State Ex Rel. Bolshaw v. Montgomery

146 S.W.2d 129, 237 Mo. App. 678, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 10
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 129 (State Ex Rel. Bolshaw v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Bolshaw v. Montgomery, 146 S.W.2d 129, 237 Mo. App. 678, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 10 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

TATLOW, P. J.

The relator seeks by this proceeding to compel the probate judge to revoke the letters of administration heretofore issued to one Dovey Schaerer, and to issue the letters to him and permit him to administer the estate. A former proceeding was before this court, seeking a writ of prohibition, which was denied for the reason that it was not the proper remedy. [137 S. W. (2d) 654.] A general outline of the facts appears in that proceeding, which it is not necessary to repeat here. The parties have treated the petition in the instant ease as the alternative writ, and the respondent has filed a return thereto, and the case has been, argued both on briefs and orally before the court. The court has appointed the Hon. Arch A. Johnson, a member of the Bar of this court, as a commissioner to hear and determine the facts in the case as outlined in the order, as f ollows:

“Whether the said relator, James Henry Bolshaw, Jr., was, on the 7th day of January, 1939, the date of the death of Oscar Farrar in Dade County, Missouri, a resident of the State of Missouri and an heir at law of said deceased and next of kin so that, under the statutes of descent and distribution of the State of Missouri, he was entitled, on proper application therefor, to administer the estate of said deceased. ’ ’

Our said commissioner has filed a very carefully prepared and excellent report and has returned therewith a transcript of the testimony and exhibits offered in evidence by the relator and the respondent, together with the depositions of witnesses introduced in evidence.

Our said commissioner finds as a fact that James Henry Bolshaw, Jr., was, on said 7th day of January, 1939, the date of the death of *680 Oscar Farrar in Dade County, Missouri, a resident of the State of Missouri, and an heir at law of said deceased and next of kin of said deceased, and concludes his opinion with reference thereto, as follows: . . So, in my opinion, there can be no question that-the relator sustained the relationship of second cousin to Oscar Farrar, deceased. The testimony shows that the relator has for seventeen years held responsible positions with a bank or trust company in the city of. St. Louis, and would be a competent person to administer upon the estate.”

We have carefully read the report of the commissioner and find that his conclusion is well supported by the evidence and corroborated by court records and documentary evidence extending over a number of years, showing that the deceased was a descendant of Sullivan Farrar and Mary Taylor Farrar, who lived and resided in the State of Iowa. The date of the death of Sullivan Farrar does not appear in the report but was some time prior to the year 1880. Mary Taylor Farrar moved to Lockwood, Missouri, some time after 1880, where, she died on the 9th day of December, 1904, at the extreme old age of 104 years. She brought with her her son William H. Farrar, who continued to live with her in Lockwood until 1904, when she died. She also brought with her her grandson, Oscar Farrar, the deceased, whose estate is being administered, who continued to reside with her in Lockwood until her death on December 9, 1904, and who continued to live in Lockwood until his death on January 7, 1939.

This evidence is undisputed except for an effort on the part of Jess Farrar, et ah, to show that the deceased was the son of William Farrar, of Lawrence County, in the State of Illinois. In support of this claim there was introduced in evidence the petition for letters of administration on his estate, which petition was filed in Lawrence County, Illinois, on January 28, 1874. The petition recited that William Farrar died in said county on the 11th day of, September, 1873, intestate; that he left surviving him no widow. The petition named, among his surviving children, Mary O. Farrar and Mary L. Farrar, and sought to show that Oscar Farrar, the deceased, was the same person as Mary O. Farrar, who, when he was about seventeen years of age, left Illinois and was gone until he reached the age of about twenty-one years, when he returned for a short time and absconded with about $6,000, in money belonging to the .estate of William G-. Farrar, deceased. All efforts to thereafter locate him proved unsuccessful, except that one witness testified that he saw him on one occasion a number of years afterwards in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.

The William Farrar who died intestate in Lawrence County, Illinois, on the 11th day of September, 1873, and who left surviving him no widow, could not have been the husband of Mary Taylor Farrar, who lived in Lockwood, Missouri, a number of years, and who was the grandmother of the relator, and who did not die until *681 the 9th day of December, 1904, and with whom Oscar Farrar, the deceased, lived until her death.

The only testimony in the ease attempting to identify Oscar Farrar, the deceased, as Mary O. Farrar, the son of William Farrar who died in Lawrence County, Illinois, on the 11th day of September, 1873, is the testimony of Nelson Lemery, who had lived in Lockwood all his life; had known Oscar Farrar.ever since he was old enough to know anything; that he knew Oscar’s grandmother, his uncles, William and Daniel Farrar, and Howard Farrar; that he had known Oscar’s grandmother well, “had been in the house a thousand times”. In other words, the witness identified the deceased in the instant case .as a member of the family of Mary Taylor Farrar, deceased, who, so far as the evidence show's, was in no way connected with William Farrar, who died in Illinois in 1873; yet he testified that, in the fall of 1910, he was working as a carpenter on Oscar’s house in Lockwood, and that Oscar Farrar told him that his name was Mary 0., or Oscar Farrar. This is an absurdity upon its face and clearly has no probative force. It would not prove anything if the statement was, in fact, made by the deceased. Concerning the testimony of this witness the commissioner found:

‘ ‘ The demeanor of this witness was not the best, and his testimony, which was wholly uncorroborated, was contradicted by all of the pertinent and credible testimony in the case and, in my opinion, is unworthy of belief. ’ ’

In this finding we fully concur, as evidently do the counsel for the respondent, for, while they have filed exceptions to the report of the commissioner as to his recommendation as to the law of the case, they do not except to his findings of fact.

In addition to his findings of fact the commissioner’s recommendation as to the law is:

“. . . , the probate court had no jurisdiction to render the judgment decreeing Dovey Schaerer the adopted daughter of Oscar Farrar.”

He cites a number of cases to sustain his conclusion.

The only exception to the report is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 129, 237 Mo. App. 678, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bolshaw-v-montgomery-moctapp-1940.