179 Mo. App. 434 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an appeal from a judgment •of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, reversing and setting aside a certain order of the probate court •of said city.
The respondent, Elizabeth Fritch, is the widow of George W. Fritch, deceased, and is the administratrix of the estate of her husband. On January 9, 1911, at
Acting upon said application the probate court did, on the same day, enter an order appropriating to-respondent the sum of six hundred dollars, in lieu of the grain, meat, vegetables, groceries and other provisions mentioned in section 114, supra, necessary for the subsistence of the widow for twelve months, and which were not on hand at the time of taking the inventory.
Thereafter, to-wit, on June 16', 1911, and at the June term, 1911, of said probate court, the appellant, Letitia L. Fritch, a creditor of said estate, filed a motion in the probate court praying for an order reducing the said allowance to respondent from six hundred dollars to- two hundred dollars, upon the ground that the allowance made was excessive, that the estate was insolvent, and that respondent, as widow, had received her “absolute dower” of four hundred dollars, and her dower in the real estate, and should be satisfied with -the amount of two hundred dollars, as an allowance in lieu of provisions.
Thereafter, on July 10,1911, and at the same June term of said probate court, the latter made and entered an order reducing said allowance to respondent from six hundred dollars to the sum of three hundred dollars.
Thereupon the respondent appealed therefrom to the circuit court, and upon a trial there de novo, the latter court by its judgment vacated and set aside said order of the probate court of July 10, 1911; from which judgment Letitia L. Fritch, the intervening creditor, prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant contends that the original order, made at the December term, 1910, of the probate court, was-void, or at least voidable, for the reason that it was made ex parte, without either the appointment of an administrator ad litem, or notice to creditors or others interested in the estate; and that in any event it was-not a final judgment, but was subject to review and correction at any time during the course of administration, prior to the final settlement of the estate.
It will be well, in the first place, to notice the statutory provisions concerning such an allowance to a widow, and the rule of decision prevailing with respect to the construction of these sections.
Section 114, Revised Statutes 1909', provides a& follows:
“In addition to dower, the widow shall be allowed to keep as her absolute property a family Bible and other boohs, not to exceed two hundred dollars; all the-wearing apparel of the family, her wheels, looms and other implements of industry; all yarns, cloth and. clothing made up in the family for their own use; all grain, meat, vegetables, groceries and- other provisions-on hand provided and necessary for the subsistence of the widow and her family for twelve months; her household, kitchen and table furniture, including beds,, bedsteads and bedding, not to exceed the value of five hundred dollars.”
The next succeeding section, viz., section 115, is-as follows:
“If the grain, meat or other provisions allowed the widow in the preceding section shall not be on-hand at the time of taking the inventory, the court shall make a reasonable appropriation out of the assets of the estate to supply such deficiency.”
“The year’s provision allowed her is her absolute property. So if it be not on hand, the money in lieu thereof would be hers as her absolute property and not ■depending upon her place of residence after her husband’s death. We deem this to' be the logical result ■of the cases of Cummings v. Cummings, 51 Mo. 261, .and Hastings v. Myers, 21 Mo. 519’. . . .
“A judgment for the widow under this statute should be no more than a judgment establishing the ■claim; or an order appropriating assets, ascertained lo be unappropriated, to the payment of the claim and ordering it paid. ’ ’
In Waters v. Herboth, 178 Mo. 166, 172, in treating of what are now sections 114 and 115, supra, and .section 116 which allows to the widow additional personal property not. exceeding four hundred dollars in ■value as her absolute property, the Supreme Court said:
“Those sections were not designed to affect the final distribution, but the idea was to allow the widow to have those articles in the beginning.
“They were to be separated from the estate that was to be administered, to form no part of it, neither for the creditors nor the distributees; they were to be .given to the widow in the first place, and it was only what was left after those articles were given to the widow that was to be treated as the estate to be administered.
“This is further shown by section 2, in the same chapter (now section 10, Revised Statutes 1909 which*441 is to the effect that if there is no more in the estate than those articles and that amount of money, there shall be no administration.”
"We are not, of course, directly concerned with the absolute property of the widow, of the value of four hundred dollars, allowed her under section 116,. supra, but it is quite clear that the property mentioned in section 114 is the absolute property of the widow as well as that mentioned in section 116; and from the language employed by the Supreme Court in the opinion just referred to, it is equally clear that the allowance in lieu of the provisions mentioned in section 115 is to-take the place of the latter, and is likewise regarded as her absolute property. If the grain, meat, vegetables, groceries and other provisions be on hand, for the subsistence of the widow and her family for twelve months, such becomes and is the absolute property of the widow, and does not enter into- or form any part or parcel of the estate to be administered upon. And if such property be not on hand, the widow is entitled, as a matter of absolute right, to an allowance in lieu thereof, and the only discretion vested in the probate court with respect to the same pertains to the amount to be ascertained and appropriated to supply the deficiency.
In Lowe v. Lowe, Exrs., 163 Mo. App. l. c. 213, 146 S. W. 100, it is said:
“Section 115 provides that if the latter articles-are not on hand a reasonable appropriation shall be made out of the assets of the decedent’s estate to supply such deficiency. It appears to us that the policy of the law is to, place the articles enumerated in section 114 upon the same footing as dower. The widow is as much entitled to the allowance in question as she-is to the family Bible, her clothing and other articles enumerated in said section. It goes to her absolutely by operation of law and toee from the debts and liabilities of the husband.”
Prom the foregoing, it quite clearly appears that the allowance to the widow in lieu of provisions is not to be regarded as a demand against the estate, as appellant apparently seeks to have us treat it, but that it is something to which the widow is entitled, as a matter of absolute right, and is upon the same footing, so far as the law can place it, as the articles themselves which under section 114 the widow is allowed to keep .as her absolute property, and for the supplying of a ■deficiency therein the allowance is made. If the provisions themselves are not on hand, it is the imperative ■duty of the probate court to make an order appropriating sufficient funds out of the estate to supply such deficiency, to the extent at least that there are funds available therefor. And, with respect to this matter, the power of the probate court extends merely to the •matter of ascertaining and appropriating such sum as in the court’s discretion will supply the deficiency mentioned in the statute. And the widow’s right to .such allowance is absolute, regardless of whether the estate be solvent or insolvent, or whether such allowance renders it insolvent. Indeed we have but recently 'held that the property thus allowed to the widow is -chargeable with no expense whatever, not even the ■costs and expenses of administration. [Estate of Ulrici v. Johnson, supra.]
And we are further fortified in our opinion that such allowance is not to be regarded in any sense as a demand against the estate, by the language of section 289, Revised Statutes 1909, relative to appeals from the probate court, which is as follows:
*443 “Appeals shall he allowed from the decision of the probate court to the circuit court in the following cases: First, on all demands against an estate exceeding ten dollars; Second, on all settlements of executors and administrators; Third, on all apportionments among creditors, legatees or distributees; Fourth, on all orders directing the payment of legacies, making •distribution or making allowances to a widow,” etc.
From this it appears that the lawmakers did not regard the allowance as being a demand against the estate; for had this been so, it would have been deemed included within the clause of the above section relating to demands, and there would have been no necessity to specially provide for appeals from “allowances to a widow. ’ ’
With respect to such allowances, it is said by the Supreme Court in Whaley v. Whaley, supra:
“It was not an action to recover money or propetry or damages, but it was a right depending wholly .upon the exercise of the discretion of the court. The judgment is erroneous because it is an absolute judgment against the executors, instead of an appropriation of the assets in their hands, as the law requires.”
That such an allowance has the force of a judgment we think cannot be doubted, but the judgment is one merely determining the amount which the widow shall have to supply the deficiency mentioned, and appropriating the same; the widow’s right thereto beeing paramount to the rights of creditors and others interested in the estate. The matter is, therefore, one of a nature peculiar to itself, and the proceeding is. totally unlike the establishing of a demand or claim against the estate.
In this view, we are of the opinion that there no notice was necessary to creditors or others interested in the estate; and that where the widow is also administering upon the estate, there is no necessity for the appointment of an administrator ad litem upon appli
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the order made was not void or even voidable for the reason that it was made without the appointment of an administrator ad litem and without notice to creditors or others. On the other hand, we are fully persuaded that the order is in fact a judgment — a judgment ascertaining the amount of the allowance, and appropriating the same to the widow. [Campbell v. Whitsett; Whaley v. Whaley, supra.] And that it is a final judgment we think quite clearly appears from the provisions of section 289, Revised Statutes 1909, supra, providing for an appeal therefrom.
The immediate succeeding section, 290', provides that the appeal shall be taken during the term at which the decision complained of is made, or within ten days thereafter — or within twenty days if the appellant be a nonresident. And in this connection we may say that there must have been a purpose on the part of the lawmakers in providing that appeals may be taken from a judgment of the probate court within ten days, or twenty days, after the expiration of the term. The
In view of what we have said above, we think that when the order was made, and the term thereafter suffered to lapse, and no appeal was prosecuted therefrom within the statutory period, the order became a final judgment, and that the probate court was without jurisdiction to set it aside at a subsequent term, and that its act in so doing was null and void.
The argument of learned counsel for appellant, that such an order is interlocutory in its nature and is subject to review and correction at any time during the period of administration, and only becomes final upon the final settlement of the estate, does not appear to us as being sound, nor in keeping with the policy of our law with respect to allowances to the widow. As is said in Waters v. Herbóth, supra, it was evidently the intention of the lawmakers to allow the widow to have the articles constituting’ her absolute property, or an allowance to supply the deficiency with
We think that it clearly appears that the order is classed among those orders and judgments of the probate court which are final in their nature; and that since the right of appeal therefrom is specifically provided by statute, when the statutory time for appeal is allowed to pass, the power of the probate court over it is at an end and its judgment in the premises is final and binding upon all interested in the estate. In this connection see, also, In Re Stephens, 83 Cal. 322; 1 Woerner on American Law of Administration (2 Ed.) Sec. 93, p. 205; Pettee v. Wilmarth, supra.
And in this connection we may say that, in our opinion, section 220, Revised Statutes 1909', authorizing the probate court to vacate an order allowing a demand against an estate within four months after the allowance thereof, is here inapplicable, for the reason that such section applies alone to demands against an estate and not to an allowance to the widow with respect to her absolute property. And were it applicable, it would avail appellant nothing here, for the reason that it appears from the record that more than five months elapsed after the entry of the original order before the appellant sought to have the same set aside.
For the reasons given above the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.