This is an appeal by plaintiff, George W. Helliker, Jr., from a judgment dismissing his petition. Plaintiff’s claim was for damages for personal injuries and property damage alleged to have been sustained by him on August 2, 1950, while a passenger in his automobile which was at the time being driven by Norman E. Thomas-. Plaintiff alleged that his injuries and damage were caused by the negligence of said Thomas in permitting said motor vehicle to leave the road and collide with an embankment. Norman E. Thomas died on August 2, 1950, .and defendant, Kermit B'ram, was on the 12th day of August, 1950, appointed administrator of said Thomas’ estate. Thereafter, notice of said appointment was duly published, as required by law. This suit was filed October 9, 1951, and the service of process therein constituted the first and only exhibition of said claim to the administrator. Defendant moved for a dismissal on the ground that the action was barred under Section 464.-020 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in sustaining said motion to dismiss. He argues in support of this contention, (1) that an analysis of the various sections of Chapter 464 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., clearly indicates that the one-year limitation provided by Section 464.020, supra, was intended to apply only to contractual claims based upon “written instruments” or “accounts”; and (2) that the application of said section is confined entirely to proceedings over which the probate court has jurisdiction, and consequently, is.no bar to the present action which is one ex de-licto on a contingent claim not cognizable in the probate court.
There is no basis for the contention that Section 464.020 is limited in its operation to contractual claims founded upon “written instruments” or “accounts.”
Chapter 464 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., provides for the manner of exhibition of all demands against estates without any qualification as to their character, requires the classification of all demands without regard to quality, and provides for their payment in the order classified. There is no exclusion of tort claims anywhere in the statutes. The language of Section 464.020 is all-inclusive.
Section 464.060 provides that: “All actions pending against any person at the time of his death, which, by law, survive against the executor or administrator, shall be considered demands legally exhibited against his estate from the time such action shall be revived, and classed accordingly.” (Emphasis ours.)
Section 464.070 provides that: "All actions commenced against such executor or administrator, after death of the deceased, shall be considered demands legally exhibited against such estate from the time of serving the original process on such executor or administrator.” (Emphasis ours.)
Section 464.020 bars "all demands not thus exhibited in one year * * (Emphasis ours.)
Section 464.010 provides: “All demands against the estate of any deceased person *558 shall be divided into the following classes: * * * (5) All demands, without regard to quality, which shall be legally exhibited against the estate within six months after the date of the granting of the first letters on the estate; (6) All demands thus exhibited after the end of six months and within one year after the date of the granting of the first letters.” (Emphasis ours.)
Section 464.130 provides that: “All demands against any estate shall be paid * * * in the order in which they are classed.” (Emphasis ours.)
It seems clear that the classification “all demands, without regard to quality” in Section 464.010 includes tort claims exhibited in conformity with Section 464.070. (Emphasis ours.)
As used in the statutes under discussion, the word “demands” should be held to include every species of liability which the personal representative can be called upon to pay out of the assets of the estate. It has been held by this court that the term “demands” is extremely broad. In Mayberry v. McClurg,
“The word 'demand/ says Lord Coke, is one of the most comprehensive terms in the law. (Co.Litt. 291b.) It is defined by other writers, to be a claim, a legal obligation. In the matter of Denny and Manhatten [Co.], 2 Hill [N.Y.], 220, Nelson, C. J., says, ‘the term “demand” is one of the most extensive import, among the most so, indeed, of any that are known to the law.’ ”
We believe that the plain language of the statutes does not allow the exclusion for which plaintiff contends.
In making the contention that Section 464.020 is limited in its application to proceedings over which the probate court has jurisdiction, appellant relies on a number of decisions of this court and our courts of appeal. The following analysis of the cases cited reveals .that they were either suits in equity to establish rights to funds not properly a part of the estate, or actions in rem to subject specific real estate to the payment of a debt owed by the deceased.
In the case of Orr v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.,
In Cunningham v. Kinnerk,
“The purpose of the suit being the pursuit of a trust fund which the court is asked to take in its entirety out from among the assets of Kate Harris’ estate with which it is mingled and to order the same to be paid over in its entirety to plaintiffs as the beneficiaries of the fund, equity alone has jurisdiction over the claims, and the probate court acquired no jurisdiction over the claims previously filed therein; the issue being one of subject matter. Citing cases.) There is no question here of plaintiffs having attempted to proceed in the probate court by waiving the trust and suing as general creditors of Kate Harris’ estate; and, as we have already pointed out, the Campbell fund was actually no part of her estate. Consequently, the adverse judgment of the probate court of St. Louis county, as well as of the circuit court of St. Louis county, exercising its derivative jurisdiction on the appeal to it, were not res adjudicata of the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims. * * * While the lower court did not make an express finding upon this question, the fact that it proceeded to a judgment in favor of plaintiffs, and against defendant, indicates that it found sub silentio, and properly so, that such defense was without merit. And, of course, since the subject-matter of the claims was outside the jurisdiction of the probate court, they were not required to be exhibited to it, and defendant’s plea of the one-year special probate statute of limitation (section 75, R.S.1929, Mo.St.Ann. § 75, p. 45 [V.A.M.S. § 461.440]) was likewise without merit.”
Cowan v. Mueller,
Sturdy v. Smith, Mo.App.,
Bond v. Unsell, Mo.App.,
Clay v. Walker, Mo.App.,
“There is no merit in this contention. This is a suit in equity to establish a resulting trust, of which the probate court would have no jurisdiction. * * * The theory of this suit is that Walker never owned the land, but merely held the title thereto in trust for his wife. In other words, the purpose of the suit is not to recover a claim against the estate of David S. Walker, but to recover property which plaintiff’s mother owned but is now in the possession of defendants. If Walker never owned the property, it was not an asset of his estate, and a suit brought by the rightful owner to recover it could not be classed as a claim against his estate. Plaintiff’s claim not being a demand against Walker’s estate, he was not required to exhibit it in the probate court as a demand against said estate, within one year from the date of the publication of notice of the granting of letters of administration on said estate, or bring a suit within that time.”
In Holland Banking Co. v. See,
Appellant also cites Peck v. Fillingham’s Estate,
The probate court, by virtue of this constitutional provision, is not a court of general jurisdiction, but its jurisdiction is circumscribed and restrained to those matters set out in Section 16, Article V, supra, and any legislative acts which attempt to extend such jurisdiction beyond that conferred would be violative of the constitution. There is nothing in the constitution which, in our opinion, would indicate that the framers thereof contemplated conferring upon such courts general equity jurisdiction or the right to adjudicate actions in tort. But, that does not mean that a cause of action in tort (which, when reduced to a judgment, becomes a debt payable out of the assets of the estate), should not 'be subject to the same limitations as any other form of demand allowable against the estate. Such a construction is permissible in view of the broad and all-inclusive language contained in Chapter 464, and is in accord with the public interest which is promoted by the prompt settlement of the estates of deceased persons.
Appellant’s final point is that the non-claim statute is not applicable for the reason that the claim asserted by plaintiff is contingent in nature. There is no merit to this contention.
Under the law, a tort claim is not contingent merely because claimant may not prevail at a trial thereof. The distinguishing feature of a contingent claim is that the cause of action has not accrued. Pierce v. Johnson,
For the reasons indicated, it is our view that the action of the trial court in sustaining the motion to dismiss was proper. The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
