LOUISE VIEHMANN et al. v. JACOB VIEHMANN, by Guardian and Curator, JOSEPHINE KAEMPER, Appellant
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
April 9, 1923
298 Mo. 356
Division Two
Our conclusion is that the court committed no error in denying a writ of ouster and that the judgment below should be affirmed. It is so ordered. All concur.
Division Two, April 9, 1923.
1. JUDGMENT OF PROBATE COURT: Collateral Attack. A judgment of the probate court, concerning matters within its statutory jurisdiction, is entitled to the same favorable presumptions, arising from either affirmative statements or the silence of its record, as are accorded to judgments of the circuit court, and is invulnerable to collateral attack unless it affirmatively appears in some portion of the record that the steps necessary to acquire jurisdiction were not taken.
2. ——: ——: By Partition; Fraud. Where the record of the probate court shows the filing of a claim by the administratrix for services rendered, the appointment of an administrator pendente lite, the presentation of her claim to him, his waiver of notice and entry of appearance, consent to an immediate hearing, a call upon the claimant to testify, and the allowance, classification and payment of the claim, the judgment of allowance and an order for the sale of real estate to pay estate debts are at most only voidable and not subject to collateral attack; and where said administratrix and the grantee in the deed, both heirs of the intestate, bring suit for the partition of other estate lands against another heir, a minor, a defense, by cross-bill, alleging that said
3. ——: Statutory Partition: Counterclaim: Cross-Bill. To sustain defendant‘s cross-bill in a statutory proceeding in partition the matters alleged therein must be germane to and within the general scope of the matters embraced in plaintiff‘s petition. Where the petition seeks the partition of estate lands, brought by certain heirs against another, a cross-bill, charging that the sale of other lands under an order of the probate court to pay debts, and that the judgment by which one of the plaintiffs obtained an allowance of a claim against the estate, were fraudulent and the result of a conspiracy entered into by and between her and the other plaintiff to cheat and defraud the defendant, is not germane, and does not come within the provisions of the statute (
Appeal from St. Louis City Circuit Court.—Hon. Franklin Ferriss, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
John Cashman for appellant.
(1) The judgment of the probate court in allowing the claims of Louise Viehmann, and ordering a sale of the real estate to pay same, should not be permitted to stand. This administratrix, on oath, stated that it would not be necessary to sell the real estate to pay the debts of the deceased. All persons interested in the estate were at liberty to rely upon this declaration and assurance. This, taken with Louise‘s statement to the mother of the infant defendant, that the sale of the real estate would not be made for ten years, prevented defendant
W. F. Heideman for respondents.
DAVIS, C.—This is a statutory action in partition, filed in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, on the 25th day of June, 1920, praying partition and sale of one certain parcel of improved city real estate, the petition alleging, in substance, that said real estate devolved on plaintiffs and the minor defendant from one Jacob Viehmann, father and grandfather respectively of the parties, which estate was then and had been in the course of administration in the probate court since December 27th previous.
Defendant‘s second amended answer, after admitting the granting of letters of administration to Louise Viehmann, and the heirship and interest of the parties, is a pleading in the nature of an equitable cross-bill, stating, in effect, that the testator died intestate, seized of two pieces of property other than the piece sought to be partitioned by plaintiff, which were sold by the plain-
The trial court excluded evidence sought by defendant to be introduced under the cross-bill, dismissed his cross-bill, and decreed partition and sale of the one piece of property set out in plaintiff‘s petition.
The evidence and such other matters as may be deemed important, will be referred to in the opinion.
The questions presented for determination are, first, may defendant collaterally attack and put in issue the verity of a judgment entered in the probate court, and, second, is defendant‘s cross-bill the proper pleading to act as a direct attack on the probate court judgment?
I. Besides alleging in his cross-bill that the claim of plaintiff, Louise Viehmann, was duly allowed, defendant‘s evidence tends to show the appointment of an administrator pendente lite, by the probate court, the presentation of the claim to him verified by oath, waiver of notice and entry of appearance, the call on claim-
II. Having ruled that the verity of a judgment of the probate court, fair on its face, may not be attacked collaterally, it becomes necessary to determine whether defendant‘s cross-bill to set aside the judgment for fraud is a pleading that may act as a direct attack.
Plaintiff‘s suit is a statutory action to partition one described parcel of real estate. Defendant‘s cross-bill is a suit to set aside the judgment of the probate court and order of sale of two other described parcels of real estate for fraud and incidentally to partition same. The basis of his suit, however, is the setting aside of said judgment for fraud. He rises or falls, even in a proper action, on this hypothesis, for should the action for fraud fail, the partitioning of the two lots cannot be had.
As was said in Fulton v. Fisher, 239 Mo. l. c. 129: “Our statute does not use the word ‘cross-bill,’ but the office of a cross-bill is as well recognized in our practice now as it was under the old chancery practice, and it means now what it meant then. . . . The statutory counterclaim embraces a cross-bill in equity, but is not limited to that, because, under the statute, in an action on a contract, the defendant may plead any other cause of action he may have against the plaintiff arising on contract.”
The cross-bill now under discussion, in so far as it relates to the cause of action stated in plaintiff‘s petition, cannot be sustained as a counterclaim under the last clause of the statute mentioned, because the cause of action does not arise out of a contract between plaintiff and defendant; nor can it be sustained as a cross-bill or counterclaim under the first clause because it does not state a cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the petition of plaintiff as the foundation of a claim, nor is it connected with the subject of plaintiff‘s action.
To sustain defendant‘s pleading, it must be shown that the matters alleged in the cross-bill are germane to and within the general scope of the matters embraced in plaintiff‘s petition. [Fulton v. Fisher, 239 Mo. 116; Mathiason v. St. Louis, 156 Mo. 196.] As also stated in Fulton v. Fisher, 239 Mo. at page 130: “A cross-bill in equity pleading is a matter of defense to the original bill,
As we have said, plaintiff‘s petition is a statutory action in partition; defendant‘s cross-bill is a suit to set aside a judgment for fraud. The right to partition the property described in plaintiff‘s petition was not in any way involved in the cross-bill, and we are unable to see how a suit to set aside the judgment of the probate court for fraud could in any way affect the issues presented in plaintiff‘s petition. The cross-bill is not germane to the petition, nor is it defensive in its character; while it goes beyond a mere defense and asks for affirmative equitable relief, it does not touch the subject of the petition, nor does it ask for affirmative relief concerning the same matters covered by the petition. It was said in Mathiason v. St. Louis, 156 Mo. l. c. 202: “If a defendant, in filing a cross-bill, attempts to go beyond this, and to introduce new and distinct matter, not essential to the proper determination of the matter put in litigation by the original bill, although he may show a perfect case against either the complainant or one or more of his co-defendants, his pleading will not be a cross-bill, but an original bill. And no decree can be rendered on such matter.”
We have reached the conclusion that the cross-bill is not germane to the petition, and does not touch or cover the same matter covered by it.
The action of the circuit court is sustained, and the judgment below affirmed. Railey and Reeves, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of DAVIS, C., is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
