Thomas v. People ex rel. Joiner

107 Ill. 517, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 291
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 107 Ill. 517 (Thomas v. People ex rel. Joiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. People ex rel. Joiner, 107 Ill. 517, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 291 (Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the Fourth District, affirming a judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair county for the sum of $703.87, in favor of the People of the State of Illinois, for the use of John Joiner, and against Charles W. Thomas, the appellant, and others, on his official bond as late master in chancery of St. Clair county.

It appears that after the execution of the bond sued on, and during his term of office, there came into Thomas’ hands, as such master, certain moneys, being the proceeds of a sale of real estate made by him in a partition proceeding, $703.87 of which belonged to the said Joiner, and for which the recovery in this suit was had. Long before the partition proceedings, however, Joiner had left his home and people in St. Clair county, and his whereabouts was to them, and all his former acquaintances, wholly unknown. Not having been heard of by any of his relations or acquaintances for more than seven years, his brother, Daniel Joiner, acting upon the hypothesis he was dead, applied to and obtained from the county court of St. Clair county letters of administration on his estate. After administration had been thus granted on John’s estate upon the hypothesis that he was dead, the said Charles W. Thomas, upon formal demand by Daniel Joiner, paid to him, as the administrator of John, the latter’s share in the proceeds of the partition sale. John subsequently, however, turned up alive, and on Thomas’ refusal to pay the rda.im a second time, instituted the present action, with the results already stated.

The foregoing facts are specially pleaded as a defence to the action, and the question for determination is, are they sufficient for that purpose. While the question has never before; so far as we are advised, been directly presented to this court, yet it is by no means a new one. It has frequently been mooted before the courts of this country and of England, though actual decisions directly upon the question are not very numerous. Judging from the cases where the point has come directly in judgment, as well as from judicial dicta and expressions of opinion to be found .in the standard text-books, there has been but little diversity of opinion upon the question. The general doctrine on the subject undoubtedly is, that a grant of administration oh a live man’s estate, together with all acts done under such a grant, is absolutely null and void. Allen v. Dundos, 3 T. R. 125; Freeman on Judgments, (3d ed.) sec. 319 a; Jochumsen v. Suffolk Savings Bank, 3 Allen, 87; D’Arusment v. Jones, 4 Lea, 251, 40 Am. Rep. 12 ; Stephenson v. Superior Court, 15 Rep. (Col.) 140; Melia v. Simmons, 45 Wis. 334, 30 Am. Rep. 746; Griffith v. Frazier, 8 Cranch, 23.

It is said by Freeman, in discussing the question, in his work on Judgments, above cited: “The decrees and orders of a probate or surrogate’s court, made in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred upon it by law, are as final and conclusive as the judgments, decrees or orders of any other court. The character and finality of res judicata attach to the decisions made in probate or surrogate’s courts, irrespective of the nature of the issue determined, provided, always, that the court had jurisdiction to determine it. Hence, whether the adjudication be for or against the validity of a will, for or against granting letters of administration, allowing or disallowing an account, granting or refusing to grant a homestead, it is in either ease a final settlement of the matter of which it assumes to dispose, and it can not be collaterally attacked, impeached or avoided in the same or in any other court by any of the parties thereto, nor by any person in privity with them. It is, however, as in other cases, essential that the parties to be affected be brought within, the jurisdiction of the court by the service of notice prescribed by law, and that the court have jurisdiction over the subject matter. The question occasionally arises whether the grant of- letters testamentary or of administration on the estate of a person in fact living, but supposed to be dead, is an act beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and therefore so utterly void that no person is protected in dealing with the executor or administrator while his letters remain unrevoked. The weight of authority is very decidedly to the effect that the decease of the supposed decedent is a prerequisite to the jurisdiction of the court, and that he is wholly unaffected by the proceedings for the settlement of his estate,—the only adjudication, so far as we are aware, in conflict with the rule here stated, having been rendered by the Court of Appeals of the State of New York.” We fully concur in this general statement of the author on the subject.

In line with the doctrine here announced it is said in Melia v. Simmons, supra: “The proceedings of administration!, settlement and assignment of the estate of the respondent, represented to have been dead when he was and still is alive, are absolutely null and void, for all purposes whatsoever. * * *' The county court of Dodge county, or any other court, has no jurisdiction in this particular case or in such a class of cases. There is no class of cases which embraces the administration of the estates of living persons as if they were dead. The proceedings are void ab initio and throughout. If this ease falls within any class of eases, it is a class in which no court has any right to deliberate or render any judgment, and in which every conceivable act is an absolute nullity. The only jurisdiction the county court has in respect to the administration of estates, is over the estates of cleacl persons. It would seem that the bare statement of such a proposition is enough, without citing authorities.”

The only case we have been able to find, or to which our attention has been called, holding a contrary doctrine, is that of Roderigos v. East River Savings Institution, 63 N. Y. 460, (referred to by Freeman in the above citation,) which was decided by a divided court of three to four, and has since been the subject-of much-adverse criticism. • (10 Am. Law Eeg. 787; 15 id. 212.) The case, it is true, is placed upon the peculiar provisions of the New York statutes, but we confess we see nothing in them that seems to warrant the conclusions drawn from them. Moreover, we regard the authority of that case as a precedent, even in New York, much shaken by the reasoning of the New York Court of Appeals in the same case, when before it on a subsequent occasion. The case as last reported will be found in 76 N. Y. 316.

It must be conceded that if the probate court had authority to act at all in the particular case before it, then its adjudication, like that of any other court, became binding and conclusive upon all parties to the proceeding, until reversed or otherwise set aside. The real question therefore is, whether the court had any authority to act at all. The contention of appellant is, “that the jurisdiction of the probate court did not depend upon the death of Joiner, but upon the fact that that court was set in motion by the application for an. administrator, and having been so set in motion, its jurisdiction to investigate and decide was complete, and its decision can not be collaterally attacked as to anything the court was called upon to decide. ” This proposition, in the light of the facts as confessed upon the record before us, we regard as fundamentally erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
107 Ill. 517, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-people-ex-rel-joiner-ill-1883.