68 Ind. App. 278 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
Reuben Stout died intestate on April 1,1914, leaving as his only heirs at law, his children, Charles W. Stout and Cerilda Williams, his grandchildren, the appellants, Ira Stout, Andrew Stout, Harry Stout and Viola Stout, children of William C. Stout, a son of intestate, who died before his father,' and two great-grandchildren, Mabel Smith and Helen
Charles W. Stout was appointed and qualified as the administrator of intestate’s estate, and, on May 5,1915, filed his final report, in which he showed that he had distributed the sum of $4,776.06, the assets of the estate on hand for distribution, as follows: to Charles W. Stout, one-third part; to Cerilda Williams, one-third part; to Ira Stout, one-fifteenth part; to Andrew Stout, one-fifteenth part; to Harry Stout, one-fifteenth part; to Yiola Stout, one-fifteenth part; to Mabel Smith, one-thirtieth part; and to Helen Smith, one-thirtieth part. The report showed that all debts and liabilities of the estate had been paid, and all assets thereof fully administered. Prayer that the report be approved, the administrator discharged, and the estate closed.
Appellants filed exceptions to this report on the ground that intestate, in his lifetime, made certain advancements and conveyances to Charles W. Stout and Cerilda Williams, that when said advancements and conveyances were made, and long prior thereto, said intestate was of unsound mind, that said advancements and conveyances are a part of the personal estate of said intestate, and should have been, but were not, accounted for by the administrator in said report.
Said administrator replied to said exceptions: (1) In general denial; (2) that said intestate, in his lifetime, gave to William C. Stout, as an advancement, money and property of the value of $3,856.58, which exceeded the amount of any advancement to said Cerilda Williams or said Charles W. Stout; (3) that said William C. Stout, at the time of his death, was
There was a trial by the court, and pursuant to a request therefor, the court made a special finding of facts and stated conclusions of law thereon.
For the purposes of this opinion, it is sufficient to say that the finding of the court was in effect a finding that the report was in all respects correct, except as to certain advancements, which the court found the decedent had made to certain of his children, which advancements the court found should have been, but were not, taken into account in the distribution made by such administrator. Upon its finding of facts the court stated conclusions of law, which need not be set out.
The record then shows the following entry, of September 28,1915: “The court now renders judgment on the conclusions of law upon the special findings of facts. It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that Charles W. Stout, administrator of the estate of Reuben Stout, shall make and file an amended report, in which Cerilda Williams shall be charged with an advancement in the sum of $3,750.00 and said Charles W. Stout shall be charged. with an advancement in the sum of $3,500.00, and said heirs of William C. Stout, namely: Ira Stout, Andrew Stout, Harry Stout, Viola Stout, Mabel Smith, and Helen Smith, shall be charged with an advancement in the sum of $3,856.58 as having been made to the said William C. Stout. It is further considered and adjudged by the court that said Charles W. Stout, as administrator of the estate of Reuben
It is from this order that appellants prosecute this appeal.
Nor is the order appealed from one of the interlocutory orders from which an appeal is authorized by subdivisions 15, 16, 17 and 18, of §1392 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 237. Thiebaud v. Dufour, supra, and cases there cited; Pfeiffer v. Crane, Gdn., supra.
In this connection, we deem it proper to say that a majority of this court recognize that in cases like the one here involved an apparent hardship and injustice results from the interpretation and construction given to said §671 Burns 1914, supra. This fact, though not referred to in the opinion, was given consideration by this court in the recent case of Leach v. Webb, supra, but we felt that under the decisions of the Supreme Court there cited and followed the question involved was not an open one.
For the reasons above indicated, the appeal is dismissed.
On Petition eok Rehearing.
Appellants have filed a petition in this cause, in which they ask a rehearing herein, and that such cause be reinstated as a cause pending in this court for disposition on its merits.
Six reasons are assigned by appellants in their petition for the relief asked therein. The gist .of their contention, however, urged in their brief, is expressed in their third reason, which is as follows: “The court erred in holding and deciding that this appeal should be dismissed because a final judgment had not been rendered within the meaning .of section 671, and because the said appeal was not from one of the interlocutory orders from which an appeal is authorized by subdivisions 15, 16, 17 and 18, of section 1392, Burns 1914, for the reason that this, appeal is prosecuted under sections 2977 and 2978, Burns 1914, which fully authorize and provide for the appeal in this cause.”
Such is the effect of the original opinion, and among the cases cited in its support is that of Thiebaud v. Dufour (1877), 57 Ind. 598, in which it is expressly held that: “No appeal will lie from an interlocutory order under section 189 of the decedent’s act, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 557, except such as are embraced in section 576 of the practice act, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 245.” In support of this statement several cases are there cited.
Section 189 of the decedent’s act referred to in the language quoted provides for an appeal by any person aggrieved by any decision of a court of common
Section 576, referred to in said quoted language, is a section of the practice act designating the interlocutory orders from which an appeal is authorized, and hence, for the purposes of the question under consideration, is the same as subdivisions 15, 16, 17 and 18 of §1392 Burns 1914, supra.
The Supreme Court in the case of Pfeiffer v. Crane, Gdn. (1883), 89 Ind. 485, also cited in the original opinion, expressly held that appeals from interlocutory orders “can be taken in four cases only,” naming the cases designated in §646 R. S. 1881, which is the same as said §576, supra, of said practice act of 1876 and the Code of 1852, and substantially the same as subdivisions 15,16,17 and 18 of §1392, supra. This case cites with approval the case of Thiebaud v. Dufour, supra.
We have carefully examined the cases cited and relied on by appellant and find nothing in any of them in conflict with the decisions supra. They hold in effect and necessarily so we think, that when an appeal is prosecuted from any decision “growing out of a matter connected with a decedent’s estate,” the appeal must be prosecuted in the manner and within the time prescribed by said §§2977, 2978, supra. To hold otherwise would be to render said sections a nullity, because the purpose of their passage was to furnish a method of and time for appeal different from that prescribed in the ordinary civil case.
However, in this connection, it should be stated that in our investigation of this question and the decided
However, independent of said decisions, it seems to us that no good reason-can be given for construing said §2977, .supra, as authorizing appeals taken under said act in any case where the judgment sought to be appealed from was neither a final judgment within the meaning of §671 Burns 1914, supra, nor an interlocutory order from which an appeal is authorized by subdivisions 15,16,17 and 18 of §1392, supra.
Such was not the intent or purpose of said act. On the contrary, the purpose and intent of the legislature in the passage of said act, as before stated, was to provide a different method of appeal in cases of decisions growing out of any matter connected with the settlement of decedent’s estates, where the decision sought to be appealed from was one that was appeal-able under the general practice acts, the main purpose of the act being to prevent delay in the settlement of decedents’ estates. Browning v. McCracken (1884), 97 Ind. 279, 281; Seward v. Clark, Admr. (1879), 67 Ind. 289, 297; Vail v. Page (1910), 175 Ind. 126, 130, 93 N. E. 705; Miller, Admr., v. Carmichael (1884), 98 Ind. 236.
To give to such work and said section of the decedent’s act of which it is a part any other interpretation or meaning would be to say in effect that by such act the legislature intended to authorize any person aggrieved by any ruling growing out of a matter connected with a. decedent’s estate the right of. appeal from such ruling. This is so because the word “decision” must have been used with reference to and meaning in effect final judgments and interlocutory orders from which an appeal would lie under the practice act, or otherwise it was used in the sense of “ruling,” and hence would permit an appeal from any decision without regard to its finality, or the character of the order or ruling involved, whether interlocutory or otherwise, and hence, to a great extent, defeat the controlling purpose of said act indicated in numerous decisions, some of which we have cited, supra, in that such an interpretation would prevent the speedy closing up of estates, and embar
By what we have said we do not mean to be understood as saying that the instant' case is one from which no appeal should lie, but simply that §2977, supra, should be construed in the light of said sections of the civil procedure acts, supra, declaring what cases are appealable, and the interpretation placed thereon by the Supreme Court. Indeed, we think, as suggested in the original opinion, that the instant case is one in which an appeal should be authorized, but, if it is in. fact an interlocutory order, it is not one of those from which an appeal is authorized by said subdivisions 15, 16, 17 or 18, .§1392, supra, and legislative enactment would- be necessary to put decisions like it within the appealable class.
We feel sure, also, that under the cases cited in the original opinion, to some of which we have called attention, supra, said decision is not a final judgment within the meaning of §671 Burns 1914, su,pra, as construed and interpreted by said decided cases. If said cases have placed too narrow a construction and interpretation on the character of the judgment that was intended to be included in the words “final judgment,” as used in said §671, and such interpretation should be broadened so as to include cases like the one here involved,- the duty and power to make such a change is in the Supreme Court. In neither case, as we view the law, does such duty or power rest in this court.
' However, we deem it proper to suggest in this connection that, in our opinion, appellant is not without
Said decision made necessary the filing of' an amended final report by said administrator, and hence delayed the rendition of a final judgment until such amended report is filed. When this report is filed, a judgment approving it and adjudging that said estate has been fully and finally settled, and that such administrator be discharged, will be a final judgment within the meaning of §671, supra, and hence a judgment from which an appeal may be prosecuted. Appellants, or any party aggrieved by the preliminary ruling or decision from which this appeal is prosecuted, would have the thirty days fixed by §587 Burns 1914, Acts 1913 p. 848, from the date of such final judgment (or if the decision or finding, special or general, upon which such final judgment is rendered be made at a date preceding such judgment* then thirty days from such decision or finding) within which to file a motion for a new trial. As grounds for such motion appellant may include any ruling
For these reasons, the petition for a rehearing and to reinstate this cause is overruled.
Note. — Reported in 114 N. E. 473, 115 N. E. 594.