Trieseler v. Ratican

173 S.W.2d 595, 237 Mo. App. 490, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 229
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 595 (Trieseler v. Ratican) 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
Trieseler v. Ratican, 173 S.W.2d 595, 237 Mo. App. 490, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 229 (Mo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County in the matter of an allowance to respondent, William A. Ratican, for his services and expenses as the appraiser of the estate of Dr. Bert P. Beebe, deceased, in connection with the determination of the amount of the inheritance tax, if any, to which the estate might be subject.

The estate had been in process of administration in the Probate Court of St. Louis County following Dr. Beebe's death by suicide on April 22, 1938. On June 27, 1938, an inventory was filed showing the amount of the estate to be $7834.93. Of the total demands against the estate, those allowed by the time of respondent's appointment as appraiser amounted to $2174.64, of which the funeral bill of $1225.43 had been paid. In addition, there was then pending the claim of the United States Government for delinquent income taxes in the sum of $10,599.68, with statutory interest, which was subsequently compromised and allowed for $3669.43.

While so far as the files and records of the estate disclosed, there was nothing to indicate that the estate was subject to an inheritance *Page 493 tax, it appears that the probate judge had known Dr. Beebe in his lifetime, and had information, and personally thought, that there were assets belonging to the estate which had not been reported to the administrator for inclusion in the inventory, and which, if found and accounted for, would be subject to the payment of a tax under the provisions of the inheritance tax law. [Secs. 571-604, R.S. Mo. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., secs. 571-604.]

In this situation, with the probate court of the opinion, from information in its possession, that the estate might be subject to tax, the court, on November 16, 1938, appointed respondent as the appraiser of the estate in connection with the court's determination of the amount of tax to be assessed.

On November 22, 1938, respondent filed his oath as required by law, and thereupon entered upon what he conceived to be the proper discharge of his duties by conferring with the probate judge, who imparted the information he had acquired regarding the existence of assets which had not been reported to the administrator; by checking and rechecking the records of the recorder of deeds and the assessor, both of St. Louis County and the City of St. Louis, for property listed in the name of Dr. Beebe, or in the name of any one of some four or five other people whose names the doctor might have employed in an attempt to conceal his own identity; by likewise checking the records in the offices of the comptroller and the board of public service in the City of St. Louis; by correspondence and frequent contact with certain of the heirs in California who were assisting with whatever information they had regarding the doctor's property holdings; by conferring with officials of the United States Government who were apparently engaged in a somewhat similar investigation of their own for the purpose of ascertaining whether there had been an income tax evasion; by checking records regarding property that the doctor had inherited from his parents; and by attending hearings of a case which had been brought by the administrator in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis for the recovery of $206,000 allegedly belonging to the estate.

Being unable to complete his investigation and make his report within twenty days after his appointment, respondent, at successive intervals, was given extensions of time in which to report; and on February 14, 1940, filed his report disclosing that he had failed to discover any assets other than those included in the inventory, and that there was no inheritance tax due from the estate. He also reported that he had been actually and necessarily engaged for sixty-eight days in the performance of his duties as appraiser, for which services he claimed to be entitled to compensation at the rate of $5 a day as provided by law.

The probate court approved the report; allowed respondent the sum of $250 for his services as appraiser, together with the sum of $1.25 for actual and necessary expense incurred in making the appraisement; *Page 494 and ordered that the administrator, before making final settlement, pay to respondent the sum of $251.25.

Thereafter the administrator filed his exceptions to the report and to the application for an allowance and the allowance made by the court. In due course the court overruled the exceptions, from which order the administrator appealed to the circuit court, wherein, upon the trial of the matter anew, the order of the probate court was affirmed. Following the entry of judgment in the circuit court, the administrator applied for and was granted an appeal to this court.

Respondent has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal upon the principal ground that the order fixing his per diem fee was not an appealable order, and that in any event the administrator was not aggrieved by the order so as to have had the right to appeal from it.

The matter of appeal in connection with proceedings for the assessment of inheritance tax is dealt with by Section 587 of the statutes, which provides that any person aggrieved by the judgment of the court as to the amount of liability for the tax may appeal to the court having jurisdiction of appeals from said court in ordinary civil actions, and in case of appeal shall be required to give bond in double the amount of the tax, interest, penalty, and "costs involved."

It has been held that the fees allowed an inheritance tax appraiser are "costs involved" within the meaning of such statute. [Harris' Estate v. Waltner, 233 Mo. App. 319,118 S.W.2d 90.] Moreover, it is provided by Section 589 of the statutes that when an allowance is made to the appraiser, it shall be taxed against and paid by the administrator as other costs of the estate.

This court, in the case of In re Baptiste's Estate (Mo. App.), 259 S.W. 498, assumed, without question, that an order making an allowance to an inheritance tax appraiser was appealable, and entertained jurisdiction of the case on the merits. The appellants in that case were distributees of the estate, whose personal interest could not be questioned as in the case of the administrator who undertakes to appeal. However, in Harris' Estate v. Waltner, supra, which likewise involved the propriety of an inheritance tax appraiser's fee, the appeal from the probate court was taken by the executrix, whose right to have appealed was in effect conceded, if only she had complied with the statutory prerequisites relating to the giving of bond.

In the light of the above precedents, we conclude, therefore, that not only does the allowance made to the appraiser constitute an appealable order, but also that the administrator, against whom the fee is taxed, and whose duty it is to preserve the estate for the benefit of the creditors and distributees, may be a party aggrieved by the order if he believes that it represents the granting of compensation for time in which the appraiser was not actually and necessarily engaged in the performance of the proper duties of his office. Other complaints having to do with the sufficiency of appellant's abstract are not well *Page 495 taken; and respondent's motion to dismiss the appeal should be accordingly overruled.

The ultimate question on this appeal is whether appellant's exceptions to respondent's report, and to his application for an allowance and the allowance made, should have been sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 595, 237 Mo. App. 490, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trieseler-v-ratican-moctapp-1943.