15 N.W.2d 674 | Mich. | 1944
Nancy Everton, formerly Nancy Griffin, presented a claim, in the probate court, for $890 against the estate of her brother, Frank Patrick Griffin, who died testate in the city of Detroit, November 23, 1941. The probate court referees reported allowance of the claim. The administrator of the estate, with will annexed, objected to the allowance of the claim as reported by the referees, stating that the name of P.F. Griffin, which appears on the instrument upon which the claim is based, is not the genuine signature of the deceased, *378 and that the statute of limitations bars the claim. The probate court allowed the claim and the administrator took an appeal to the circuit court. The claim was based upon a written agreement, purporting to have been signed by the deceased on March 23, 1923, and acknowledged an indebtedness of $890 to claimant, and contained a promise to pay the same whenever he was financially able to do so.
Before impanelling the jury the circuit judge stated on the record:
"Now in this matter, Mr. Reporter, let the record show that both counsel and the court have been in conference on this matter for some time, and it is now, as I understand it, stipulated and agreed by the appellant here that the matter is to go to trial here on the objections to the allowance set up in paragraph 4 of the appellant's objections to the allowance of the claim of Nancy Everton by the referees. Paragraph 4 reads: `Because if it was genuine the statute of limitations has long since run against the claim. According to the tenor of the instrument the claim was due and payable when the testator was financially able to pay it. A right of action accrued to the claimant then and the statute of limitations began to run against the claim.' The proofs here are to be limited to the question of when, if ever, was the testator financially able to pay the amount set up in the instrument during his lifetime, and, as I understand it, the appellant now stipulates and agrees that that is the issue here. Is that about right, Mr. Alexander?
"Mr. Alexander: That is just about the correct analysis, your Honor.
"The Court: So we will proceed in this matter, and the issue to be determined, as I have already tried to indicate, is when the testator here was financially able to pay the amount set forth in the *379 instrument. I will limit the proof to that question, and it will be for the jury to say when he was able to pay it, if he was ever able to pay it. Of course, the application as to when the statute of limitations started to run, if ever, will be for the court. Now have I got that right?
"Mr. Alexander: That is correct.
"The Court: That suits you, Mr. Eggenberger?
"Mr. Eggenberger: Yes, your Honor."
The agreement, if signed by the deceased, was evidently home-drawn and was styled "a Sacred Trust."
At the trial the circuit judge in his charge to the jury directed answers in writing to the following questions:
"No. 1. Did the deceased, Frank P. Griffin, become able to pay the obligation mentioned in the exhibit during his lifetime?
"Answer yes or no.
"No. 2. If the answer to No. 1 is yes, when did he become so able?
"Answer by fixing the date."
The jury answered question No. 1 by "Yes," and to question No. 2, answered that he became able to pay "April 4, 1936." Thereupon the court affirmed the probate court allowance of the claim.
The administrator appeals on the sole ground that the verdict of the jury was against the clear weight of the evidence. The sole legatee under the will of the deceased took no part in the trial and, in fact, did not appear in the case until April 12, 1943, or 45 days after the trial and judgment.
The legatee, in a brief, claims the administrator was without authority to comply with the issues as stated by the circuit judge and thereby waived a *380 "material legal right" of the legatee without the latter's knowledge or consent.
The attorney for claimant in his brief asks us to strike from the record the brief filed in behalf of the legatee, claiming that the legatee is a mere interloper. The point raised in the brief for the legatee is the only one of importance in the case and, had leave been asked, we would have granted the filing of the brief. We now exercise the power of this court under Court Rule No. 72 (1933), which states:
"The Supreme Court may, at any time, in addition to its general powers, in its discretion and on such terms as it deems just: * * *
"(g) Give any judgment and make any order which ought to have been given or made, and make such other and further orders and grant such relief, whether mentioned in the notice of appeal or not, as the case may require."
The claimed agreement did not prove itself and claimant was not entitled to verdict and judgment without proof of the signature of the deceased, and such proof could not be waived by the administrator or rendered unnecessary by the court.
In Caswell v. Stearns,
"Claims against the estates of deceased persons must be proved by the claimants, and judicially *381 found. They cannot be established by concession of the decedent's representatives. * * * Neither the statute nor the rule was designed to operate as a practical repeal of the probate law requiring affirmative proof of claims against the estates of decedents."
In Hampton v. Van Nest's Estate,
"We doubt if it is applicable to cases appealed from the probate court. We think the burden was upon the claimant all the time to make his case and prove the execution of the instruments claimed to have been executed by the deceased."
The court and counsel for the parties were all in error in leaving out such essential issue, and for such error the judgment is reversed and a new trial granted, but without costs to any one.
NORTH, C.J., and STARR, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, BOYLES, and REID, JJ., concurred. *382