State Ex Rel. Lipic v. Flynn

215 S.W.2d 446, 358 Mo. 429, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 597
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 40987.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 446 (State Ex Rel. Lipic v. Flynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Lipic v. Flynn, 215 S.W.2d 446, 358 Mo. 429, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 597 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*432 [446]

ELLISON, J.

Prohibition to represent Judge Flynn of the circuit court, city of St. Louis. The underlying contest is between two estates, each claiming the same assets. Relators, as executors of one estate, challenge Judge [447] Flynn’s jurisdiction to entertain a suit against them in the circuit, court for conversion of those assets. That conversion suit was filed by the administratrix of another estate after she had already brought a proceeding against relators in the probate court to discover the same assets, under Sec’s 63-67, R. S. 1939, Mo., R. S. A., which latter proceeding is still pending. Re-lators’ theory is that since the two proceedings are essentially the same, and the probate court first acquired jurisdiction of the latter proceeding, therefore the circuit court has no jurisdiction to proceed against them in the conversion suit. The respondent judge [through counsel for the administratrix of the second estate, the real party in interest] disputes this.

The facts in brief are that relators Joseph Lipic, Jr. and Emil Lipic are executors of the will of Joseph Lipic, Sr. who died in 1946. His estate is now under administration in the probate court of St. Louis. In his lifetime he had been the administrator of the estate óf Emma Berg Lipic, who died in 1942, and in that estate had inventoried its assets as being only her bank account for about $750.

A year or so after the death of said Joseph Lipic, Sr., Gertrude Wheeler was appointed administratrix d.b.n. of said Emma Berg Lipic’s estate, and filed in the probate court in that estate the aforesaid proceeding to discover assets against relators as executors of the estate of Joseph Lipic, Sr. She alleged therein that he had embezzled about $24,000 of the assets of the Emma Berg Lipic estate, consisting of secured promissory notes, bank paper and cash; that he was concealing and withholding them when he died; and that his executors had them in their possession or control. The probate court had heard that ease and had it under advisement when this prohibition proceeding was filed against Judge Flynn.

But two days after she had filed that discovery of assets proceeding in the probate court, the said Gertrude Wheeler, administratrix d.b.n. of the Emma Berg Lipic estate, also filed a suit in “conversion” [which we understand to mean trover and conversion] in the circuit court against relators for the same property, where it is pending-in the respondent Judge Flynn’s division. It is conceded by the parties that the same identical assets actually are involved in both the probate and circuit court proceedings, the principal difference between them being that the probate court proceeding primarily seeks the recovery of those assets in kind in behalf of the Emma Berg Lipic estate, whereas the circuit court case asks a money judgment for their value because of their wrongful conversion.

Relators, as executors of Joseph Lipic Sr.’s estate, first filed in Judge Flynn’s court a verified motion to dismiss the conversion suit *433 on the ground that the probate court had preempted jurisdiction o£ the controversy in the discovery of assets proceeding, and therefore the circuit court had no jurisdiction. Judge Flynn heard arguments and overruled it. Then relators filed a motion asking him to abate that suit awaiting final action in the. discovery of assets proceeding, but he overrated that, also, and had set the conversion case down for trial when the present petition for prohibition was filed here.

We here set out Sec. 63 of our statutes on which the probate proceeding was based. [Sec. 67 makes Sec. 63 applicable not only to proceedings brought by executors, and administrators, but also to those brought against them, as here.] The words we have first itali-cised therein were added by Laws Mo. 1881, p. 32. The words next italicized were added in 1 R. S. 1855, p. 130, § 7, wit]i a footnote: “This section has been amended to meet the case of Dameron’s Administrator v. Dameron, 19 Mo. Rep. 317.” The statute is as follows:

“If the executor or administrator, or other person interested in any estate, file an affidavit in the proper court, stating that the affiant has good cause to believe and does believe that any person has concealed or embezzled, or is otherwise wrongfully withholding any goods, chattels, money, books,, papers or evidences of debt of the deceased, and has them in his possession or under his control, the court may cite such person to appear before it, and compel such appearance by attachment.”

[448] Counsel for the respondent Judge Flynn and Gertrude Wheeler, adm’x, respectively, both concede that probate courts have exclusive jurisdiction of statutory proceedings to discover assets under Sec’s 63, 67, supra. But the former contend such proceedings are special and will not lie. unless the relators were in possession of the assets in controversy when and before the affidavit was filed; and they assert first that relators’ petition for prohibition here does not so allege.

It is true that the prohibition petition does not allege as an independent fact that relators were in possession of the disputed assets when the affidavit of Gertrude Wheeler, adm’x d.b.n. was filed in the probate court. But it does allege the affidavit charged relators then had the disputed assets “in their possession or under their control.” That allegation in the affidavit followed the statute and was enough to give the probate court jurisdiction of the discovery of assets proceeding. The parties could not litigate on the merits in the prohibition proceeding as to whether relators in fact had possession of those assets. The only question in that proceeding would be whether the probate court on the face of the affidavit had acquired exclusive jurisdiction of the controversy in the discovery of assets proceeding- before the conversion suit was filed in the circuit court. We rule that point against respondent.

*434 Next respondent’s counsel contend that such statutory proceedings for the discovery of asset’s are special and summary, and are not p reclusive as against other legal remedies open to the executor, administrator or other claimant in the circuit court, such as trover and conversion, citing Niederberg v. Golluber (Mo. Div. 1) 162 S. W. (2d) 592, 597(3). And in that connection respondent’s counsel further cite Barnes v. Boatmen’s Nat’l Bank, 355 Mo. 1136, 1142(2), 199 S. W. (2d) 917, 919-20(1), where it is held that many claims against estates may be established in the circuit court under See’s 183, 184, 188, 208, R. S. 1939, Mo., R. S. A., as well as in the probate court.

That may be conceded, but the question here is not whether alternative remedies were available to Gertrude Wheeler, adm’x. On the contrary it is whether she could elect to adopt the probate court route by a discovery of assets proceeding; next, bring a suit for conversion involving the same property in the circuit court while the first proceeding was and still is pending; and then prohibit the circuit court from going forward with the conversion suit on the ground that the probate court has preempted jurisdiction of the controversy in the first proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W.2d 446, 358 Mo. 429, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lipic-v-flynn-mo-1948.