197 N.E. 255 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1935
This cause comes before this court upon motion to dismiss the appeal perfected from the Court of Common Pleas of Perry county. The petition filed by Ann Kochs, as administratrix of the estate of Catherine Noon, deceased, is labeled "petition for a declaratory judgment and determination of rights and legal relations and other relief." In this petition it is averred that the plaintiff administratrix had, in the Court of Common Pleas of Perry county, obtained a judgment against W.D. Foraker, as executor of the estate of Bernard Noon, for wrongful conversion of the personal estate of Catherine Noon, deceased, which judgment was afterwards affirmed by this court. It is averred that said administratrix has filed her final account in the Probate Court and is desirous of making distribution of the assets in her hands; that the defendant Foraker, as executor, has set up certain *328 claims against the funds, and that the plaintiff, as administratrix, has incurred certain expenses which she desires to pay. The prayer of the petition is that the court instruct her as to her rights, and instruct her to pay herself, as heir of Catherine Noon, the entire balance in her hands, and to refuse to pay any part to the said W.D. Foraker, as executor.
To this petition an answer was filed by Foraker, as executor, in which he admits the judgment against him set forth in the petition, except that, by general denial, he denies that the former action was one for conversion, and avers that the same was for the recovery of one-half of $8,000, formerly a certificate of deposit, and $500, formerly in a Liberty bond. He further avers that upon said judgment being affirmed, and a motion filed in the Supreme Court being overruled, he paid said amount to the plaintiff, as administratrix. He avers in his cross-petition that his decedent, as the widower of Catherine Noon, deceased, is entitled, under the laws of Ohio, to certain exemptions, and is entitled to a distributive share in her estate. He denies the right of the plaintiff to pay the other expenses alleged to have been incurred by her. His answer further contains a prayer that he be decreed to have an interest in the estate under the provisions of Sections 10654 and 8592 of the General Code, and that the plaintiff be ordered to pay to him the amount to which he is entitled as widower, and also his distributive share.
A demurrer filed to this answer was sustained, and Foraker, executor, not desiring to plead further, final judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and, from that order, an appeal was perfected to this court, to which appeal the motion to dismiss is now directed.
The Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, Sections 12102-1 to 12102-16, General Code, does not establish or change any substantive rights. Section 12102-12 *329 states: "This act is declared to be remedial; its purpose is to settle and to afford relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status and other legal relations."
Section 12102-7, General Code, provides that "all orders, judgments and decrees under this act may be reviewed as other orders, judgments and decrees." In other words, if the cause of action were equitable in its nature, so that an appeal might be perfected from the judgment of the lower court, such an appeal might be had if the action were brought under this declaratory judgment act. If the cause of action were not equitable in its nature, then error might be prosecuted. This act simply broadens the remedies, but it does not, and could not, change the essential nature of an action itself.
As stated by this court in the case of Diebold Safe Lock Co.
v. Fulton, Supt. of Banks,
In that decision this court cited, and here cites again, the case of Wagner v. Armstrong,
We fail to see how it can be claimed that the issues raised in the instant case are equitable in their nature. They have to do with the distribution of estates, a matter purely statutory, and with no equitable principle involved. Such a statute has been in existence in Ohio a great many years, first as Revised Statute 6202, later as Section 10857 of the General Code, and now as Section 10504-66, General Code.
Some concern has been given us by the holding of the Supreme Court in the case of Swing et al., Exrs., v. Townsend,
The appealability to the Circuit Court was questioned, but not decided — apparently not having been urged — in the case ofSilk, Admr., v. Merry, 13 C.D., 218, 3 C.C. (N.S.), 91.
It seems to us that the different constitutional provisions in effect at the time of the Supreme Court decision in the Swing v.Townsend case, and at the present time, warrant, and in fact make mandatory, a different conclusion in the instant case.
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This constitutional provision of course is controlling and cannot be added to or subtracted from by any legislative act or judicial decision. If the action is not one in chancery there can be no appeal to this court, regardless of statutory enactments, and, holding, as we do, that this action is not one in chancery, it follows that the motion to dismiss the appeal will be, and the same hereby is, sustained.
Motion to dismiss sustained.
LEMERT, P.J., and CARTER, J., the latter of the Seventh Appellate District, concur.