Tyler v. Priest

31 Mo. App. 272, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 175
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Mo. App. 272 (Tyler v. Priest) 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
Tyler v. Priest, 31 Mo. App. 272, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 175 (Mo. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff recovered a judgment against John Q-. Priest, administrator de bonis non, cum testamento annexo, of the estate of Isaac Walker, deceased, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on the twenty-eighth of October, 1885, for the sum of $1,389.02. The action which resulted in the recovery of this judgment was commenced on the twelfth of August, 1884. It was brought under section 191, Revised Statutes, to establish in the circuit court a demand against the estate of Isaac Walker, deceased. This demand consisted of the payment by the plaintiff of two instalments of money to a dowress, the same being instalments of an annuity charged by a judgment of the St. Louis land court, in 1864, upon land conveyed by the defendant’s testator, Isaac Walker, deceased, to the plaintiff, in the year 1857, with covenants of warranty. In other words, it was an action for damages for the breach of a covenant of warranty against incumbrances. Prom the judgment of the circuit court, rendered in that action, an appeal was prosecuted to this court, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed on the twentieth of April, 1886. Tyler v. Priest, 21 Mo. App. 685, erroneously reported as Taylor v. Priest. In the concluding part of our opinion in that case, we held ' that the question of the classification and payment of the judgment, including the question whether there were any assets available [276]*276for its payment, or whether the lands of the testator in the hands of his devisees could be subjected to its payment or not, were questions relating to the execution of the j udgment, which could not be determined in that action. These questions present themselves for determination in the present proceeding.

After the judgment of the circuit court had been thus affirmed, it was presented to the probate court, and that court entered an order directing that it should be paid in due course of administration. The administrator declined to pay it, claiming that there were no funds in his hands available for that purpose. Thereupon the plaintiff filed her motion in the probate court, praying for an order upon the administrator to pay it. This motion was overruled by the probate court, after a most careful examination of the questions involved and after the filing of a very learned and able opinion upon those questions, which we have had the advantage of reading, but with which we have not been able entirely to agree. The plaintiff appealed to the circuit court where the motion was heard de nono, as required by the statute.

In support of her motion in the circuit court, the plaintiff showed that, according, to the last annual settlement, filed by the administrator on the twenty-third of April, 1887, he had in his hands a balance of $4,679.75, to which the probate court had added the amount of $5,733.03, for error in settlement, thus making the total amount charged against him to be $10,412.78.

This surcharge of $5,733.03, made by the probate court, arose under the following circumstances: Thomas A. Walker, executor of Isaac Walker, deceased, was removed by the probate court on account of his being a nonresident of the state, and John G. Priest, the present administrator, was appointed administrator de bonis non, cum testamento annexo, in his place. Walker appealed from this judgment of removal, and it was reversed by this court. In re Walker, 1 Mo. App. 404. Thereupon Walker was reinstated as executor, where[277]*277upon, on settlement between him and Priest, there was found to be in Priest’s hands assets belonging to the estate to the amount of $5,394.21, for which the probate court rendered a judgment against him that he pay it over to Walker. Subsequently Walker was again removed and Priest re-appointed. Thereafter another settlement took place between Walker and Priest, in which it appeared that Priest had not paid over to Walker the amount above mentioned, to-wit, $5,394.21. Nor had he, in his own settlements, accounted therefor, nor charged himself therewith. On motion of some of the legatees, the probate court, in June, 1880, ordered Priest to charge himself with said sum, and in January, 1881, added the same to the balance of his annual settlement for that year. In his next annual settlement, which took place in April, 1882, he charged himself with this sum of $5,394.21, and, in explanation of his reason for not charging the judgment against himself in his former settlement, he showed that an effort had been made to wind up the estate by a settlement among the heirs and the devisees, which had failed of accomplishment ; and he claimed credit for certain expenditures constituting the items in issue on the settlement between him and Walker, which resulted in the judgment of the probate court in favor of Walker’s estate, and against him, for the sum of $5,394.21, as above stated, and for sums distributed to the legatees in the aggregate sum of $5,733.03 ; and he produced a voucher in support of the same signed by five of the legatees, in which they undertook to authorize him to take credit for this sum in his settlement, and waived all objections thereto. This charge and credit were stated, in his settlement as follows:

‘' Gash paid sundry items for costs, attorney’s fees, and other disbursements specified in the account and ordered filed as an exhibit marked ‘ O ’ herewith, as per authorization...............$5,733 03”
[278]*278‘ RECAPITULATION.
“ Disbursed on acc. blk. 808 and other propertyinCabanne & Walker’s sub-division, being blocks 796
and 838 per statement........... $2,314 97

The “ exhibit O ” thus referred to was as follows:

“The undersigned, legatees under the will of Isaac Walker and distributees of said estate, by this instrument, consent and authorize John Gr. Priest, administrator de bonis non of said estate, to credit himself in his settlement account with said estate, in and before the St. Louis probate court, with the annexed statement and account, amounting in the aggregate to fifty-seven hundred and thirty-three 3-100 dollars, and we waive all objection thereto, and authorize the said St. Louis probate court to allow the same in the settlement of said administrator’s accounts.
“["Signed] Wm. M. GIawtrt, Trustee,
“Peter I. Nevius, Trustee,
“S. P. Jenkins, Trustee,
“Archibald Maclat, Trustee.
“Gf. W. Bull,
“ R. Maclat Bull.
“New York, Jan. 6, 1882.”

“Disbursed, items disallowed by St. Louis probate court:

Krum & Patrick..;...................$ 250 00
Hall, reporter ...................... 10 00
Clinton, Hall & Brewer, for depositions. 38 50
Other small items..................... 57 80
Disbursed, accounts of heirs, per statement........................... 2891 91
Total............................$5733 03
“ Piled April 1, 1882.”

When this credit and so-called “authorization”

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Related

Brigham v. Elwell
14 N.E. 780 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1888)
Estate of Walker v. Walker
1 Mo. App. 404 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1876)
Priest v. Deaver
22 Mo. App. 276 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1886)
Pearce v. Calhoun
59 Mo. 271 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1875)
Ritchey v. Withers
72 Mo. 556 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1880)
Walker's Administrator v. Deaver
79 Mo. 664 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)
Bassett v. Slater
81 Mo. 75 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)
North v. Priest
81 Mo. 561 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1884)
State ex rel. Koch v. Roeper
82 Mo. 57 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1884)
Lewis v. Carson
93 Mo. 587 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1887)
Isaac Walker's Administrator v. Deaver
5 Mo. App. 139 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1878)
Taylor v. Priest
21 Mo. App. 685 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Mo. App. 272, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-priest-moctapp-1888.