146 Ark. 520 | Ark. | 1920
The facts in this case are substantially as follows: On the 28th day of March, 1899, Mary Win-ton and Fred Groschner were married and four children were born to them, one of whom was Gilbert Groschner. On the 13th of December, 1907, Mrs Groschner obtained a divorce from her husband and was awarded the custody of their minor children, and since that time and while the children were of tender years their care, education and maintenance • devolved entirely upon Mrs. Groschner. In June, 1915, Mary Winton, formerly Mrs. Groschner, moved with her children from Arkansas to Oklahoma where she and her children have resided ever since. Soon after she moved to Oklahoma her son, Gilbert, went to work and contributed all of his earnings to the support of his mother and the younger children. He enlisted in the United States army during the war and served for a period of eighteen months, during which time he allotted to his mother $25 per month. After he was discharged from the army and for about a year before his death he contributed to the support of his mother and the younger children the sum of $80' per month. On the 2d of January, 1920, while employed as a driver in a coal mine of the Whitehead Coal & Mining Company (hereafter called coal company), in the city of Henrietta, Oklahoma, he was killed by coming in contact with an uninsulated electric wire in the mine. His body was brought to Sebastian County, Arkansas, for burial. Soon thereafter Mary Winton, his mother, informed the coal company of the facts as above stated. The coal . company carried life insurance for its employees with T. H. Mastín & Company of Kansas City, Missouri. After the coal company was informed of the death of Gilbert Groschner and the facts as above stated, a representative- of that company entered into negotiations with Fred Groschner, Gilbert’s father, who lived at Mansfield in Sebastian County, Arkansas, as a result of which Fred Groschner took out letters of administration on the estate of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, and filed a friendly suit in the Sebastian Cirpuit Court against the coal company for damages for the alleged negligent killing of Gilbert Groschner.
The attorney representing the coal company, who also represented the insurance company, filed an answer for the coal company, and Fred Groschner and the coal company agreed upon a consent judgment in favor of Fred Groschner as administrator of the estate of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, and against the coal company in the sum of $1,791, of which $1,500 was to be paid Fred Groschner as administrator, after deducting the sum of $291, which was retained by the coal company to reimburse it for the amount paid by it for the funeral expenses of Gilbert Groschner. At the time of his death Gilbert Groschner was still under the control and custody of his mother, Mary Winton, and his residence was in Oklahoma where he was killed. He owned no property in Arkansas. Judgment was entered on the 5th day of March, 1920. On the 9th of March, 1920, at the same term of the court, Mary Winton filed her motion asking to be made a party and to appear for the special purpose of setting aside the judgment. In her petition she alleged substantially the facts as above and further alleged that soon after informing the coal company of the death of her son she received a communication from the insurance company offering her the sum of $1,500 in settlement of her claim on account of the death of her son, Gilbert, which she declined to accept. Whereupon, the coal company fraudulently and illegally procured the appointment of Fred Groschner as administrator of the estate of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, for the fraudulent and illegal purpose of unlawfully settling with Fred Groschner as administrator for the damages, and for the purpose of defrauding her of her rights. She further alleged that, in pursuance of this fraudulent purpose, the suit for damages was begun in the Sebastian Circuit Court, which resulted in the consent judgment as above set out. She alleged that the appointment of Fred Groschner as administrator of the estate of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, by the clerk of the probate court for the Greenwood District of Sebastian County, and the bringing of the suit was all done and procured through fraudulent collusion between the coal company, the insurance company, and Fred Groschner. She prayed that the judgment be set aside and for all proper relief.
Fred Groschner, administrator, answered, setting up that he was the father of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, and that he was duly appointed administrator of his estate. He alleged that Gilbert Groschner always regarded Sebastian County as his home. He admitted that Gilbert was killed while working for the coal company as alleged, but averred that it was the contention of the coal company that he was killed without any negligence on its part, and that his death was brought about by his 'own contributory negligence, and that he had assumed the risk; that he, as administrator, and the coal company had agreed upon a settlement in the sum of $1,791 for the damages, and that in pursuance of this arrangement suit was brought by him against the coal company for that sum, and that it entered its appearance and confessed judgment. He alleged, however, that this was all done in good faith and that he regarded the settlement as a good settlement of the controverted claim.- He denied specifically all the allegations of fraud.
The court heard the testimony and found the facts substantially as above set forth and also found that the attorney, Mr. J. B. McDonough, was free from fraud, which finding we expressly approve. The court therefore entered a judgment vacating the judgment rendered at a former day and striking the case of Fred Groschner as administrator of the estate of Gilbert Groschner, deceased, against the coal company from its docket. From that judgment is this appeal.
The judgment of the court was correct for two reasons. First, the appellant was appointed administrator of the estate of his son, Gilbert Groschner, deceased, by the clerk of the probate court in vacation. This appointment was subject.to the confirmation or rejection of the probate court. Section 1, Kirby’s Digest. It is not alleged or proved by the appellant that the appointment of the clerk was confirmed by the probate court before the institution of the action against the coal company in the circuit court and before that court rendered its judgment in his favor. It appears, therefore, from the allegation of the appellee’s petition to vacate and her testimony, which is the same as the allegations in her petition, that the administrator had been appointed in vacation by the clerk of the probate court, and that the action was instituted by him after such appointment.
Section 2 of Kirby’s Digest provides that “letters testamentary and of administration shall be granted in the county in which the testator or intestate resided; * * and, if the deceased had no such place of residence and no lands, such letters may be granted in the county in which the testator or intestate died * * The undisputed facts show that Gilbert Groschner neither resided nor died in Sebastian County. Therefore, under the above statute, the appointment of appellant as his administrator by the clerk of the probate court was absolutely void. The action to vacate the judgment was not a collateral attack upon the appointment of the administrator by the probate court of Sebastian County, for that court never made or approved such appointment. The question, therefore, does not arise as to whether the action to vacate the judgemnt of the circuit court was a collateral attack upon the judgment of the probate court.
Second, the court was correct in finding that the judgment in favor of the appellant as administrator against the coal company in the circuit court was procured by the collusion and fraud of Fred Groschner as administrator and the agent of the coal company. If the circuit court had been advised of the facts, 'which the testimony tended to prove were purposely withheld from the court for the purpose of procuring the consent judgment, that court undoubtedly would not have rendered the judgment in the first place. Being convinced that fraud had been practiced upon it, as the court found, its ruling in vacating such judgment and dismissing the cause was in all things correct. The judgment is therefore affirmed.