzman’s Will, 117 Minn. 247, 135 N. W. 980, wherein a long list of authorities is cited as holding that an executor named in a will has the right to appeal from an order refusing to admit the will to probate. In Bell v. Davis, supra, the county court entered an order admitting the will there in question to probate on the petition of the executor named in the will. Contestants appealed to the district court. While the appeal was pending in the district court the executor named in the will died. Thereupon, an administrator with the will annexed was appointed by the county court, and the cause pending in the district court was revived in the name of such administrator. From an adverse ruling in the district court, the administrator with the will annexed appealed to this court. His right to appeal was upheld. In the opinion, it is said:

“We are clearly of the opinion that the administrator with the will annexed, standing in the place of the executor, is the representative of the will ‘and all rights created by it, and that he is directly interested in sustaining and having it probated, and is therefore a proper and necessary party to this proceeding in error.”

In re Bretzman’s Will, supra, after citing numerous authorities, says:

“In the light of these authorities, against which we have found none to the contrary, .... It may be noted, in this connection, that the very absence of later authorities upon the question under consideration would seem to indicate that the executor’s right to appeal in a case like this is very generally accepted.”

In this connection our attention is called to O’Connell v. Dockery et al. (Mo. App.) 102 S. W. 2d 748, a comparatively late case holding to the contrary. Other authorities are cited, but they do not appear to be directly in point.

The greater weight of authority, and, as we view it, the better reasoning, gives the executor named in the will the right of an appeal from an order denying probate of the will.

It is next contended that the evidence established undue influence, mental incapacity, duress, and menace.

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Bluebook (online)
121 P.2d 602, 190 Okla. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sporn-v-herndon-okla-1942.