207 N.W. 639 | Minn. | 1926
Thereafter the respondent duly tendered to the appellant as the representative of the estate the amount due on the mortgage as fixed by the judgment and asked for a satisfaction thereof. The appellant refused to receive the money or execute a satisfaction. Thereupon the respondent brought the present suit in which he set forth the prior proceedings, paid the amount due into court, and asked for a judgment discharging the property from the lien of the mortgage. The appellant answered, admitting the tender, but asserting that the judgment in the former action was wholly void. The court struck out this portion of the answer and directed judgment for respondent. The appellant appealed. *322
On February 19, 1924, the district court affirmed the order of the probate court admitting the will of Lowell C. Lamoreaux to probate and appointing Genevra D. Lamoreaux executrix thereof. On March 21, 1924, she resigned as executrix and on the same date the appellant was appointed administrator with the will annexed. It does not appear that the executrix ever took charge of the estate or assumed to act as such.
Although the appellant became administrator of the estate with the will annexed while the trial of the former action was in progress, he was designated as special administrator throughout all the proceedings in that action. He now claims, in his capacity as administrator, that the judgment in that action is absolutely void. He asserts, as the grounds for this contention, that a special administrator cannot maintain such an action, and also that he ceased to be special administrator when the district court affirmed the order appointing the executrix.
The statute provides that the power of a special administrator shall cease upon the issuance of letters testamentary or of administration, but actions commenced by him do not abate and may be prosecuted to final judgment by the executor or administrator. G.S. 1923, § 8785. The executrix did nothing. After the appellant became administrator with the will annexed, he prosecuted the former action to a decision on the merits, appealed from that decision to this court, submitted the cause to this court on the merits and, pursuant to the decision of this court rendered at his instance, final judgment has been entered.
If the facts alleged in the complaint in the former action to the effect that the decedent and the respondent were tenants in common of the property; that it was encumbered by mortgages, instalments of which were past due and unpaid; that respondent was financially irresponsible; that he was collecting all the income from the property and appropriating it to his own use; and that he intended to allow the mortgages to be foreclosed, were true, the appellant probably had authority under G.S. 1923, § 8784, to bring that action as special administrator. However this may be, he certainly had *323
authority under G.S. 1923, §§ 8785, 8786, 8799 and 8819, to maintain the action as administrator with the will annexed. Crane v. Veley,
The order is affirmed.