181 Ind. 441 | Ind. | 1914
Appellee, Eoy Fehler, a legatee and devisee under the will of Catherine Faylor deceased, filed an application for the probate of the will of the decedent, to the probate of which appellant, having obtained leave over appellee’s objections, filed objections which on motion were stricken out. Exception was reserved and the evidence heard, and the will admitted to probate. The other appellees are the executor and legatees and devisees under the will, and personal or legal representatives of the legatees and devisees, and those who, but for the will, would be heirs, of which appellant was one. In appellant’s application for leave to file objections to the probate of the will, he alleges, in addition to the facts set out in the objections proper, that on July 8, 1902, Catherine Faylor died leaving numerous persons, himself included, her sole heirs at law, naming them; that on July 10, 1902, in vacation, one of said heirs filed in the office of the clerk of the Wells Circuit Court, his
On motion of appellee Roy Fehler, these objections were stricken out on the grounds, (1) that they were not filed within the time allowed by law, and (2) that they were filed by one George Mock, and not by Thomas Faylor, to which ruling, an exception was reserved. The record shows leave generally to appellant Thomas Faylor to file objections to the probate of the will, and it does not show that any time was asked or refused in which, properly, to prepare and file such objections, but that immediately following the granting of the leave, the objections were filed as herein shown, and on their being stricken out, no further time was asked or refused, and the matter was at once submitted to the court for hearing on motion of Roy Fehler, a jury being waived and the evidence heard, and the will ordered probated.
February 21, 1913, appellant filed his written motion to set aside the order of admission to probate on the grounds: (1) That on July 8, 1902, Catherine Faylor died in Wells County, Indiana, and that on July 10, 1902, Peter Paylor for and on behalf of the heirs of said decedent filed in the office of the clerk of Wells County, his sworn objections to the probating of any will in said estate as shown by Order Book Probate Record 15 page 171 of that court; that on July 10, 1902, and after said objections were so filed, David D. Studebaker presented said will for probate to said clerk; that the clerk of said court thereupon refused to probate said will, and on the first day of the September Term, 1902, of the Wells Circuit Court, a complaint was filed by said Peter Paylor, et al., including this plaintiff and petitioner, and summons issued thereon, and a full appearance entered against said David D. Studebaker, and for him, in said cause; that said action has been pending ever since in the said Wells Circuit Court, and said objections and complaint are still pending, and have never been withdrawn by any person, and that said cause was set down for trial at this term of court at the regular setting of cases on said trial calendar, and that the continuance of said cause has been by agreement from term to term since the filing of the same; that said Roy Pehler never asked to be made a party to said cause, never had any appearance noted
Notice of this motion was ordered and given appellee, Roy Fehler, for February 24. On that date the motion was overruled, appellant excepted, and this appeal followed.
It is next urged that it was error to strike out the objections, where a cause of action has been begun before probate, citing, Ahearn v. Burk (1913), 179 Ind. 179, 99 N. E. 1004, to the point that notice is not required of the filing of such objections. It is urged that he should have had a reasonable time to resist the probate under §3153 Burns 1908, §2595 R. S. 1881. It is answered that he asked no time, but filed his objections at once. It is next urged that where a beneficiary under a will, moves a court to probate it, and application is made by an heir to file objections, and they are filed before probate, and a beneficiary files a motion to strike out the objections, it is an appearance to such complaint, and to the pending proceedings originally filed within time. The point made is that
Three questions therefore arise: (1) In case of objection to probate under §3153 Burns 1908, supra, and the matter being deferred to the next term, Must a eomplaint be filed making the executor and the persons beneficially interested parties under §3154 Burns 1908, §2596 R. S. 1881? (2) Did the act of appellee Roy Fehler in filing a motion to probate and to strike out appellant’s objections, effect an appearance to and make him a party to the original proceeding? (3) Does a failure in a complaint to resist probate, to make one beneficially interested a party, until the three years from the offer to probate has run, bar him from having probate ? It is urged that the court took judicial notice of its own records, and knew of the pending of the original complaint. If it did so, it also took notice that Roy Fehler was not a formal party. If it be the law that no one need be named as a party in the primary objections before probate, then it was not necessary to name him or any one else as a beneficiary. But
In McGeath v. Starr (1901), 157 Ind. 320, 61 N. E. 661, it was held that §3156 Burns 1908, §2598 R. S. 1881, must be complied with, whether the proceeding is to resist probate or contest the will, and that a citation must issue for all the beneficially interested persons; that the filing of a complaint is not notice, and that an action is only commenced in proceedings of this character, when a complaint is filed and process (citation) issued, and for that reason the executor and other persons who had not been cited or had not appeared, were entitled to have the will probated, notwithstanding the filing of the complaint, and that proving the will could not be arrested in that manner. In Ahearn v. Burke, supra, it was held that the objections permissible under §3153, supra, will arrest probate until the next term of the court. The construction deducible from these cases seems to be, (1) that the preliminary objections which will arrest probate until the next term of court, must at or before that time be followed by a formal complaint in resistance of probate; (2) that such formal complaint must name as defendants the executor, and all persons beneficially interested, who do not join as plaintiffs or contestants, and that citation must issue for the defendants unless they voluntarily appear, and this appears to us to be the orderly and correct practice.
The distinction between the Floyd and McGeath cases lies in the fact that in the former an action was commenced within the time, while in the McGeath case an action had not been commenced by any person, against any one. The eases are not in conflict. Here the proceeding in resistance of probate was pending when appellee filed his motion for probate, pursuant to objections originally offered and fol
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the court below to set aside the order admitting the will of Catherine Paylor to probate, and the order probating the same, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Note. — Reported In 104 N. E. 22. As to who is in a position to contest a will, see 130 Am. St. 186.