299 P. 969 | Kan. | 1931
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover damages for the conversion of personal property, brought by Frank Rost as administrator of his father’s estate against Frank Heyka and other claimants to a share in the estate of the deceased. The court overruled plaintiff’s demurrer to- the answer of defendants, and defendants filed a demurrer to plaintiff's reply to an answer of the defendants, which the court sustained, and the plaintiff appeals from these rulings.
Frank Rost died intestate on January 5, 1926, leaving as his heirs his sons, Frank W. Rost, Joseph H. Rost and his daughters, Elizabeth Heyka, Anna Tartowski, Mary Kerstine and Rosa Rizek.
“In an action to determine the ownership of the residue of property left after paying the debts of the deceased person, which action is prosecuted by one to whom the deceased person had contracted to leave the property at his death, against the beneficiary under the will executed by the deceased person, a judgment against the beneficiary is final and conclusive and will be binding on the executor in the final distribution of the estate.” (See, also, cases cited on the point.)
The general rule is that a judgment binds not only the parties to the action but also those who are in privity with them in the estate, and in the situation mentioned the administrator was so far in privity with the heirs as to be concluded by the determination in the first action. Cases somewhat in point are: Ervin v. Morris, 26 Kan. 664; Hoisington, Sheriff, v. Brakey, 31 Kan. 560, 3 Pac. 353; Ellis v. Crowl, 46 Kan. 100, 26 Pac. 454; McEntire v. William
It is unnecessary to cite cases in support of the rule that a fact brought in issue and judicially determined by a court of competent jurisdiction is conclusively settled by the judgment therein as to the parties to the action and those in privity with them and cannot be relitigated in a later action. The judgment rendered against Frank W. Rost in the former action must be held to be conclusive against him not only as heir but also in his capacity as administrator.
The court, it appears, sustained the demurrer to the answer as to the husbands of the three contesting daughters and these husbands have filed a cross appeal. It appears that ruling was based on the fact that they were not named as defendants in the first action. They had no interest in the estate. The fact that they are the husbands of the three heirs does not entitle them to share in the estate. The matter involved in the cases was a controversy among the Rost heirs and in which their husbands and other relatives had no concern. Although the husbands were not named in the first case there was a charge that these husbands of the daughters had conspired with their wives to commit the alleged wrongs, and the matter of the husbands’ participation was so pressed in the former case that the court made a finding acquitting not only the defendant daughters but also their husbands of the wrongs charged, adding that there was nothing due to the estate from any of them. But in view of their lack of interest or direct connection with the case the judgment in favor of the daughters of the deceased left nothing of substance against the husbands to be tried. The finding against the alleged conspiracy takes both the daughters and their husbands out of the case free from any liability to the plaintiff. The court should have eliminated the husbands as well as their wives from the case. In all other respects the judgment of the district court is affirmed.