106 Minn. 454 | Minn. | 1909
The will of the ancestor of the appellant was duly admitted to probate. In due ■ course the petition for allowance of final account of the executor of the will and for the assignment of the residue of said estate to persons entitled thereto by law came on for hearing. The court made an order allowing final account. In that proceeding the executor appeared by his attorney. The heirs of the deceased also appeared by attorneys. At the request of the attorneys for the heirs, the hearing and consideration of application for the construction of the will and for the assignment of the residue of the estate was adjourned. On the day of actual hearing the executors by their attorneys and the heirs by their attorneys appeared, and the hearing on the petition of the executor for the construction of the will of deceased and the assignment of the residue of said estate was proceeded with. “After a due consideration of the evidence adduced, taken, heard, and submitted at said hearing, together with the records and files” of the court, the court found that the deceased bequeathed the substance of his estate to a named trustee for a named synod, for the purpose of erecting and maintaining an orphans’ home, and that the devise had been duly accepted. Thereupon the court ordered that the property be assigned to and vested in said devisee. The attorneys for the heirs gave notice of appeal to the proper district court. Due and personal service of that notice was admitted by the attorneys of the executor of the estate of the deceased. Service was made on no other persons. The district court dismissed the appeal, because service had been made only upon the attorneys of the executor.
This appeal was taken from the order of the district court dismissing the appeal from the order and decree of the probate court. So far as here involved, section 3873, R. R. 1905, provides that an appeal can be taken from a decree assigning the residue of an estate only by a party aggrieved; section 3874, R. R. 1905, that in an appeal from the probate court “the appellant shall serve a written notice on the adverse party, his agent or attorney who appeared in court, and, when there, has been no appearance, by delivering a copy of
In this connection we are cited to many authorities which sustain respondent’s position. They are, however, irrelevant. The executor may be a mere stakeholder, or he may become the “sole champion of the will.” In such case, the notice served upon the executor is sufficient to perfect the appeal. In re Brown, 32 Minn. 443, 21 N. W. 474, and cases cited at page 445 of 32 Minn. and page 475 of 21 N. W. And see Estate of McDougald, 143 Cal. 476, 77 Pac. 443; Ford v. First National, 201 Ill. 120, 66 N. E. 316.
In this case the record discloses that the attorney for the executor appeared and took part in the litigation concerning the construction of the will and the assignment of the residue of the estate. At that hearing evidence was taken. No other attorney appeared for the residuary devisee. On argument in this court it was conceded that the validity of the will was argued by counsel then appearing and then submitted for decision. This, and a number of side lights cast upon the controversy by the record, leads us to conclude that the notice was sufficient. That conclusipn accords with the general tendency to disregard technicalities and to treat appeals without disfavor. There is an especial propriety in this rule as applied to appeals from the probate court, because the judges of such courts are not required to be members of the bar. No substantial prejudice results to the residuary devisee. Itvhas been denied no right to be heard in this court. The observation of proper practice would secure that right to it.
Reversed.