283 N.W. 199 | Neb. | 1939
On August 1, 1927, Sophia Lehman, a resident of Omaha, Nebraska, died, leaving a last will and testament, listing some 35 legatees, most of whom were nephews and nieces. The personal property of the estate amounted to $76,894.07 and the real estate to $119,000, the total estate amounting to $195,984.07. The estate, due perhaps to economic conditions, appears to have been overvalued in the inventory. The will provided for the appointment, as executors, of Jesse Kochenthal, Arthur Kochenthal, both of Rochester, New York, and Maurice Ollhouse of Omaha, nephews of the deceased. Maurice Ollhouse lived with and cared for the property of Sophia Lehman during a part of her lifetime, and the will provided that he be allowed $1,000 a year, to be paid in instalments of $250 a quarter, as long as he managed the property of the estate as one of the executors. The will further provided that the executors have complete charge of the property of the estate, to supervise, rent, repair, insure and sell and convey the real estate, and exercise their own best judgment in the
Two cases are before us in these appeals by the executors, and, by agreement, have been consolidated for purposes of briefing and presentation. A large number of pleadings in the county and district courts were filed, which will be hereinafter concisely set out.
In November, 1935, appellees filed in the county court an application for an order modifying former orders entered therein, in which the court allowed compensation to the executors in sums aggregating $8,200, and asking that the amount be reduced to the sum of $1,200, which appellees contend are the statutory amounts to be allowed in such cases. On May 8, 1936, the county court denied the appellees’ application of November, 1935. July 15, 1936, appellees filed their application in the district court, setting forth the same allegations as by their application set forth in the county court, and praying for a modification of the decree of the county court accordingly. November 12, 1936, the executors filed their motion to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that the county court’s order of May 8, 1936, was not a final order and was not, therefore, an appealable order. January 7, 1937, this motion was overruled. March 15, 1937, the executors demurred to appellees’ application, challenging the sufficiency thereof. March 31, 1937, the demurrer was overruled. April 10, 1937, the executors filed their answer, challenging the sufficiency of the appellees’ pleading, and, in addition thereto, giving the history of the proceedings and their acts as such executors, setting forth a history of the reports filed by them and the extraordinary services they claim
April 21, 1937, appellees filed a motion to strike all of the executors’ answer, except their appointment and qualification as executors. May 24, 1937, the motion was sustained. February 5, 1938, judgment in the district court was entered in favor of appellees, finding: On June 6, 1928, the county court allowed $4,200 to appellants and
This appeal involves the allowances made by the county court to the executors, and the evidence in the county court is of a documentary character. An examination of the reports filed by the executors shows an accounting in detail of the amounts collected for rents from real estate and from personal property and disbursements made. One report discloses an adjudication of the claim of Maurice Ollhouse, filed in the estate proceedings, in the amount of $79,000, and the participation of the executors in the adjudication' of such claim, resulting in special benefits to the estate, by settlement had thereon, in the sum of $8,500. The reports further disclose the requests for fees for services rendered by the executors, extraordinary and otherwise, and are sufficient in this respect, and show amounts on hand and requests for partial distribution. The reports also show that the executors requested continuance on payment of fees in their behalf, due to lack of sufficient funds at the time to pay both their fees and partial distribution as prayed.
The principal question is whether or not the order of the district court, overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal, determined that the order of the county court of May 8, 1936, appealed from, was a final order, subject to review on appeal, and whether or not the judgment of the district court determined that the order of the county court of August 21, 1934, awarding compensation to executors, was
Section 30-1601, Comp. St. 1929, provides: “In all matters of probate jurisdiction, appeals shall be allowed from any final order, judgment, or decree of the county to the district court by any person against whom any such order, judgment or decree may be made or who may be affected thereby.” This provision of the statute appears under article 16, “Appeals in Probate Matters.”
In the case of In re Estate of Creighton, 91 Neb. 654, 136 N. W. 1001, this court held:
“The county court has exclusive, original jurisdiction of the probate of wills and the settlement of estates, and its final orders within its jurisdiction are binding upon all parties. * * *
“An order of the county court in the settlement of an estate, by which distribution is made of the assets, is appealable to the district court.”
In Bachelor v. Schmela, 49 Neb. 37, 68 N. W. 378, it was held: “The law recognizes a substantial difference between the final settlement of the accounts of an executor or administrator and those made annually or at any stated periods during the course of the administration. A final settlement made pursuant to notice to persons interested in the estate is in the nature of a judgment and conclusive as to all matters included therein until reversed or set aside by means of a direct proceeding, or impeached on account of fraud, while an interlocutory (meaning intermediate and not final) ex parte accounting is but prima facie correct and subject to reexamination so long as the administration account remains unsettled.” The case of Boales v. Ferguson, 55 Neb. 565, 76 N. W. 18, follows the rule as stated in Bachelor v. Schmela, supra.
In the case of In re Estate of Wilson, 97 Neb. 780, 151 N. W. 316, it was said: “It will be observed that the controversy relates entirely to the accounts of the administrator and is between the administrator and the estate. We have observed no final order of the court discharging
Section 30-1414, Comp. St. 1929, in part provides: “Before the administration accounts of any executor or administrator shall be allowed, notice thereof shall be given to all persons interested, of the time and place of examining and allowing the same, and such notice shall be given by publication three (3) successive weeks in a legal newspaper published within the county, or if no legal newspaper is published within the county, then in a legal newspaper published in an adjoining county.”
In Thompson v. Pope, 77 Neb. 338, 109 N. W. 498, we find this language at page 342: “Our statutes with reference to the collection and administration of the estates of deceased persons derive their origin in the first place from Massachusetts. It has been said that they have come to us by way of New Hampshire, Michigan and Wisconsin.” The Massachusetts probate law is comprehensive but contains no provisions on notice, as shown by section 30-1414 of the Nebraska statute, but the Michigan statute, in substance, provides for notice and is similar to our provision of the statute in this respect, with the exception that oral.notice may also be given.
In Morton v. Johnston, 124 Mich. 561, 83 N. W. 369, the Michigan statute was held to be applicable to all accounts of executors and administrators, whether final or intermediate. The court held that the case of Musick v. Beebe, 17 Kan. 47, did not apply in view of the Michigan statutes; The Mustek case was referred to in Bachelor v. Schmela, supra, as authority for the court’s decision. '
In Schinz v. Schinz, 90 Wis. 236, 63 N. W. 162, there
Thus, we have the appellants’ contention and query as to whether or not the county court’s orders in the instant case were final, or, if intermediate or interlocutory, were appealable as final when notice is given, as provided by section 30-1414, Comp. St. 1929. Our court has not decided the question, and it is here on first impression. The county court has exclusive, original jurisdiction over the probate of estates and settlement of accounts. In the instant case, upon showing made to the county court for services rendered by the executors and partial distribution made by such executors to the parties entitled thereto, the county court made several orders; due and proper notice was given as provided by section 30-1414, supra, in the settlement of administration accounts of the executors. Section 30-1601, Comp. St. 1929, provides for appeals from final order, judgment or decree. Our court is committee! to the rule that such orders, as made by thq county court in the instant case, are intermediate or interlocutory orders and very often are made ex parte. There is no decision in this state holding that statutory notice, as required by section 30-1414, supra, would make such order a final order.
We -see no particular reason why the rule should be changed at this time. There may be criticism in that large estates, consisting of some considerable real estate, might be kept open indefinitely, to the loss of those interested in
In In re Estate of Wilson, 83 Neb. 252, 119 N. W. 522, this court held: “For services rendered by H. in a business way, such as collecting rents of real estate, paying taxes thereon, insuring property, and attending to repairs, it was within the discretion of the court, if the evidence established that such services were extraordinary, to allow H. a reasonable compensation.” See, also, In re Estate of Wilson, 86 Neb. 175, 125 N. W. 158.
Section 30-1411, Comp. St. 1929, provides for the commissions, schedule allowed, and for extraordinary services. So we have sufficient authority for the allowance to the executors of a reasonable fee for extraordinary services.
Appellees cite section 30-1306, Comp. St. 1929, which provides: ■ “Any person aggrieved by any order, decree, or denial of a court in pursuance of the provisions of this
The district court did not have jurisdiction to entertain the appeals, in the instant cases, from such orders sought to be appealed from, made by the county court for partial distribution and allowances of executors’ fees. Such orders, under the law of this state, were interlocutory orders and not final orders, within the meaning of section 30-1601, Comp. St. 1929.
The executors rendered an account of their services from October 31, 1935, to February 15, 1937, including certain items of expense charged by the executors while in attendance on probate proceedings in the county court. April 5, 1937, appellees filed objections to the account, alleging that the executors had not filed an itemized statement as to their services and had performed no extraordinary services; alleging further that an appeal was pending in the district court by the appellees to have the executors refund certain fees. The county court made an allowance of additional fees to the executors for services rendered from August 21, 1934, to date, in the amount of $1,650. Subsequently, the appellees filed additional objections in the county court,
The judgments of the district court are hereby
Reversed.