74 P.2d 147 | Kan. | 1937
The opinion of the court was delivered by
As this action was determined below and reaches us on appeal the principal controverted question is, Which of two parties, each an intervenor in the action as brought, is entitled to foreclose a certain real-estate mortgage?
The pertinent facts and the contention of the parties, as shown by the record, may be stated briefly as follows: Mary D. Horan brought this action February 24, 1937, against Hanna M. Dore and Ellen Dore to obtain judgment on two promissory notes executed by defendants and payable to plaintiff. Ellen Dore was a nonresident of Kansas. To obtain service upon her, plaintiff caused an attachment to be issued and levied upon certain real property owned by Ellen Dore and situated in Wyandotte county, Kansas, and took further steps to have judgment on the notes held to be a first lien on the property.
In March, 1931, Ellen Dore, then a single woman, residing in Kansas City, Mo., being the owner of the property later attached,
In the meantime, and on February 4, 1937, N. J. Wollard, the public administrator of Wyandotte county, Kansas, presented to the probate court of that county a petition for the appointment of himself as administrator of the estate of Catherine McAuliffe, deceased. This alleged that she was a resident of Wyandotte county, Kansas, that she departed this life in a hospital in Jackson county, Missouri, January 19, 1937, leaving personal property within Wyandotte county, Kansas, which required immediate attention; “that the value of said personal property left by said deceased is about $1,000; that said deceased died testate, but the said will was wrongfully removed out of the state of Kansas and is beyond the reach of this petitioner.” It was further alleged that Mary D. Horan, a sister and the only heir at law of the deceased residing in Kansas, had renounced her right to administer upon
On February 15, 1937, N. J. Wollard, as administrator of the estate of Catherine McAuliffe, filed an action in the district court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, to recover from Cornelius Horan a certain $1,000 U. S. government bond alleged to be the property of Catherine McAuliffe at the time of her death. A trial of that action resulted in judgment for defendant.
On March 30, 1937, N. J. Wollard, as administrator of the estate of Catherine McAuliffe, filed an application in this action for permission to intervene, alleging his appointment, and that the $3,000 note and mortgage were owned by Catherine McAuliffe at the time of her death. This application was granted, and on the same day he filed his answer, in which he admitted the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, but denied that the attachment was a first lien upon the property, and in a cross petition set up the $3,000 note and mortgage and sought to have it foreclosed as a first lien upon the real property.
On April 14, 1937, Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn filed an application to intervene in the action, in which she alleged that she was the owner of the $3,000 note and mortgage, and by her affidavit filed therewith set up her claim of title to it under the will of Catherine McAuliffe, and the action of the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, and the executor. This application was allowed, and on April 21 she filed her separate answer to the petition of plaintiff, which contained a general denial and an allegation that if plaintiff was entitled to recover any judgment or lien by attachment on the property the same was inferior to her lien under the mortgage, and by cross petition set up the mortgage and sought to foreclose it. Attached to this answer and cross petition was a copy of the will of Catherine McAuliffe, also copies of all of the proceedings in the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, all authenticated under the acts of congress.
On April 27 N. J. Wollard, as administrator, filed a reply to the
On May 13, 1937, Ellen Dore filed her verified answer, in which she admitted executing the first note sued upon by plaintiff and
On May 20, 1937, N. J. Wollard, as administrator, moved for judgment of foreclosure on the $3,000 note and mortgage on the pleadings. This motion was sustained, and a decree was entered adjudging the mortgage to be a first lien upon the property in controversy, and foreclosing the mortgage and directing the sale of the mortgaged premises.
The appeal is from the order of the court striking the cross petition of Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn from the files, and also from the judgment foreclosing the mortgage on the cross petition of N. J. Wollard, administrator.
We turn now to the merits of the appeal. It is clear from this record that at the time of her death Catherine McAuliffe owned the $3,000 note and mortgage securing it; that the note was past due and unpaid and the mortgage subject to foreclosure; that Catherine McAuliffe left a valid will, by the terms of which this note and mortgage were given specifically to Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn, and that by proceedings in the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, regular on their face and never appealed from or directly attacked, is shown a chain of title vesting title and possession of such instruments in Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn. These things are not controverted by any pleading filed in this action.
In the argument and brief of appellee quite a little is said to the effect “that for some time” prior to her last illness Catherine Mc-Auliffe lived with or near her sister, Mary D. Horan, in Wyandotte county, Kansas, and received her mail and had her bank account in Kansas. None of this is in the record, and if it were it would not be conclusive as to her place of residence.
The proceedings for the appointment of appellee as administrator, apparently prompted or brought about by Mary D. Horan, tend to show an effort to administer the estate of Catherine McAuliffe in Kansas as an intestate estate, with distribution to heirs at law of the decedent notwithstanding and ignoring her will. Appellee’s petition alleged that Catherine McAuliffe died testate, yet no request was made that he be appointed as administrator with the will annexed, which would have required final distribution to be made under the will and would have distributed the note and mortgage in question to the appellant. Ten days prior to appellee’s application the will had been admitted to probate in Jackson county, Missouri. In that will the testatrix had stated that she was a resident of Jackson county, Missouri. No mention of either of these facts was made in the petition for appellee’s appointment. Obviously the probate court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, was never advised of these facts. It would not be in harmony with principles of equity and fair dealing to hold that the order of the probate court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, appointing appellee administrator was final and conclusive as to this appellant.
Appellee argues that the proceedings of the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, have no extraterritorial effect; hence, that they are in no way binding on the courts of this state, citing Denny
Appellee says the question of conflict of jurisdiction of probate courts is not involved in this case. It is true no issue was raised by the pleadings as to the place of residence of Catherine McAuliffe at the time of her death. No evidence was taken on that question, and the judgment of the trial court was not based upon the adjudication of that question; yet, perhaps it is the only question the determination of which would enable this court to say definitely whether her will should have been probated and her estate administered upon in Missouri or in Kansas. If the deceased testatrix was a resident of Missouri at the time of her death, that is where her will should have been probated and her estate administered; if she was a resident of this state, our courts had jurisdiction to probate the will and administer upon her estate. Appellee could have raised that issue in this action, but for some reason preferred not to do so. Possibly the reason was, if upon a hearing of that issue it would have been determined the testatrix was a resident of this state at the time of her death it would have been necessary to probate her will in this state and administer her estate under it. This would have placed the ownership and possession of the $3,000 note and mortgage in controversy here in Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn, just where it was placed by the proceedings taken in the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri; also, it would have left nothing for Mary D. Horan, who initiated the proceedings in the probate court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, for she was not named as a beneficiary in the will of Catherine McAuliffe. She is benefited only by an administration which disregards the will and in which distribution is made under the law of descent. It seems clear that was the purpose of the attempted administration in Kansas. That is sought to be accomplished on the grounds that the proceedings in the probate court of Missouri had no effect outside that state, and
Appellee argues that appellant is estopped to claim the $3,000 note and mortgage in question, under the will of Catherine Mc-Auliffe and the proceedings had in the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, because of the judgment in the action he brought against Cornelius Horan to recover a $1,000 U. S. government bond and in which judgment was rendered for defendant. The point is not well taken. Appellant was not a party to that action; the ownership of this note and mortgage was not involved, and the record does not show that any question was at issue in that case that would in any way affect appellant’s title and ownership of the note and mortgage in question.
Quite a little is said in the briefs and arguments about the situs of the property of Catherine McAuliffe and whether its possession passed to the appellee. We are told in the briefs that she kept a lock box in a Missouri bank. Her will and th'e inventory of her estate in Missouri showed a long list of bonds and shares of corporate stock, as well as notes and mortgages. The record in the Missouri court discloses that all of those came into the possession of the executor appointed by that court. There is nothing in the record to show that any of the personal property of Catherine McAuliffe was ever in Kansas, except when the mortgage involved in this action, or its assignment, was recorded in the office of the register of deeds. Appellee makes no claim that he ever had actual possession of any of this property. His contention is that he became in constructive possession of it under the law by reason of his appointment as administrator. Ten days before that the executor had been appointed in Missouri, and by the same reasoning employed by appellee the executor would have had constructive legal possession of the property, and possibly did have actual possession of it, as the record discloses his possession later. Appellee prepared the copy of the note and mortgage set up in his cross petition from the records in the office of the register of deeds of Wyandotte county, Kansas, not from the instruments themselves. It is only by ignoring all the proceedings in the probate court of Missouri that appellee can be said to have had constructive legal possession of these instruments. It is argued that Catherine McAuliffe had debts in Kansas, but we were told in the argument that even to that time no claims against this estate had ever been filed in the probate court of
The probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, had presented to it a will in which the textatrix stated she was a resident of that county, together with a petition for its probate, which alleged she was a resident of that county. The court proceeded to hear evidence and admit the will to probate, and in doing so found that the testatrix was a resident of that county. The court’s adjudication on that question is at least prima jade valid. It never has been attacked either directly or collaterally. In this action, where the question of the place of residence of the testatrix at the time of her death might have been put in issue and determined, the parties chose not to do so. On the other hand, they boldly ask this court to ignore those proceedings entirely. This the court declines to do. From this record the proceedings in Missouri should be regarded as valid. (See cases above cited.) No question as to the validity of the will of Catherine McAuliffe is raised in this action. In effect it is conceded to be a valid will. Under its terms the note and mortgage in controversy here were given to Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn, and under an appropriate order of the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, they were duly transferred to her. They are and have been rightfully in her possession. It necessarily follows the trial court erred in striking her cross petition from the files. After that was done the defendant, Ellen Dore, filed a verified answer in this action in which she admitted executing one of the notes sued on by plaintiffs and claimed certain credits on it, and denied executing the second note sued on. She admitted she was owner of the real property attached, that she had executed the $3,000 note and the mortgage on the property to secure it, and that the same was past due and unpaid. She questioned the right of the appellee to foreclose the mortgage, and made as a part of her answer all of the allegations of the cross petition of Mary Elizabeth Dore McGlynn as to her ownership of the note and mortgage and right to foreclose it. With the pleadings in this condition appellee moved, and the court granted to him, judgment on the pleadings foreclosing the mortgage. The appeal here involves that ruling. It was erroneous.
From what has been said it necessarily follows that the judgment of the court below must be reversed with directions to set aside the