120 Ind. 180 | Ind. | 1889
This litigation commenced with the filing of a claim against the estate which the appellant represents.. Originally the claim was made up of two paragraphs, numbered one and two, respectively. The court sustained a, demurrer to the first paragraph, and the appellee filed an additional paragraph numbered three. Demurrers were overruled to the second and third paragraphs, and an answer filed in two paragraphs, the second of which was a general, denial. A demurrer was filed and sustained to the first paragraph and an exception taken.
The only errors assigned which we care to notice are, that, the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the second paragraph of the claim, in sustaining the demurrer to the first paragraph of answer, and in overruling the motion for a new trial. As the same strictness in pleading is not required in the filing of claims against decedents’ estates that is required in ordinary civil actions, the second paragraph of the claim may be good, possibly; but as we are not entirely satisfied that it is sufficient from the investigation which we have made, and as it does not become necessary to-pass upon its sufficiency, in view of the conclusion to which we have arrived in reference to the ruling of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial, we do not decide as-to whether it is sufficient or not.
In passing upon the demurrer to. the answer, and that an understanding may be had of the question presented, it will be proper to state briefly the allegations made in the second - paragraph of the claim, which is the paragraph on which .the allowance made by the court depends. . Enoch Hayes, the decedent, died testate in November, 1875, and his will was duly probated in Hamilton county, Ohio, where he resided, on the 7th day of December, 1875, and in Dearborn county, Indiana, on the 22d day of the same month and
On the 27th day of January, 1882, an accounting took place between the appellee and the said Anna Hayes Cooper, and it was thereby ascertained that it would be necessary for the appellee to pay to the said Anna Hayes Cooper $1,725 to equalize her with the latter on account of the excess of claims paid by her over what the appellee had paid, and to make them equal the appellee leased for three years to the said Anna Hayes Cooper and her husband certain real estate which she owned in Dearborn county, Indiana. That afterwards it turned out that the indebtedness of said estate was much greater than was anticipated, and the real estate that was devised to the appellee was sold by the executor for the payment of debts; and the theory of the claim is, that the appellee became subrogated to the rights of creditors to the extent of the said sum of $1,725 paid to the said Anna
It may be well to state further that Cooper was removed as executor of the estate in Dearborn county, and the appellant became administrator de bonis non.
The answer rests on the following item in the will: “ I will that in case there is not money enough in the hands of the executors of my father’s will to pay all my just debts, I then desire that the property herein devised to my wife Anna and to my mother Mary Ann Sykes shall be held liable in equal proportions to pay the same, and to this end I make a charge upon my estate so devised to perform the same.”
It is alleged in the answer that the appellee and the said Anna Hayes Cooper accepted the provisions as made for them by the will, and the theory of the answer is that they thereby became personally liable for the indebtedness of the estate, and therefore the right of subrogation does not exist.
It is not our opinion that the devisees became personally liable because of their acceptance of the devises made to them by the will. By the terms of the will they took title to the real estate subject to the encumbrances ..and charge that was placed upon it. Copeland v. Copeland, 89 Ind. 29; Hancock v. Fleming, 103 Ind. 533.
In Porter v. Jackson, 95 Ind. 210, and other cases referred to by counsel for the appellant, a personal liability was imposed on the devisee. The provisions of the will were such in each of those cases that by an acceptance of its terms a personal liability was assumed.
In our judgment the answer was bad, but' were we of a different opinion, there would be no available error, because all facts provable under this paragraph were competent under the general denial. E. S. 1881, section 2324. The court should have sustained the motion for a new trial.
This case may be said to be a counterpart of the case of Burkham v. Hayes, 116 Ind. 136. Burkham, the appellant in that case, filed his claim as assignee of the said Anna
All that is said as to the claims paid by Mrs. Cooper applies with full force to the appellee’s claim in this case; and it may be said in addition that the appellee paid no part of
The question as to the appointment of Holman judge pro tempore by McMullen, judge pro tempore, was not properly saved, but see Cargar v. Fee, 119 Ind. 536, which disposes of the question when properly raised.
The judgment is reversed, with costs.