State, Ex Rel. Cassel v. Johnston

185 N.E. 278, 204 Ind. 563, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 39
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1933
DocketNo. 26,290.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 185 N.E. 278 (State, Ex Rel. Cassel v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. Cassel v. Johnston, 185 N.E. 278, 204 Ind. 563, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 39 (Ind. 1933).

Opinion

*564 Hughes, J.

This is an original action filed in the Supreme Court of Indiana by Charles Cassel, relator, as executor of the last will and testament and estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased, against G. Edwin Johnston, judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, and against the Fayette Circuit Court. On February 3, 1933, the relator, Charles Cassel, filed a petition in said court to obtain a writ of mandate and prohibition against the defendants, requiring said defendants to grant a change of venue in a matter then pending in the Fayette Circuit Court, the same being exceptions to a current or partial report in the estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased, and to prohibit the defendants herein from hearing said exceptions to said current or partial report. Said affidavit and motion for change of venue was filed on February 2, 1933. On February 3, 1933, .this court made and entered an order for an alternative writ of mandate and prohibition and made the same returnable on February 20, 1933. On February 20, 1933, the defendants filed their return and answer, and, on March 17, 1933, the relator filed a reply to the return of the defendants.

On the 6th day of February, 1933, the relator filed a second petition in -this court to obtain a writ of mandate and prohibition against the defendants to prohibit them from disposing, or attempting to dispose, of any legal matters connected with, or pertaining to, the estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased, which is pending in the Fayette Circuit Court, and to have G. Edwin Johnston, judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt of the Supreme Court. Said petition also asks that said Johnston be mandated to expunge, cancel, vacate, and set aside the order of February 3, 1933, assuming and *565 purporting to remove the relator as executor of said estate. The petition filed on February 6, 1933, proceeds upon the theory that the defendant, G. Edwin Johnston, judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, had violated an order of this court in summarily removing Charles Cassel as executor of the estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased. The petition avers that said Charles Cassel was summarily removed as executor of said estate on February 3, 1933, by the said G. Edwin Johnston, as judge of the Fayette Circuit Court.

The relator’s petitions, the returns of the defendants thereto, and the reply of the relator, are very voluminous and it would unnecessarily extend this opinion to quote at length from either of them.

As to the alternative writ issued by this court on February 3, 1933, the defendants’ return thereto shows that the defendants had granted the change of venue which had been applied for prior to the time said writ of mandate and prohibition was issued out of this court and prior to the time of the service of any writ, or notice of any writ, to the judge in said cause and that the defendants took no action of any kind relative to the hearing of the objections and exceptions to the current or partial report filed in the estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased.

This court will not do a useless thing, and as the office of the writ of mandate is to compel action it will not issue if the duty sought to be enforced has already been done. It is conceded by all the parties hereto that the change of venue was granted on February 3, 1933, and it sufficiently appears that the defendants did not hear or attempt to hear the exceptions to the current, or partial report, on February 4, 1933. The relator herein contends that the defendant Johnston is in contempt of this court for the reason that he, as judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, summa *566 rily removed the relator, Charles Cassel, as executor of the Nancy J. Ranck estate, and that in doing so he assumed to pass upon and decide the matters with reference to the said partial or current report filed by said relator as executor of said estate. It appears from the petition and return that on the evening of February 3, 1933, at about 9:45 p.m., the said G. Edwin Johnston, as judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, prepared and had delivered to the clerk of said court an order purporting to summarily remove relator as said executor, and in said order of removal he' considers and discusses at some length the partial or current report filed by the relator in said estate, and his reasons for the removal of said executor are based partly on said report.

The defendants, for answer and return to the writ issued out of this court, say that they removed said executor on February 3, 1933, prior to and before any writ was issued out of this court, and before any notice of - any kind was served upon these defendants, and prior to and before any notice came to the knowledge of the defendants; that on the morning of February 4, 1933, after the Fayette Circuit Court was duly opened and the clerk had commenced the reading of the record for the previous day, to-wit: February 3, 1933, that Albert Heeb, one of the attorneys for the relator, laid a paper on the bench of the judge, but did not inform the court what it contained or what to do with it; that the court asked said Heeb to have a chair until the clerk had finished reading his record; that Heeb sat down in the court room for a few minutes, but then left the court room, and did not remain until the minutes of February 3d had been read; that after the record had been read, and there being no objections, it was signed; that after the record had been read and signed, Heeb re-entered the court room, picked up the papers he had laid on the judge’s bench and read to the de *567 fendants a writ of mandate and prohibition in open court on February 4, 1933; that the said Heeb, in answer to the defendant, said that he was not deputized to serve the papers; that a short time later the sheriff of Fayette county read said writ of mandate and prohibition to said Johnston.

Albert P. Heeb, one of the attorneys for the relator, as part of the reply to the defendants’ return and answer, under a sworn statement, says that on the morning of February 4, 1933, and before the clerk began the reading of the record of February 3, 1933, and before the judge had taken his chair, he handed to the judge the writ of mandate arid prohibition issued out of this court, and that he announced to said judge and said court that he was handing said judge and court a copy of the writ of mandate and prohibition in the matter of the estate of Nancy J. Ranck, deceased, as issued out of the Supreme Court of Indiana. William K. Stoops, who was the clerk of said county on February 4, 1933, in an affidavit which is made a part of the reply to the defendants’ return and answer, confirms the foregoing statement of Albert P. Heeb.

After giving due consideration to the petition of the relator, the return and answer of the defendants, and the reply of the relator to the return and answer of the defendants, we can not say with confidence that the defendant, G. Edwin Johnston, as judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, had notice or knowledge of the issuing out of this court of the alternative writ of mandate and prohibition on February 3, 1933, relative to the Nancy Ranck estate, but his conduct, as shown, strongly suggests that he did. The fact that the order removing the executor was delivered to the clerk at 9:45 P. M.

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Bluebook (online)
185 N.E. 278, 204 Ind. 563, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cassel-v-johnston-ind-1933.