53 Ind. App. 567 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1913
Appellant excepted to the final report of the appellee as executor of the will of his deceased wife, Malissa Alice Shuey. Appellant's wife died testate, in the state of Michigan, on April 6, 1909, the owner of real estate in Elkhart county, Ind., worth approximately $4,000, and also left an estate in Michigan of about $600. Appellant at the time of his wife's death and at the time she went to Michigan, was a resident of Argenta, Ill., where he was postmaster.
Decedent's will was duly probated in the state of Michigan, where she was residing at the time of her death. Appellee, Melvin A. Lambert, qualified as executor of the will and also caused the same to be duly recorded in Elkhart county, Ind., as by law provided, where ancillary proceedings were had in said state. By the terms of the will appellant was given no part of the estate of his deceased wife, though she referred to him as her beloved husband and gave as her reason for not willing him any part of her property that she believed his children would get it from him and she did not want them to have it. Appellant filed his election to take under the laws of descent of the state of Indiana, and asked that the assets of the estate be marshaled and that no part of his *568 one-third of the Indiana real estate be used to pay debts of the estate. The Indiana real estate was sold by the executor on order of court, and the executor charged himself with all the proceeds of the sale in his final report.
Trial was had on appellant's exceptions to appellee's final report in said estate, and on request the court made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon. Appellant duly excepted to each conclusion of law, and thereupon, in pursuance of the order of the court, appellee filed an amended final report which was approved by the court, to which approval appellant duly excepted. Appellant thereupon filed his motion for a new trial on the ground that; (1) The decision of the court is contrary to law, and (2) is not sustained by sufficient evidence. The motion for a new trial was overruled, appellant excepted, and appealed to this court.
The errors assigned are that the court erred in each of its first, fourth, and fifth conclusions of law, in approving the amended final report of appellee, and in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial. The facts as far as material to the questions to be decided, in addition to those already stated, are, in substance, as follows: That the estate is pending and unsettled in St. Joseph county, state of Michigan; that appellee received from the sale of Indiana real estate $4,050 and rents amounting to $199.05 and claimed credits against the same aggregating $3,162.56. As against appellant these credits were deducted from the price of the real estate, leaving a balance of $887.44, the one-third of which, or $295.82, according to the amended report, is due appellant as his share of the proceeds from the sale of the real estate. The credits deducted from the money received from the sale of the real estate included court costs and other expenditures incident to the sale of the real estate, taxes, part of the executor's fees and expenses, $190 of $225 attorney's fees allowed in the estate, a mortgage paid by appellee of $2,575.80, $66 for medical services rendered decedent in her last sickness by a physician in Michigan, and $90 for a burial casket, which was ordered by appellee. The court also found that the assets of the estate are not sufficient to give to appellant one-third of the real estate in Indiana free from debts, and that a part thereof is required to pay the debts of said estate; that appellee, Melvin A. Lambert, was a brother of decedent, and at the time of her sickness and death appellant was at his home in Illinois, and his location was well known to appellee and the other relatives of decedent who intentionally failed to notify appellant of his wife's sickness and death, though they had ample authority and time to have done so before her death; that he did not learn thereof until after she was dead and buried; that they failed to so notify him in order that he should be deprived of the opportunity of purchasing his wife's burial casket or attending her funeral.
The first conclusion of law is that the one-third interest of appellant in said real estate is subject to the indebtedness of decedent in so far as is necessary to pay the debts of her estate. The fourth is that appellant is not personally liable for $90, the alleged cost of a casket purchased in Michigan for his deceased wife without his knowledge or approval, but that the same is a proper charge against her estate. The fifth is that $66 paid a physician in Michigan is a proper charge against the estate and should be allowed as a credit to the executor.
Appellant's amended exceptions to appellee's final report challenged the right of appellee to charge in his account and obtain credit for certain expenses of last sickness and funeral incurred in the state of Michigan, without his knowledge or consent, and also certain costs of administration in that state; that, at the time of the death of his wife, his property of every kind and character did not exceed $300, and she had an estate worth $5,000; that by the laws of Indiana he was entitled to one-third of the Indiana real estate, free from debts of the estate contracted after marriage, and the Elkhart circuit court had previously entered an order to that effect; that, in violation of said order and contrary to law, appellee has used and expended the greater part of the proceeds of the sale of his one-third of said real estate in payment of debts of said estate and for costs of administration; that the debts so allowed and paid were contracted by decedent subsequent to her marriage with him.
[1] Appellant's exceptions to the final report were sufficient to challenge the right of the appellee to obtain credit for the several items so as to reduce the amount due him below the one-third part of the proceeds from the sale of the Indiana real estate. Major et al. v. Miller et al.,
[2] Where exceptions are filed to a final report of an executor, and, upon trial of the issues so joined, some of the exceptions are sustained, and the executor ordered to amend his report in accordance with the finding of the court, which he does, and the court thereupon approves the report, it has been held that such amended report filed in obedience to the order of the court after trial of the exceptions is not filed in the sense of an amended pleading, and that the report as amended and approved in such case is in fact the judgment of the court. From this it follows that appellant's exceptions to the conclusions of law are still effective to test the correctness of such conclusions on any question affecting his legal rights which was originally raised by such exceptions, unless the amendments ordered by the court and *569
made by the executor have cured the error, if any, shown by such exceptions when taken.McDonald v. Moak,
In McDonald v. Moak, supra, it is also held that a motion for a new trial on the ground that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law is a proper way to test the correctness of the court's approval of such amended report. See, also, Wolverton v. Wolverton,
[3] The claims of an executor in his final report for credits against the funds of the estate are in the nature of separate complaints or allowances, and exceptions thereto place the burden on the executor and require him to establish by competent evidence the correctness of his report in respect to all matters embraced in the exceptions.
[4] The report and the exceptions thereto stand as the complaint and answer of the respective parties. Spray v. Bertram,
[5] The rule also applies that, where the court makes a special finding, failure to find a material fact is the equivalent of finding such fact against the party having the burden of proving the same. Wysong v. Nealis, supra,
[6] Section 3016, Burns' 1908 Statutes, provides: "If a wife die testate or intestate leaving a widower, one-third of her real estate shall descend to him, subject, however, to its proportion of the debts of the wife contracted before marriage." Under this statute appellant asserts his right to the full one-third part of the proceeds from the sale of the Indiana real estate and claims that none of the credits by which his interest is reduced is for a debt contracted prior to his marriage to the decedent.
It is settled by the decisions of this and our Supreme Court that, under the aforesaid statute, the surviving husband of a deceased wife is entitled to one-third of her real estate, subject only to its proportion of her debts contracted before marriage, unless he has in some way waived his right thereto or estopped himself to assert such right. Kemph v. Belknap,
In the case of Kinney v. Heuring,
In Hampton v. Murphy,
The finding of facts shows the payment of a mortgage to Melvin A. Lambert by the executor amounting to $2,575.80, but it does not show that this mortgage was for a debt contracted before marriage, nor does it appear that the husband joined in its execution or even that it was upon the real estate sold by appellee. If the mortgage was executed before marriage, by the terms of the statute the husband's interest is subject to its proportion of the debt.
The court stated its conclusions separately as to the items for the physician's services and the burial casket. These items were filed and allowed as credits against the funds of the estate derived from the sale of the Indiana real estate, and the court found that each item is a proper charge against the estate and should be allowed as a credit to the executor, and also approved the amended report which deducted one-third of the amount from appellant's share of the Indiana real estate. If the court was warranted in finding these items to be debts of the estate, it follows that they are not debts of the appellant. No facts are found to show that they are debts of the decedent for which appellant's interest in the real estate may be taken in payment, and therefore it was error to deduct one-third of these items from appellant's share of the Indiana real estate.
Appellee contends that on the facts of this case appellant was personally liable for all *570 of these bills and cannot therefore complain when he is only charged with one-third of the amount. The conclusions already reached show the error of this position. The facts found do not show that credit was extended to appellant or that he became liable for any part of these bills. He is not shown to have waived his right under the statute or to have estopped himself to claim his full one-third part of the Indiana real estate as against these items.
[7] The findings that said items were proper charges against the estate is more of a conclusion of law than a finding of fact; but, if given any effect at all as a finding, it would necessarily be against appellee as showing that credit was not extended to appellant but to the estate. It therefore follows from the finding of facts that no part of said claims can be deducted from appellant's share of the funds derived from the sale of the Indiana real estate. The finding as a whole is defective and incomplete. It should have covered all the facts involved in the report and found all the ultimate facts in issue. As presented, it does not warrant the conclusions of law or sustain the judgment rendered. As throwing some light on questions more or less involved in this controversy, we cite the following: Oinson v. Heritage,
The judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to the lower court to sustain appellant's motion for a new trial and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
ADAMS, C. J., HOTTEL, P. J., and LAIRY, IBACH, and SHEA, JJ., concur.
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