Wernse v. McPike

100 Mo. 476
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 100 Mo. 476 (Wernse v. McPike) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wernse v. McPike, 100 Mo. 476 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

The Traders’ Bank of St. Louis held a note for thirty-two hundred dollars made by Leiper Bowling & Co., and indorsed by Abraham McPike. Abraham McPike died, and Henry C. McPike qualified as administrator of his estate, in the probate court of Ralls county, January 28, 1873. The note being unpaid was duly protested, and the bank brought suit on it in the circuit court of St. Louis county against Leiper Bowling & Co. and Henry C. McPike, administrator. The former resided and the latter was found, and all were personally served in St. Louis county on the fifth of July, 1873. In due time judgment by default was entered against all the defendants October 16, 1873. Thereupon a transcript of the record was filed in the probate court of Ralls county, and the administrator being present, as the record recites, the judgment was duly exhibited and placed in the.fifth class on the fifteenth of April, 1874, from which classification no appeal was taken.

The administrator subsequently filed a petition for an order of sale of the realty, to pay debts, and in that petition included in the list of allowed demands this claim as due by and established against the estate as a fifth-class demand. The judgment was subsequently assigned to plaintiffs, Wernse and Haeussler. The administrator having failed to pay any part of it, whilst he was paying other fifth and sixth-class claims in full, plaintiffs filed a motion in the probate court to compel payment. This motion was denied, the probate court holding that the judgment was void for want of jurisdiction in the St. Louis circuit court to render it. Plaintiffs appealed to the circuit court of Ralls county, where the jugdment was affirmed, and thence to this court where the judgment of the circuit court was also affirmed. 76 Mo. 249. This was done November 27, 1882. Several letters appear by the record to have been written by the administrator to plaintiff Haeussler at [481]*481various times and from different piaces extending from the date of the first, June 30, 1876, to November 2, 1877. In all of these letters except the last the administrator talks about compromise and settlement; he suggested at one time payment in land; at another time a house and lot in Louisiana, which he recommends as well worth the whole debt.

On the same day on which the appeal was taken in the cause just mentioned, to the circuit court, to-wit, on the twelfth day of December, 1877, both parties being present in the probate court, the plaintiffs presented the note, .upon which the judgment aforesaid was based, for allowance, and the cause was continued to January 16, 1878, and again continued, and on the fourteenth day of March, 1878,, plaintiffs dismissed their cause, and withdrew the note and other papers. February 26, 1878, plaintiffs petitioned the county court of Madison county, Illinois, for letters of administration on the estate of Abraham McPike, deceased, stating in their petition in substance that they were creditors of the deceased, in what manner, and to what extent, that their debt remained due and unpaid, that deceased had a large amount of real and personal property in said county and that no letters of administration had ever been granted to said estate in said county.

Letters were granted on the second day of April, 1878, and, on the fifth day of July following, the administrator, H. C. McPike, appeared in court and filed the following motion: “And now at this day comes H. C. McPike, the administrator of the estate of Abraham McPike, in the state of Missouri, and who is the original and principal administrator of said estate, and in his own behalf, as well as in behalf of the heirs of said Abraham McPike, moves the court to dismiss the suit and rescind the letters of administration granted William H. Hall, public administrator of Madison county, for the following reasons, viz.: . .

[482]*482“That the claim of Herman Haenssler, upon whose petition letters of administration were granted, is barred by the laws of the state of Missouri.
.“That the said Haeussler was at the time of the death of said Abraham McPike a citizen and resident of the state of Missouri, in which was intestate’s domicile at the time of his death, and must recover his claim under the laws of Missouri, if at all.
“That all the personal property of the said Abraham McPike in the state of Illinois had all been collected and paid over to the principal administrator before the grant of administration in this state, and at the time when said grant of administration was made there was no personal property in the state of Illinois, belonging to the estate of said Abraham McPike.”

On the following day the court, passing on this motion, dismissed plaintiff’s suit and revoked the letters; thereupon an appeal was taken to the circuit court of Madison county, where the judgment was affirmed, and it was also affirmed in the appellate and supreme courts. On the twenty-second of November, 1878, this appeal was heard in the circuit court; parties all present and consenting, the cause was heard by the court without a jury. The record shows the finding of the court to be as follows: “Does find from the evidence in this cause that Abraham McPike, deceased, was at the time of his death a resident of the county of Ralls, in the state of Missouri, that letters of administration were very shortly after his death granted, by the county court of said Ralls county, to H. C. McPike, the brother of the deceased; that due notice of the grant of letters of administration and of notice to creditors was given by said administrator in said state of Missouri, as required by the laws of said state; that said plaintiffs were before, and at the time of, the death of said Abraham McPike, and ever since have been residents of the state of Missouri; that the plaintiffs presented [483]*483their claim against said estate before the probate court in Missouri, and the said claim is now being litigated in the state of Missouri; that the estate of said Abraham McPike is solvent and is in due course of administration in the state of Missouri; that Said Abraham McPike left no creditors in the state of Illinois, and has no personal property in the state of Illinois, except an interest in a partnership in Alton, Illinois, which partnership was all settled up by the surviving partners, and the portion belonging to the said Abraham McPike’s estate was paid over to said H. C. McPike, as such administrator, long before the filing of the petition in this proceeding by the plaintiffs.”

Plaintiffs’ claim was disallowed, and the letters of administration revoked December 31, 1878; plaintiffs' appealed to the appellate court. On the twenty-fifth of March, 1879, that court rendered its decision, affirming the circuit court. On March 18, 1881, writ of error was sued ‘out to the supreme court of Illinois. The court delivered its opinion on the eighteenth day of January, 1882, affirming the decision of the appellate court.

On the nineteenth of March, 1879, plaintiffs served upon the administrator notice of their intention to present their demand to the probate court of Ralls county for allowance; thereafter, on the sixteenth day of July, same year, it was so presented, and, being disallowed, plaintiffs at once appealed to the Ralls county circuit court, there on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1882, the case was tried by the court and judgment rendered for defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Mo. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wernse-v-mcpike-mo-1890.