6 Colo. App. 377 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
■ While the matter involved in this suit is of slight moment either to the administrator or the creditors of the estate, who are the parties to the litigation, the matters to be considered are of considerable perplexity and much consequence to practitioners. It is the outgrowth of the administration of the estate of a decedent. The plaintiff in error Clemes was appointed administrator of the estate of Clark Lipe. We are not concerned with the circumstances of his appointment, or with anything except certain steps which he took in winding up the affairs and with the various orders of the county court which were made during the progress' of the administration. The dates of the various orders will not always be given, since, our conclusions in no manner rest on the time of the adjudication. An application was made for a widow’s allowance and the county court made an order fixing the amount, which apparently the administrator subsequently paid to the widow. On the administrator’s application the court likewise made an order allowing the undertaker’s bill in the fixed sum of $675.
The administrator likewise petitioned the court for authority to buy a cemetery lot. On this petition the court made an order granting the petition. What that petition was, its contents or its purport, is not set out in the present record. All we have is the order granting the application of the ad
The chief difficulty we have springs from the peculiar legislation regulating the winding up of the estates of decedents, and the statutes which provide for appeals from the county court in such and other cases. By section 499 of the General Statutes of 1883, and section 508 of the same statute as modified by the act of 1891, Session Laws of 1891, page 108, appeals from the county court are provided for and regulated. Under the first section appeals can be taken to the district court from all final judgments of the county court. A subsequent section gives the parties the right to a trial de novo when any such appeal has been regularly perfected.
Very strong support for this construction is found in the rule which prevails in most probate jurisdictions with reference to an account not final. Such accounts are not conclusive when the representative legatees or creditors seek a final settlement. Schouler’s Executors & Administrators, sec. 526. It-is almost universally true that periodical accounts may b'e passed on and allowed, but still remain open to subsequent consideration. This position is supported by the terms of the chapter on wills. Section 3620, General Statutes of 1883, provides that upon each and every settlement of the accounts of an administrator the court shall ascertain the whole amount -that has come to his hands and then provide for the distribution of the funds and make dividends to the creditors. The difference between a final and a periodical account is likewise recognized in the sections which determine what the administrator must do if he desires to obtain a final discharge from his administration. It will be remembered there was no- adjudication by the county court in September, 1893, with .respect to two of. the items in dispute. Those had'been previously disposed of by orders which remained wholly urn-reversed and unmodified. By this we mean there was. no such thing as a final judgment-entered in respect to these ■matters. In obedience to the mandate of the court, the’administrator filed a report and these items were stricken therefrom; . It cannot.be contendeol.that this amounted- to,a final
■ The judgment of the district court, in so far as it affirms the proceedings below, is hot a final one, and therefore could not have been brought to this court on writ of error or by appeal. We have reached a conclusion which is somewhat analogous to the result reached by the supreme court in the
While therefore we conclude that no writ of error would lie to review so much of the judgment of the district court as affirms the order to strike from the report the items involved in the antecedent discussion, had such been its only subject-matter, a wholly different question is of necessity involved in the consideration of the other part of the judgment which, was rendered after a trial and hearing.
There is very much question in the books as to what constitutes a final judgment. The principal criterion by which that matter has always been resolved respects the conclusion of the controversy as between two parties to the record who
There are many decisions of a similar nature, but these serve to illustrate the line on which the courts have proceeded. The question underlying all of the cases which consider the subject of the finality of the judgment is, did that which the court entered determine a matter disputed between the parties so that it is no longer open to contention? We must conclude the order of the county court disallowing this item did, as between the creditors and the administrator, directly decide the legitimacy of this expenditure and the legality of the charge. When the appeal was taken to the district court as to that portion of the order, it must be accepted as an appeal from a final judgment, which gave to the district court the right to try it de novo and imparted to whatever judgment it rendered the character of finality which warrants its review in this court.
Under these circumstances we'must consider whether the judgment accorded with the law. The right to purchase a lot in which to bury a deceased person rests on very similar-principles to -those which control the administrator’s right to pay the funeral charges and the expenses which are immediately attendant upon the death and burial. Schouler’s Executors & Administrators, sec. 422.
While the administrator has the undoubted right to buy a place to bury the dead in, due regard must always be had to the situation of the estate, to the question of its solvency or insolvency, and to the circumstances attending the expendij ture. The difficulty under which the administrator always labors is easily recognized. The stricken relatives are always clamorous for what they consider a fitting place in which to lay the dead, while the administrator is largely controlled by the financial considerations which must govern his action. The amount which he undertook originally to expend was manifestly ill conceived and unjustifiable. The estate was insolvent. The administrator undertook to expend nearly twenty-five per cent of all the mqney which came into his
The judgment of the district court will accordingly be affirmed, with the express statement that this decision only extends to the one item of the cemetery lot, and is not an adjudication on the subject of the widow’s allowance or the undertaker’s bill. The judgment will accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.