Utley v. First Congregational Church

117 N.W.2d 141, 368 Mich. 90, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 311
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1962
DocketDocket 31, Calendar 49,339
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 N.W.2d 141 (Utley v. First Congregational Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utley v. First Congregational Church, 117 N.W.2d 141, 368 Mich. 90, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 311 (Mich. 1962).

Opinions

Dethmers, J.

The initial question raised in this case was whether the alleged will of Jerome A. Utley was executed in the manner prescribed by statute. CL 1948, § 702.5 (Stat Ann 1943 Eev § 27.3178 [75]). On petition for admission of the will, the probate court held in the negative and denied probate. On appeal, the circuit court reversed that order, held that the will was executed in accord with the statute, and remanded the cause to probate court for further proceedings consistent with that holding. From that, plaintiff, widow of the testator, as adverse party or contestant, appeals here. Appellees are beneficiaries under the will and are styled as intervenors. They support the will. One of them, the church, although agreeing with the circuit court’s holding in the respect noted, cross appeals because it did not go further and admit or direct the probate court to admit the will to probate.

The person signing the petition for probate of the will, hereinafter called the -proponent, did so' as the one named in the will as executor and a prime beneficiary. Counsel for the church entered its ap[94]*94pearance in the probate court. No written objections to admission of the will were filed. From the order denying probate the proponent seasonably took an appeal to circuit court. She also procured a probate court order authorizing her to employ counsel, at the expense of the estate, to represent her in the matter, which, of course, consisted, at that time, of her appeal to circuit court. The church and other appellees in this case did not take an appeal to the circuit court nor did they enter an appearance there in proponent’s appeal.

After the time for taking such an appeal had expired, the church, on its petition, was permitted, by circuit court order, to intervene and stand as an intervening party appellant in subordination to and recognition of the present plight and condition of the proceeding.

Next, proponent and 3 other legatees who had appeared in her appeal, as first parties, and plaintiff widow entered into an agreement, settling the claims of the former against the estate under the will, providing for a $5,000 fee to be paid out of the estate to proponent’s attorneys, and permitting the cause and appeal to be dismissed with prejudice to first parties. Pursuant to the agreement an order to so dismiss was presented to the circuit court. The church objected. The court being of the view that intervenors had no standing to further prosecute the appeal after proponent had agreed to dismissal of it, an order entered dismissing the cause with prejudice as to all the parties.

On the church’s motion for rehearing the order dismissing was set aside, the cause was reinstated as to the church, and the legatees appearing as the other appellees herein were permitted to intervene as parties appellant in the same manner as the church. A further order was entered affirming the [95]*95order dismissing as to the parties who had entered into the settlement with plaintiff widow.

Plaintiff widow next moved to dismiss the canse because proponent’s petition to admit the will had not been duly verified. This the court denied.

At pretrial hearing in circuit court it was determined that the sole issue was whether the will was duly executed in accord with the statute.

Finally, the matter came on for trial in the circuit court. After trial without jury, the court held that the will had been executed in the manner by statute' required. From that, as stated at the outset, plaintiff widow has appealed here.

Questions raised on this appeal are these:

1. After proponent executrix had consented to dismissal of her appeal as such, did the appellee church have standing to prosecute the appeal from the order of the probate court to the circuit court?

2. Was the judgment of the lower court that the will was executed in accord with the statute against the preponderance of the evidence?

3. Did the lower court err in refusing to dismiss the appeal from the order of the probate court on the motion of the appellant here on the ground that the petition for probate of the will was not properly verified?

On cross appeal the question is:

. Was it not the duty of the circuit court to enter such an order as the probate court should have entered, namely, admitting the will to probate?

Did the church have standing to prosecute the appeal in circuit court after- proponent, as the appellant there, consented to its dismissal? It is the contention of plaintiff that because the church’s rights as intervenor in the circuit court appeal were made “in subordination to and recognition of the present plight and condition of the said proceeding,” [96]*96proponent’s consent, as appellant, to dismissal thereof left nothing in which the church could continue to intervene or prosecute an appeal. Plaintiff says that the church could only have protected its rights in that regard by having taken an appeal itself from the order of the probate court. The church and other appellees respond that when proponent, as executrix, petitioned for probate of the will, she assumed a position of trust for all beneficiaries under the will and had a moral duty not to quit as soon as her personal interests were satisfied, thus leaving the contest dismissed with prejudice to the rights of other beneficiaries who had objected to such dismissal.

In point, urges plaintiff, is the following from In re Doty’s Estate, 231 Mich 115, 119:

“It should be remembered that in this State there is no legal duty resting on a nominated executor to establish or defend a will.”

This Court took note, however, of the enactment, too late to apply to that case, of PA 1923, No 281, permitting the executor to petition for admission of the will to probate and providing for payment of attorney fees out of the estate which are incurred by the executor in defending the will. See CL 1948, §§ 702.21, 702.24 (Stat Ann 1943 Rev §§ 27.3178 [91], 27.3178 [94]). Accordingly, in Barber v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 245 Mich 520, arising after effective date of that statute, this Court again took note of that enactment, and said:

“Before the act the person who was named executor had nothing to do in a will contest; now upon proper order of the court he has everything to do with it; before the act, he could spend no money of the estate to sustain the will; now he may expend in sustaining the will such funds of the estate as may be-necessary, subject, of course, to the approval of [97]*97the prohate court. Before the act he was not a party to the litigation; now he is a party and the active one. His duty now is, under the order of the court, to take such reasonable steps as may be necessary to sustain the will against the assaults upon it. We think the statute makes it clear that he is the adverse party to those seeking its disallowance.”

' Plaintiff says that despite the important role the statute thus assigns to the executor, nevertheless it does not require him to petition for probate of a will and become a proponent. The fact is, however, that here the proponent did just exactly that, in her capacity as executrix, and procured an order allowing her to employ counsel, at estate expense, to represent her in her appeal to circuit court from the probate court order denying probate.

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Utley v. First Congregational Church
117 N.W.2d 141 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.W.2d 141, 368 Mich. 90, 1962 Mich. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utley-v-first-congregational-church-mich-1962.