This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Probate Court finding appellant guilty of having concealed certain specified securities converted to cash by appellant belonging to the estate of Fannie Stone Woods, deceased, of the aggregate value of $37,994.95 and adjudging that Earl J. Woods, administrator of said estate, recover from appellant $37,994.95, plus a ten per cent penalty thereon in the sum of $3,799.50, and costs.
In his application for appointment as administrator filed June 22, 1956, Earl Woods disclosed no personal property, and he was appointed administrator upon giving bond in the sum of $4,000. On July 25, 1956, said administrator filed an inventory without appraisal, setting forth as the sole assets of the estate money belonging to the decedent in the sum of $41,510. 1
On August 22, 1956, appellant filed exceptions to the inventory, claiming that the currency belonged to him rather than to the estate. On November 1,1956, by leave of court, these exceptions were withdrawn by appellant.
On August 2, 1956, the administrator filed his complaint reciting that he had good cause to suspect and believe that appellant had concealed, embezzled or conveyed away money, goods, chattels, things in action or effects belonging to the estate, in fraud of the right of such administrator, to wit, the described securities converted into cash aggregating $37,994.95.
The record reveals a rather fantastic story related by five of the brothers and sisters of the deceased, that each of them secretly received from Fannie, prior to her death, gifts of $4,000 in cash which they had retained intact without depositing the money at the time of the hearing. In its opinion, the court says:
“A study of the record shows the course of the transactions by which this property [the securities] came into the hands of the respondent. As to the fact that they were in his possession there is not much of dispute or of occasion for doubt.
“However, when it comes to the final step in the matter, that of the distribution of the funds among the relatives of the decedent, the testimony of the respondent is so bizarre that to aсcept it taxes the credulity of the court beyond the breaking point. One can not reasonably be expected to believe that such uniformity of testimony as to the disposition of so considerable a sum of money among so many people could be possible.
“The court can not and does not believe that this testimony is sufficient to show that the title to the property was lodged anywhere except in the decedent at the time of her death.”
We recognize that ordinarily it is the function of the trial court to determine the credibility of the testimony of witnesses and that the trial judge in judging the accuracy, candor, and credibility of witnesses has the advantage of seeing the witnesses testify and heаring what they say firsthand, with the op
Findings of a referee having support in the evidence are to be given the force and effect of a verdict of a jury or the findings of the court in a nonjury case, and as a general rule will not be disturbed by a Court of Appeals unless manifestly against the weight of the evidence. 5A Corpus Juris Secundum, 628, Section 1665;
Kuerze
v.
Western German Bank,
Acknowledging that the findings of the referee approved by the trial court are entitled presumptively to be respected and sustained, nevertheless in the performance of our duty to determine whether the report and recommendation are sustained by evidence of a substantial, probative сharacter and in accordance with law, it seems to us, contrary to the conclusion reached by the trial court, that the uncontradicted testimony of a number of witnesses is not to be rejected in its entirety because such witnesses may, more or less uniformly, relate the same improbable story. Notwithstanding the close and confidential relationshiр between the members of the Stone family, it is quite difficult for us to believe that each of them was guilty of perjury at the hearing before the referee.
2
As a general rule, a reviewing court
In a proceeding for concealment of assets, the burden is upon the complainant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent received the money or other thing of value claimed to have come into his hands, and that he concealed, embezzled or conveyed it away.
Leonard
v.
State, ex rel. Scott, Exr.,
“The General Assembly, by its appropriate use of language in these sections, has limited the use of this summary proceeding to actions to recover specific property or the value thereof belonging to a trust estate, title to Which was in a decedent at his death, or to the recovery of property belonging to a trust estate concealed, taken or disposed of after the appointment of a fiduciary. If cases like this one were authorized by such statutory provisions, administrators could call on recipients of decedent’s checks payable to ‘cash’ and require them to prove payment of the proceeds thereof to the decedent. * * * The administrator might equally seek to require the indorsees and all others who cashed such checks tо account for the proceeds thereof. Certainly no one would contend that the indorsers of those checks could be proceeded against summarily under Section 10506-67 et seq., General Code, for the amount of such checks plus ten per cent penalty. ’ ’
In the instant case, it is undisputed that there is no concealment of the securities. Decedent’s title to the securities passed nine months before her death. Apparently, it is claimed that Dr. Stone is concealing money—currency—in the sum of $37,994.95.
Throughout the United States it has been held without exception that summary proceedings for the recovery of property belonging to decedents’ estates can not be used for the collection of debts owing the estate. 88 A. L. R., 853. In Ohio, the statute (Section 2109.50
et seq.,
Revised Code) provides a summary means, inquisitorial in nature, (1) to recover specific property, or the proceeds or value thereof, belonging to a trust estate, title to which was in a decedent at his death, or (2) to recover property belonging to a trust estate, concealed dr dis
Courts generally have frowned upon the exercise of summary jurisdiction.
In re Estate of Gottwald, supra
(
The facts in the Leiby case are dissimilar from those in the instant case, but the principle upon which the conclusion was reached in the former, in our opinion, is decisive in the instant case. In Leiby, the checks drawn payable to the decedent were cashed by the respondent who testified, apparently without corroboration, that the proceeds thereof were delivered to the decedent, respondent’s employer, during his lifetime. In the instant case, the two checks payable to the decedent were endorsed by her and cashed by the respondent who testified he delivered the proceeds to the decedent nine months before her death. This testimony of respondent is not only undisputed but, as above indicated, is corroborated by his sister. In Leiby, the court points out that the master commissioner did not find that any of the funds were in the present possession of the respondent or were in her possession at the time of decеdent’s death or were in her possession at any time otherwise than in transition, nor did it appear that the respondent owned any property, real or personal, to which any such funds were traceable. In the instant case, the referee found that the decedent “during her lifetime was the owner of certain securities, the proceeds of which came into the possession of Dr. Harley E. Stone; that Dr. Harley E. Stone was in the possession of this money; that it has not come into the estate. Your referee can come to no other conclusion than that it was her money and that it has not been accounted for by the respondent herein. Therefore, it is the finding of your referee that the respondent herein is guilty of concealing assets belonging to the estate of the decedent within the purview of Revised Code Section 2109.50.” (Emphasis supplied.)
As we construe the finding of the referee, as in the Leiby case, he merely finds that the respondent had been in possession of the money and had not accounted therefor to the decedent nor her administrator. As in the Leiby case, the administrator’s remedy in the instant case is an action at law for the recovery of money claimed to be due or for an accounting between the parties.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the Probate Court with directions to dismiss the proceeding at the administrator’s costs in this court and in the Probate Court.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
It was stated during argument on the appeal that this $41,510 in currency, together with $54,000 in government bonds in the joint names of Harley E. Stone or certain of his brothers and sisters, was discovered by Earl Woods
Harley and Floyd Stone are dentists by profession. Fred Stone is a merchant, engaged in business in Athens, Ohio. Florence Stone Jones, the youngest sister, is a machine operator and formerly was employed as an agent by a public transportation company. Ada Stone is a public school teacher in
By way of contrast, in
In re Estate of Fife, supra
(
But see
In re Estate of Howard,
