W. W. PARSONS, Appellant, v. HARRY E. HARVEY.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI.
March 13, 1920
281 Mo. 413
Division Two. October Term, 1919.
The judgment is affirmed. All concur.
Division Two, March 13, 1920.
- EVIDENCE: Former Pleading. An answer, abandoned by the filing of an amended one, may be offered in evidence by plaintiff as an admission on defendant‘s part.
- WIDOWER‘S SHARE: Note to Deceased Wife: Estoppel. When the appointment of an administrator upon a deceased wife‘s estate is legally dispensed with, a note for $500 payable to her, being her sole property, becomes the absolute property of her husband as her widower; it could not have been given away by her, nor willed away, nor taken by her creditors. If its payment is to be avoided in a suit thereon by her widower, the maker must either establish payment prior to her death, or plead and establish such an application, with the husband‘s acquiescence, of an equal amount of money after her death, as amounts to an estoppel, such as the payment of her funeral expenses.
- EVIDENCE: One Party Dead: Denial of Other Testimony. In a suit on a note given by defendant to his deceased mother, defendant is a competent witness to deny conversations occurring after her death to which plaintiff‘s witnesses have testified, but he is not a competent witness to deny that a conversation took place between him and her wherein he agreed to pay her funeral expenses in addition to the amount of the note.
- CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: Sec. 10, R. S. 1909; Orders Made in Vacation.
Section 10, Revised Statutes 1909 , authorizing the probate court, or judge thereof, in vacation, to refuse to grant letters of administration on estates of deceased persons not greater in amount than is allowed by law as the absolute property of the widower, widow or minor children, is not violative of any provision of the Constitution. It gives to creditors and other interested parties opportunity to challenge the order by timely action in court; and, besides, the action of the court is not in strict sense judicial, but the statute is similar to many othersenacted for the public convenience and to simplify the business before such courts, at a minimum cost, without injury to any one.
Appeal from Schuyler Circuit Court.—Hon. N. M. Pettingill, Judge.
REVERSED AND REMANDED (with directions).
Fogle & Fogle for appellant.
(1) This note upon the death of Mary E. Parsons, on compliance with the law, became the absolute property of W. W. Parsons, but the title thereto passed to her legal representative. It could not be willed away, given away, or taken by her creditors or for Mrs. Parsons’ debts. Glenn v. Dunn, 88 Mo. App. 442; Barnum v. Barnum, 119 Mo. App. 66; Lowe v. Lowe‘s Executors, 163 Mo. App. 213; Nelson v. Troll, 173 Mo. App. 51. (2) The proceeds of the note could not be taken to pay the expenses of the administration of Mary E. Parsons, because it was the absolute property of W. W. Parsons upon her death if he exercised his right in due time. State v. Johnson, 177 Mo. App. 584; Lamar‘s Admr. v. Belcher‘s Exr., 154 Mo. App. 171. (3) The widow or widower may make his or her election of the property from the legal representative of the estate at any time before the same is paid out or distributed or have the estate discharged from administration. Drowry v. Baur, 68 Mo. 155; Cummings v. Cummings, 51 Mo. 261; In re Estate of Howard, 128 Mo. App. 482; Hill v. Evans, 114 Mo. App. 715; Lamar v. Belcher, 151 Mo. App. 571;
(1) There was no conversion of the note. Plaintiff was present, heard and saw his daughter give it to defendant; made no objection. He knew of the arrangement of his wife and this defendant as to the manner in which said note was to be paid. He stood by and permitted defendant to finish payment of said note in said manner; allowed him to defray funeral expenses, erect a monument, pay doctor‘s bill, etc., as payments on the note, which plaintiff alone was otherwise bound to pay. Doyle v. Burns, 99 N. W. 204; 38 Cyc. 2009. (2)
RAILEY, C.—This case was appealed by plaintiff to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, and certified by the latter to this court, on account of a constitutional question raised therein. We have read the record, the briefs of counsel, and the opinion of the Court of Appeals, certifying the case here. Subject to the con-
I. The above opinion, without caption, reads as follows:
“It is somewhat difficult to determine whether plaintiff‘s petition is a suit to recover possession of a promissory note alleged to have been taken by defendant and converted to his own use, or whether it is a suit to recover the amount due on said note with the other facts alleged to show why the note sued on was not filed with the petition. In view of the fact that the petition prays for judgment for the amount of the note with interest and that the issue tried by both sides was whether the note was paid, we might regard it as a suit on the note. However, it need not be decided here what the suit is.
“Plaintiff is the step-father of defendant. The latter‘s mother, by her first husband, had four children, and by her last husband, the plaintiff, she had two, but only one of these survived her, the other dying without issue. Prior to May 24, 1904, Mrs. Parsons owned a 40-acre farm of unimproved brush land. On that day she and her husband deeded said land to the defendant, reserving the right to the possession of said land as long as they desired to live thereon, together with the rents and profits thereof during their occupancy; and if the husband, W. W. Parsons, should survive his wife he was not to have any further interest in or right to the possession of said land. Said deed recited a consideration of $1036, and on the same day defendant executed a mortgage on the land securing a note to Mrs. Parsons for $750, due in five years, with four per cent interest, representing the unpaid purchase price of said land. On January 6, 1912, this note was taken up and a new note given, but this time it was for $500, due five
“From the time said $500-note was given, up to Mrs. Parsons’ death on April 7, 1913, she kept it in her trunk. Upon the arrival of defendant at his mother‘s home after her death and before her burial, this note was turned over to him by plaintiff‘s daughter, defendant‘s half sister, in the presence of plaintiff, who made no objection. Defendant says it was turned over to him voluntarily and without request on his part, but his half sister, who was plaintiff‘s witness, testified that he demanded the note and when he received it he said, ‘Part of this note belongs to you folks.’
“Plaintiff, as widower, under
“The evidence in plaintiff‘s behalf tended to show that at the time the $750-note was taken up and the $500-note given in lieu thereof, the agreement between defendant and his mother was that he should reserve $250 to pay for her funeral expenses and would, after that, pay the $500-note by giving to each of her five children the sum of $100.
“Defendant‘s claim is that the agreement was that he was to furnish money for her support from time to time as she might need it, and upon her death he was to take her body back to her old home in Iowa and bury it by the side of her first husband, pay all funeral expenses and erect a monument for both, all out of the
“While there was evidence tending to show that defendant did send money to his mother at various times, yet it is not clear when this was done. For aught that appears, a large portion of these amounts may have been sent to her before the $500-note was given, and this may have been the reason why the note was reduced from $750 to $500, said payments accounting for the $250 difference. Defendant‘s mother lived only a little over a year after the $500-note was given, and it is not at all clear that the small sums sent from time to time, during that period, or indeed at any time, amounted to $500. Indeed, it would seem that they did not, since it is shown by the evidence offered in defendant‘s behalf that after all such payments for his mother‘s support and for her funeral and monument had been made, he paid one of his mother‘s heirs, his full sister, $100 as her part of the note. It is difficult to see why he should have made such distribution to his mother‘s heir if the amounts he had paid out had equalled said note as he now claims. In addition to this, his half sister testified that he told her he owed her $100, but would not pay it, as she owed that much rent on the place since his mother died. He admitted telling her he owed her $100, but was not allowed to give the entire conversation.
“Defendant first filed an answer in which he set up that he had paid his mother‘s funeral bills, at plaintiff‘s request, amounting to $114.50, and that plaintiff owed defendant $100 as rent for the place he had occupied since his wife‘s death; but defendant afterwards filed an amended answer, setting up that by supporting his mother and paying her funeral bills and $110 for a monument he had paid said note. The original answer was offered in evidence by plaintiff, but was excluded
“Whatever was still due on the note at Mrs. Parsons’ death would pass to her legal representatives the moment one was appointed, and, if the appointment of one was legally dispensed with, then said note became the absolute property of her husband as widower. It could not be given away by her, or willed away, nor taken by her creditors. [
“While defendant may have been a competent witness to deny conversations testified to by plaintiff‘s witnesses as having occurred after Mrs. Parsons’ death (Weiermueller v. Scullin, 203 Mo. 466), still he was not a competent witness to deny that a conversation took place between him and his mother wherein the agreement was that he was to pay the funeral expenses out of the $250 which represented the difference between the $750-note and the $500-note. That was testifying in regard to the contract between him and his mother. It was the contract in issue and on trial and the opposite party to that contract was dead. Plaintiff had from the first objected to his competency, and upon his denial of such conversation, moved to strike out the evidence as incompetent, but the objection was overruled, and exceptions were saved.
“It is apparent from the foregoing that appellant is entitled to a reversal and remanding of the case unless a contention made by the defendant, which we have not mentioned until now, must be upheld.
“That contention is that the mere order of the probate judge made in vacation, and without any order of the court approving or confirming it, is wholly insuffi-
“We are, therefore, unable to decide the case without either ignoring this point or else passing upon it one way or the other. The jurisdiction to decide the constitutionality of the section, however, lies with the Supreme Court, and not with us. Hence it is our duty to order the case transferred to that court, which is accordingly done. All concur.”
II. It is contended by appellant that the order of the probate judge in vacation, without any order of the probate court approving or confirming it, is sufficient to dispense with administration, and to vest title to the note in controversy in plaintiff as Mrs. Parsons’ widower. Defendant accordingly asserts that neither plaintiff‘s petition, nor his evidence, show any cause of action in him. The above contention is based upon the idea that
Sections 1 and 34 of Article 6 of the Constitution, relied on by appellant, read as follows:
“Sec. 1. The judicial power of the State, as to matters of law and equity, except as in this Constitution otherwise provided, shall be vested in a Supreme Court, the St. Louis Court of Appeals, circuit courts, criminal courts, probate courts, county courts and municipal corporation courts.”
Section 35 of said Article 6 reads as follows:
“Probate courts shall be uniform in their organization, jurisdiction, duties and practice, except that a separate clerk may be provided for, or the judge may be required to act, ex officio, as his own clerk.”
In addition to above Sections 1 and 34 of Article 6, we are cited by appellant, in support of his contention that
In the last named case, Court in Banc was called upon to construe
“Sec. 10409. If any person whose office has become vacated, or his executors or administrators, shall fail to deliver any record, book or paper to the person entitled to the same, any judge of the Supreme or Circuit Court, upon the affidavit of any credible person, setting forth the facts, may issue his warrant, directed to the sheriff, marshal or coroner, commanding him to seize all the records, books and papers appertaining to such office, and deliver them to the proper officer named in such warrant.
“Sec. 10413. The judge may enforce obedience to such citation by attachment, and shall proceed in a summary manner and determine the matter according to right and justice, and may issue his warrant for the restoration of any record, book or paper found to have been improperly seized.”
Judge FARIS, speaking for Court in Banc, on page 21, said:
“Even a casual examination of the statutes under which the initial proceeding herein was brought (Article 1 of Chapter 101, R. S. 1909) shows that it is contemplated that a hearing may be had thereunder to determine the right of possession of the records claimed in the affidavit. Indeed, it is patent that any scheme or so-called procedure which (upon an order issued pursuant to an ex parte affidavit) would permit one person to take from another any article, or record, or property, arbitrarily, without any hearing, or day in court, or without affording any opportunity to be heard, would be to take the property of another without due process of law. [Hovey v. Elliott, 167 U. S. 409, 17 Sup. Ct. 841, 42 L. Ed. 215.] In short, unless we construe the statutes in question as contemplating among their provisions the affording of an opportunity for a hearing of the disputed question of the right of possession of the records so arbitrarily taken, then the whole scheme is utterly void. To uphold these statutes at all, we must construe Sections 10412 and 10413 as permitting a hearing to one from whose possession records are arbitrarily taken by order of the court, or judge who issues such ‘warrant.’ In such a hearing, wherein the court or judge is required to ‘determine the matter according to right and justice’
On page 22, Judge FARIS further observed:
“It follows, we think, that Sections 10409, 10412, and 10413, Revised Statutes 1909, so far as they purport to give this court, or a judge thereof, original jurisdiction to issue the order therein provided for and to hear and determine the disputed right to the possession of books and records, according to right and justice, are void because not within constitutional delimitations.”
The facts in above case, as well as the holding of the court in reference thereto, clearly distinguish it from the matter now before us.
In State ex rel. v. Locker, 266 Mo. 384 and following, the question before Court in Banc was whether the probate courts of this State, by virtue of Sections 2441-2, are authorized to issue writs of habeas corpus. Judge GRAVES, speaking for said court, on page 392, held that they were not authorized by the provisions of our Constitution to issue such writs. The question now before us was neither considered nor discussed.
In State ex rel. v. Woodson, 161 Mo. l. c. 446-7, a judge of the circuit court, in vacation, at the instance of the Supervisor of Building & Loan Association, in winding up its affairs, examined the matters presented for his consideration, and made the following order in reference to the subject: “It is therefore ordered that said building and loan association be dissolved, and the officers, agents, and employees of said association are hereby enjoined from further conducting the business of said association,” etc. Judge VALLIANT, speaking for Court in Banc, on pages 454-5, said:
“It is contended, that our Statutes confer on the Judge the authority to hear and determine the whole issues in a case of this kind in vacation. If there is such a statute, it is in violation of
“What is here said is in reference to judicial power in its strict sense. There are quasi-judicial powers conferred upon quasi-judicial bodies, and powers to do certain acts in vacation, judicial in character, but subsidiary to a suit pending or about to be instituted in court, are conferred on judges of courts; but the power to try issues in a suit at law or in equity, and pronounce judgment or decree upon the facts found or confessed, can be conferred, under our Constitution, only on a fully organized court.” (Italics ours).
In the above case, the order made by the trial judge in vacation, indicates that he attempted to try the cause, as he would have done had all the proceedings taken place during the regular term of court. The suggestions made by Judge VALLIANT, italicised as above, clearly indicate that his views of the law are not in accord with appellant‘s, based upon the facts before us.
“The probate court, or the judge thereof in vacation, in its or his discretion, may refuse to grant letters of administration on estates of deceased persons not greater in amount than is allowed by law as the absolute property of the widower, widow or minor children under the age of sixteen years. Proof may be allowed by or on behalf
The order made by the probate judge in vacation, is couched in the following language:
“Now at this day comes William W. Parsons, and shows to the court that he is the widower of Mary F. Parsons, late of the county of Schuyler, deceased, who died, having at the time of her death personal property in this State, not greater in amount than is allowed by law as the absolute property of the widower.
“To the end, therefore, that the said William W. Parsons, as such widower, may be authorized and empowered to collect, sue for and retain said property, as his absolute property, as provided by law, it is ordered that letters of administration on said estate be refused, unless on the application of creditors or other parties interested, the existence of further or other property be shown.” (Italics ours.)
Other sections of the Administration and Guardian laws of this State have been enacted for the benefit and convenience of the public, which are similar in principle
It is manifest that
In State v. Hathaway, 115 Mo. l. c. 49, in discussing a similar question, Judge GANTT, among other things, said:
“As was said by the Supreme Court of Indiana in Wilkins v. State, 16 N. E. Rep. 192, upon this identical point: ‘If the appellant were correct in his assumption, then every school examiner who examines an applicant for
“A judicial duty within the meaning of the Constitution is such a duty as legitimately pertains to an officer in the department designated by the Constitution as judicial. And we can but commend in this connection the language of the same court in Flournoy v. City, 17 Ind. 169: ‘An act is none the less ministerial because the person performing it may have to satisfy himself that the state of facts exists under which it is his right and duty to perform the act.’ This rule is one quite familiar in this State. It is one that governs sheriffs and constables in making levies and has been applied to the Secretary of the State in determining the sufficiency of a certificate under the election law. State ex rel. v. Lesueur, 103 Mo. 253.”
In State ex rel. v. Higgins, 125 Mo. l. c. 368, Judge BLACK, speaking for the court, said:
“As said in People ex rel. v. Provines, 34 Cal. 520, l. c. 540, where a like provision was under consideration: ‘There is nothing in the third article of the Constitution which prohibits a judicial officer from exercising functions, not in their nature judicial, if they do not belong to either the legislative or executive departments, as they are defined and limited in the Constitution.‘” (Italics ours.)
In State ex rel. v. Andrae, 216 Mo. l. c. 629, Judge GRAVES, in discussing this subject, said:
“The ‘judicial powers’ referred to in the Constitution are those ‘as to matters of law and equity.’ This
In State ex rel. v. Bird, 253 Mo. l. c. 579, Judge BROWN, speaking for Court in Banc, said:
“By Sections 34 and 35, Article 6, of our Constitution, it is further provided that the General Assembly shall create probate courts with uniform jurisdiction and duties; so that the Legislature was undoubtedly authorized to vest in said courts such additional powers not named in the Constitution as it deemed proper.”
In State ex rel. v. Tincher, 258 Mo. l. c. 19, Judge WALKER, speaking for Court in Banc, said:
“Despite the constitutional provision, therefore, in regard to jurisdiction and the evident purpose in view in the establishment of probate courts, it is no longer an open question here as to the right of the Legislature to add to the powers of such courts.”
In Johnson v. Railroad, 259 Mo. l. c. 544, Judge GRAVES, after quoting from the Woodson case, supra, among other things, said:
“In other words, the judicial power referred to in the constitutional provision, supra, has reference to the actual and real trial and determination of ‘matters of law and equity’ and not to mere preliminary steps necessary to be taken for the institution of the suit in law or equity. In our judgment the statute does not violate the Constitution, and this point is ruled against the defendant.”
We do not deem it necessary to quote further from these authorities. They sustain the right of the Legislature to pass such laws, for the convenience of the public. We are of the opinion that
In view of the foregoing, we reverse and remand the cause with directions to the trial court to proceed with same in accordance with the views heretofore expressed.
White and Mozley, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of RAILEY, C., is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
