127 N.E.2d 409 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1955
This cause has to do with the apportionment of $5,250 which is part of the settlement of a wrongful death claim following the death of Perry Miller in an accident on September 14, 1951. The beneficiaries are the surviving spouse and three adult children. Those whose pecuniary interests were affected by the death of Perry Miller were unable to adjust their claims to the fund, and the Probate Court of Sandusky County, upon having its jurisdiction invoked, divided the sum equally among them. The surviving spouse, Mary Miller, thereupon appealed to the Common Pleas Court on questions of law and fact, and that court, after a trial de novo, awarded the entire sum to her. Two of the children, Ruth E. Barber and Mildred E. Cloud, filed this appeal from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court on questions of law.
Appellants claim that a motion made by them in the Common Pleas Court to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction was erroneously overruled. The journal entry of the Probate Court recites with respect to the hearing there that "the same was submitted to the court without a record having been taken thereof."
It is well known that a probate judge hears many separate matters in the administration of an estate, despite the fact that the entire proceedings are recorded as one case under one number.
As the various facets of the case are brought to his attention, he becomes familiar with all the factual aspects of the estate in relation to the different persons involved. He consequently is competent to decide questions presented to him without the necessity of a formal hearing and the taking or making of a record. That is what occurred in this matter before the Probate Court, and as a result no bill of exceptions could be readied to appeal the judgment rendered directly to the Court of Appeals.
This is the very situation contemplated by the General Assembly of Ohio in enacting Section
Appellants assign as error the refusal of the trial court to receive in evidence the entire record of the administration of the estate in Probate Court. Clearly, such wholesale admission of records would bring into the evidence papers and documents wholly extraneous and foreign to the issues involved. We find no error in this regard.
The appellants complain that the trial court refused to allow the son, Lee E. Miller, on cross-examination, to state whether his mother signed a deed to Don Young, as trustee, to three parcels of real estate for his benefit. Since the son was testifying for the mother, an appellee, it was proper for the appellants to attempt to show his interest or bias in the outcome of this lawsuit, and not to permit an answer to the question propounded was error that was prejudicial to the substantial rights of the appellants. We likewise believe that the court was in error in not permitting Lee Miller, also on cross-examination, to answer the question whether he was in need of money. The testimony, however, by Ruth Barber, on direct examination, about property deeded to her by her father, was properly struck from the record on the ground that such answer was self-serving and not the best evidence.
The appellants also say that the judgment and order was contrary to law. The record in this case discloses that Perry Miller and Mary Miller had extensive holdings separate and apart from each other. They had separate sources of income independent of each other. Each paid the taxes and provided for the repairs for their separate properties; they also carried individual bank accounts in their own names and accounted to each other for advancements made by them back and forth.
The trial court awarded the entire sum to the widow on the theory that she was entitled to the care, support and services of her husband under the law. It is true the law presumes pecuniary injury to persons legally entitled to care and support *496
from a decedent in an action for wrongful death. (Karr, Admr., v.Sixt,
It is stated in Karr, Admr., v. Sixt, supra, in paragraph six of the syllabus:
"The term `pecuniary injury' as used in Section 10509-167, General Code, comprehends essentially injury measured by the prospective advantages of a pecuniary nature which have been cut off by the premature death of the person from whom they would have proceeded * * *." *497
In view of the above, the assignments of error that the judgment is contrary to law and against the weight of the evidence and that the trial court erred in overruling appellants' motion for a new trial are well taken and should be sustained. We hold, therefore, that the judgment is contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence and that substantial justice has not been done the parties complaining.
The judgment in the Common Pleas Court, consequently, is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings according to law not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
KOVACHY, P. J., SKEEL and HURD, JJ., concur.
KOVACHY, P. J., SKEEL and HURD, JJ., of the Eighth Appellate District, sitting by designation in the Sixth Appellate District.