Wallace v. Gatchell

106 Ill. 315 | Ill. | 1883

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 21st of September, 1878, letters testamentary were issued out of the Adams county court to Joanna E. Wallace, the appellant, on the estate of Joel Eiee, deceased, and she thereupon assumed the duties and office of executrix. Within six months from the date of her letters she appointed a term of the county court for the presentation and adjustment of claims against the estate, and gave due notice thereof, as required by statute. The claim of appellee, hereinafter stated, was not presented for allowance at the term of the court thus fixed by her.

On the 14th of September, 1880, less than two years from the date of letters, Alfred Gatchell, the appellee, filed with the clerk of said court a claim against said estate for the sum of $1416.10, the justness of which is not questioned. No notice or summons, however, was issued to the executrix on this claim until the first day of June, 1881, being more than two years from date of letters; nor did she at any time waive the issuing of summons or notice on said claim. On this state of facts the county court allowed the claim as a seventh class claim, “to be paid out of non-inventoried estate.” From this order appellee appealed to the circuit court of Adams county, where, upon a rehearing of the cause, the claim was ordered to be paid as a seventh class claim in due course of administration, and this order, on the executrix’s appeal, was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Third District, and she brings the case to this court by further appeal.

It will be seen, from this brief statement, that the vital question involved in the present controversy is, whether this claim should have been ordered to be paid, as it was, as a seventh class claim in due course of administration, or whether its payment should have been limited to subsequently discovered or non-inventoried assets.

By section 70, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, all claims against the estate of a deceased person are required to be “exhibited to the court” within two years from the granting of letters, and all demands not so exhibited within that period are declared forever barred, “unless the creditors shall find other estate of the deceased not inventoried or accounted foi by the executor or administrator, in which case their claims shall be paid pro rata out of such subsequently discovered estate, ” etc. The ultimate question to be determined in this case then is, was the claim in controversy, in the sense of the statute, “exhibited to the court” within two years from the grant of letters? The answer to this question of course depends upon what constitutes the exhibiting of a claim to the court within the meaning of the statute. Appellee insists that the filing of a copy of the claim with the clerk of the county court within the two years, as was done in this case, is all that the statute requires to take a case out of the limitation of two years, and that it is no objection that the actual adjustment or allowance of it, or that the issuing of notice thereon occurred afterwards, and in this view of the matter we concur. Counsel for appellant, however, contend that the creditor must, in addition to the filing of the claim with the clerk, sue out a summons against the executor or administrator, and that such summons must be served before the court is clothed with jurisdiction to consider the claim, and that until the court thus acquires jurisdiction of the cause there can be no such a thing as the exhibiting of a claim to the court. We are unable to perceive anything in the statute or the previous decisions of this court bearing on the question that warrants this view. The exhibiting of a claim to the court we understand to be nothing more than the formal presentation of it in the court for allowance, which is done by filing the same with the clerk of the court, and this may be done in vacation as well as in term time. By an express provision of the statute county courts are always open for probate purposes, including the presentation or exhibiting of claims against estates.

The issuing and service of process upon the filing of a claim against an estate is not for the purpose of conferring power or jurisdiction upon the court to have a claim presented or exhibited to it for allowance, as is supposed, but, on the contrary, to notify the executor or administrator that such a claim has already been exhibited or presented, and also to give the court jurisdiction of the person of the executor or administrator, and to authorize it to adjudicate the claim. The presentation of a claim for adjustment, and the actual adjudication of such claim, are two very different things. The court is always open ’ for the one, hut not for the other. The exhibiting or presentation of a claim to the court gives' the court jurisdiction of that particular claim, and sets the court in motion. If the executor or administrator is present, and it is general adjustment term, the court may proceed at once to adjudicate the claim, but if the time of general adjustment has already passed, and the executor or administrator will not waive the issuing of a summons and submit to the jurisdiction of the court, the requisite summons must be issued and served before the court will be authorized to proceed to an adjudication. The position that the presentation of a claim, and causing the same to be filed in the county court for allowance, is, within the meaning of, the statute, a sufficient exhibiting of it to the court, is fortified by the reasoning of the court in Barbero v. Thurman, Admr. 49 Ill. 284.

It is further objected that the circuit court erred in taxing appellant with the costs in the county court. It is clear this objection is well taken as to all costs in that court which might and would have been avoided by presenting the claim at the adjustment term, which would include, at least, the costs of the issuing, service and return of the summons; but we do not think, under the circumstances, the case ought to be reversed for that reason. An examination of the record shows that appellant was present by her counsel, and contested this claim in the circuit court, and that the objection now urged was' made for the first time in the Appellate Court. Had she moved for an apportionment of the costs, or in some manner called the attention of the court to the matter, the error now complained of would doubtless have been avoided. A party has no right to sit by and permit a judgment to be entered up against him, which is erroneous in some trifling respect not affecting the matter in controversy, as in the present case, without even so much as calling the attention of the court to it, and then afterwards avail himself of such error in a court of review, and thereby deprive his adversary of the entire fruits of the litigation. If the error complained of affected the merits of the controversy, which it clearly does not, the case would be altogether different. Under the circumstances, we think the error should be regarded as waived.

The conclusion reached by the circuit and Appellate courts being in conformity with the views here expressed, the judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Mr. Justice Craig, dissenting.