Townsend v. Beavers

188 So. 1, 185 Miss. 312, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 154
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1939
DocketNo. 33661.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 So. 1 (Townsend v. Beavers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. Beavers, 188 So. 1, 185 Miss. 312, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 154 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

This appeal involves as its main issues, those presented by the amended and supplemental exceptions and objections of the heirs at law to the final account of the administrator, and their effort to surcharge that account, because of the payment by the administrator, out of the assets of the estate, of five notes which the heirs now aver were not legally probated against the estate.

Two of these notes were those of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, one for the original principal sum of $450 and the other for $1000. We are not permitted here to inquire into the validity of the probate of the aforementioned two notes, for the reason now to be stated.

About four years after the administration had been opened, and after the administrator had collected all the personal assets of the estate that could be collected, he *Page 319 presented, on December 9, 1935, his petition to sell a part of the real property to pay the remaining debts of the estate, and, among these remaining debts or balances of debts, he listed in the petition as one of the items a balance due to the said Bank in the sum of $514.59. And he made as parties defendant to said petition all the eight heirs and distributees of said estate, all of them being adults.

Two of these heirs were nonresidents, and they were brought into court by published process. It is contended that this process was void, for the reason that the allegations in the petition did not sufficiently state the post office address of the two nonresidents — in fact, that the petition did not give any post office address at all. The decree recited that these nonresident defendants were served with process "by publication thereof in the News Register on February 27, 1936, and March 5, 1936, and March 12, 1936, and by mailing copies of said process to the said defendants to their post office addresses, and that said process is, in all respects, and in the service thereof, in accordance with the statutes, proof of all of which is on file in this cause." It is not shown by any proof in this record that there was not some sufficient affidavit for the process by publication, aside from the allegations in the petition itself; and in view of the decree the existence of such a sufficient affidavit will be presumed when there has been no such an affirmative showing as would exclude the existence thereof. Brotherhood Trainmen v. Agnew, 170 Miss. 604, 613, 155 So. 205.

The third of the heirs was summoned by process, personally served upon him, and the other five appeared by waivers. These waivers were in identical language, and one of them, as a sample of the others, is copied, as follows: *Page 320

"In the Chancery Court of Scott County, Mississippi.

"Vacation Term, 1935.

"Estate of C. Beavers, Deceased.

"T.W. Townsend, Administrator. No. 3846

"Waiver of Process and Entry of Appearance.

"Be it known that I, Edna Mae Beavers, an heir-at-law of C. Beavers, deceased, and in interest in said estate, do hereby waive the service of process upon me and enter my appearance in said cause whereby and wherein the administrator of said estate, pursuant to a decree of the court, has filed a petition to determine and set aside to the estate the exemptions provided by law, and to sell the residue of the land of said estate, or such part thereof as may be necessary, to pay the debts of said estate, and finally conclude the administration of said estate; and I hereby consent that said matter may be heard and determined at such time and place as the court may hear the same.

"Witness my signature this 7th day of December, 1935.

"Edna Mae Beavers."

"State of Miss. "Scott County.

"Personally appeared before me, the undersigned authority in and for said county and state, Edna Mae Beavers, personally known to me, who acknowledged that she signed, executed and delivered the foregoing instrument on the day and year therein mentioned for the purposes therein stated.

"Witness my hand and seal of office this 16th day of December, 1935."

"B.R. Nichols, Chancery Clerk."

"Filed Jan. 3, 1936. "B.R. Nichols, Clerk."

It will be observed that this waiver was acknowledged before the chancery clerk, and that it specifically and completely identified itself with the court, the matter and the particular petition therein to which it was addressed. It goes into greater particularity than is mentioned in *Page 321 the new statute on this subject, Chap. 244, Laws 1936. Had this waiver been written at the bottom of the petition itself and acknowledged before the clerk, its validity would be without question, under Byrne v. Jeffries, 38 Miss. 533, 539. There is no substantial difference that it was written on a separate sheet of paper acknowledged before the clerk and filed by him in the cause; and it can make no substantial difference that the acknowledgments of the other four waivers were before a notary public, whose authority to authenticate such acknowledgments was as ample as that of the clerk or any other officer. The objections now urged against these waivers are not well taken. See 50 C.J., pp. 446, 447.

All of the heirs being thus in court, they made no contest of the petition, and a decree pro confesso was taken against them, and thereafter a final decree for the sale of the lands as prayed.

On a petition by an administrator to sell lands to pay debts it is essential to the maintenance of the petition that there be debts to be paid and that the asserted debts be set forth in the petition. This is more than simply a material issue; but the maintenance of the affirmative of that issue is essential, indispensable, to any decree at all on such a petition. And it is equally essential or indispensable that the asserted debts be legal debts, those which the estate is obligated to pay. And in order that unsecured debts shall be legal debts against an estate, it is essential that they shall have been probated in the manner and within the time allowed by law; in consequence of which, when a petition to sell lands to pay debts lists and sets up any particular debt as being an obligation of the estate, there is thereby tendered to the heirs or devisees who are made parties to that petition, the direct and vital issue, among others, whether the alleged debt or debts have been probated in the manner and within the time allowed by law.

And when brought into court in response to such a petition, the heirs allow a decree pro confesso and a final *Page 322 decree to be taken against them, they thereby admit and there is thereby adjudicated against them, as one of the direct and vital issues involved, that the several debts specified in the petition have been duly and legally probated. The decree of sale could not in any event have been made except by the adjudication in the affirmative of that essential of legal probate; wherefore the heirs cannot subsequently litigate with the administrator, so as to adversely affect him, the question of the legality of the probate of any of the debts which were set up in the previous adversary petition; for, if they were subsequently allowed so to do and should prevail in their contention in the subsequent litigation, there would be two wholly inconsistent decrees in the same estate between the same adversary parties, namely, in one decree that the debt or debts in question were probated in the manner and within the time allowed by law and in the subsequent degree that the same debt or debts were not probated in the manner and within the time allowed by law.

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Bluebook (online)
188 So. 1, 185 Miss. 312, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-beavers-miss-1939.