Walley v. Gentry
This text of 68 Mo. App. 298 (Walley v. Gentry) 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.
Opinion
Section 187, Revised Statutes, provides that any person may exhibit his demand against an estate by serving notice on the administrator or executor, in writing, stating the amount of his claim, with a copy of the instrument of writing or account upon which the claim is founded; and such claim shall be considered legally exhibited from the time of the service of such notice, or a waiver thereof in writing. And the succeeding section (188) provides that no claimant shall avail himself of the benefit of the preceding sec[301]*301tion unless he present his demand, to the court for allowance within two years after the grant of the first letters of administration in the estate, or the publication of notice of such grant. It is thus seen that the exhibition of a demand is one thing and the allowance' of it by the court is another.
It is provided in section 183, Revised Statutes, that all demands against an estate shall be divided into six classes. This section further provides that all de-mauds without regard to quality, which shall be legally exhibited against an estate, within one year after the granting of the first letters on the estate, shall be assigned to the fifth class. And that all demands thus exhibited and presented to the court for allowance, after the end of one year and within two years after letters granted, shall be assigned to the sixth class. Unless demands of the first, second, third, and fourth classes be exhibited within the first year after the grant of letters, they lose their priority and fall within the sixth class.
All demands without regard to quality, except the first, second, third, and fourth classes, which are specially mentioned in said section 183, that are exhibited within one year after the grant of the letters, are required to be assigned to the fifth class. A demand properly assignable to any one of said first five classes, if exhibited within one year after the grant of letters, would, if not exhibited and allowed until after the end of one year and within two years after the grant of letters, go to the sixth class. None of the demands mentioned in the first, second, third, and fourth classes, can, in any case, be assigned to the fifth class, for if they are exhibited within the first year, they must be classed as the statute requires, or if not exhibited in the first year, they descend in .the order of classification to the sixth class. A demand therefore of the first four [302]*302classes must be assigned to the class therein to which the statute primarily assigns it, unless it has not been exhibited within a year after the grant of letters, in which case it goes to the sixth class; providing, of course, it has been exhibited and presented after the end 'of one year and within two years after the grant of letters.
Section 189 of the statute requires executors and administrators to keep a list of demands 'exhibited, classifying them, and to make a return thereof at each settlement. They are not required to make a settlement until the end of the first year after the grant of letters, at which time they can determine from the list of demands exhibited to them and classified, what demands belonging to any of the first five classes, whether up to that time presented for allowance or not, there are in existence against the estate. They know that all [303]*303the claims that have not then been exhibited will, under the statute, have to be assigned to the sixth class. With this knowledge and information in their possession, there can not be the slightest difficulty in making payment of demands, according to the requirements of section 209 of the statute, or in otherwise intelligently proceeding with the administration of the estate. An administrator or executor can not, without fault on his part, find himself in the situation of having paid money out of the funds in his hands on the fifth or sixth classes, which ought to be paid on demands of either of the other classes. The statute in relation to the administration of the estates of deceased persons is so plain and simple in its provisions that it can be understood by any business man of average intelligence. None of the difficulties or hardships suggested by the defendant, therefore, ought to result from the assignment by the court of the plaintiff’s demand to the first class.
IT. The defendant objects further that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress certain' depositions taken by the plaintiff. The depositions were taken without'this state, on notice, dedimus being waived. The notice specified that such depositions were “to be taken at the law office of Henry B. Babb, in the Earnest & Cramer building, number 511, in the city of Denver, in the county of Arapahoe and state of Colorado.” The notary before whom the depositions were taken certified “that in pursuance of the annexed notice’ ’ the witnesses named came before him and were severally sworn to testify the whole truth, etc., touching the matter in controversy and that they were examined and their examination reduced to writing and subscribed by them respectively in his presence, on the day, between the hours, and at the place in that behalf first aforesaid, etc.
[304]*304
The grounds of the appeal we do not think well taken, and therefore we affirm the judgment.
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68 Mo. App. 298, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walley-v-gentry-moctapp-1897.