71 Mo. App. 399 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The plaintiff is the executor of the estate of Lizzie Borgmann, deceased. On the twenty-seventh day of January, 1896, he filed in the - probate court of Montgomery county an affidavit in which he charged that the defendant had concealed and embezzled or wrongfully withheld certain notes belonging to
At the instance of the defendant the circuit court gave the following instruction, of which the plaintiff complains.
“(7) The court instructs the jury, that the charge here against the defendant, Mrs. Lizzie Struttmann, is one of embezzling assets, belonging to the estate of Lizzie Borgmann, deceased, and if you believe from the evidence in the case that defendant was in lawful possession of the notes, deeds of trust, goods and the trunk and its contents described in defendant’s answer prior to the death of said Lizzie Borgmann, claiming title thereto in good faith, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”
It may be considered as settled that under the old statute it was not intended to confer on probate courts jurisdiction to determine controverted questions of title. Does the amendment indicate an intention to do so? We would say not. Judge Woebm says that “the right or title of the decedent to property claimed by the executor or administrator * * * must, if an adjudication becomes necessary, be tried in courts of general jurisdiction, unless such jurisdiction be expressly conferred on probate courts.” Woerner’s Am. Law of Adm., sec. 151. We said in Cardwell v. Stewart, 67 Mo. App. 61: “Where such jurisdiction has been conferred upon probate courts by statute, the jurisdiction has never been carried by intendment beyond the plain language of the mandate of the statute, because, as repeatedly decided, the policy is very questionable of turning into probate courts, from their accustomed channels, a great stream of litigation touching contested rights to personal chattels which these courts from their constitution are so little calculated to sustain.” In construing a similar statute the supreme court of Arkansas denied the jurisdiction of probate courts thereunder to litigate controverted titles to property. The court ruled that nothing short of an express statute conferring such jurisdiction would suffice. Moss v. Sandefur, 15 Ark. 381. In the course of the opinion the court remarked that the statute was enacted to reach persons “who have been intrusted in the lifetime of the deceased with the custody of his effects, or who, at or about the time of his death, or soon afterward, coming into their possession, either casually or by design, hold quietly and secretly, without color of lawful authority, and evading any discovery of the truth in the premises' either by direct means or studied