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Peters v. Moore

Supreme Court of Ohio
Jul 26, 1950
154 Ohio St. 177 (Ohio 1950)

Summary

In Peters v. Moore, 154 Ohio St. 177, 93 N.E.2d 683, this court unanimously held that it is mandatory and jurisdictional that the executor be made a party to a will contest, and that the court is without jurisdiction unless the executor is made a party, and a summons, duly followed by service, is issued within six months after the will has been admitted to probate.

Summary of this case from Abbott v. Dawson

Opinion

No. 31865

Decided July 26, 1950.

Contest of wills — Right statutory — Subject to conditions imposed by statute — Necessary parties — Mandatory that executor be made party — Section 12080, General Code — Court without jurisdiction, when — Executor not made party within six months — Statute not complied with, when.

1. In Ohio the right to contest the validity of a will is statutory.

2. The exercise of that right is subject to the conditions imposed by such statutes. (Paragraph one of the syllabus in the case of McVeigh v. Fetterman, 95 Ohio St. 292, and paragraph two of the syllabus in the case of Case v. Smith, Admx., 142 Ohio St. 95, approved and followed.)

3. Under the provisions of Section 12080, General Code, all the devisees, legatees, and heirs of the testator, and other interested persons, including the executor or administrator, must be made parties to an action to contest a will.

4. Under those provisions it is mandatory and jurisdictional that the executor be made a party to such action.

5. In such an action the court is without jurisdiction unless the executor is made a party and a summons, duly followed by service, is issued within six months after the will has been admitted to probate. ( Draher v. Walters, 130 Ohio St. 92, overruled as to that part of the syllabus relating to an executor; and paragraphs two and three of the syllabus in the case of McCord v. McCord, 104 Ohio St. 274, approved and followed.)

6. It is not a compliance with this requirement when a person occupying the positions of heir, legatee and sole executor is made a party in his individual capacity as heir and legatee but not in his distinctive, official, fiduciary capacity as executor, and another person is sued as executor.

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Hancock county.

This action was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for the purpose of contesting the validity of the will of the plaintiff's father, John L. Peters, who died November 20, 1947.

Among the defendants named in the plaintiff's original petition was Lotus Moore, a daughter of the decedent by his second marriage. She and the plaintiff, her half brother, are the sole heirs at law of the decedent. Under the provisions of the will the plaintiff was bequeathed the sum of two hundred dollars, and his half sister is to receive the rest of the estate which is said to have a value in excess of $21,000.

On December 16, 1947, the will was admitted to probate. In the will the decedent's brother, Leroy Peters, was nominated executor. However, the will contains a further provision nominating the daughter, Lotus Moore, executrix in the event of the refusal of Leroy Peters to serve.

On the day the will was probated Leroy Peters declined to serve, and Lotus Moore alone was immediately appointed executrix. She qualified at once.

Nevertheless, one month later when the plaintiff, Quinby Peters, filed his original petition in the Court of Common Pleas he named Lotus Moore as a defendant in her individual capacity alone; and also included among the defendants was Leroy Peters, erroneously designated as executor. Service of summons was had accordingly.

Nothing further occurred until approximately ten months after the filing of the petition and eleven months after the probate of the will. Then on November 12, 1948 — nearly five months after the statutory six-month period for contesting the validity of a will had elapsed — the plaintiff obtained leave and filed an amended petition in which he correctly named Lotus Moore as executrix. A summons was duly served on her as such.

Lotus Moore, acting solely in her capacity as an individual, then filed a motion to dismiss the action on the ground the court lacked jurisdiction of the cause, inasmuch as the plaintiff had permitted the statutory six-month period to elapse without making her a party in her fiduciary capacity as executrix.

The Court of Common Pleas granted the motion and dismissed the action.

On an appeal on questions of law the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas and remanded the cause.

The case is in this court for review by reason of the allowance of the motion of Lotus Moore to certify the record.

Mr. David Meekison, Mr. Otto W. Hess and Mr. Marcus C. Downing, for appellee.

Messrs. Betts Betts and Mr. Kenneth Adams, for appellant.


The Court of Appeals relied on the decision of this court in the case of Draher v. Walters, 130 Ohio St. 92, 196 N.E. 884, in which the syllabus reads as follows:

"Service of summons upon one of the legatee-devisee defendants, in an action to contest the validity of a will, is to be deemed commencement of the action as to each of the defendants of that class, and also the executor. Actual service of summons can thereafter be made upon the remainder of the defendants of that class."

Two additional decisions of this court are discussed at length by counsel. They are the earlier cases of McCord v. McCord, 104 Ohio St. 274, 135 N.E. 548, and Bradford v. Andrews, 20 Ohio St. 208, 5 Am. Rep., 645.

On behalf of the defendant and appellant, Lotus Moore, it is contended that the decision in the Draher case, supra, should be overruled; that it was erroneously based on the decision in the Bradford case, supra; that the omitted parties in the Bradford case were legatees — not the executor; that the court did not hold in that case that service of summons on an heir, legatee or devisee is sufficient to support service of summons on the executor after the statutory period has elapsed; that the court did not hold in that case that an heir, legatee or devisee is in the same class as the executor; that the present Section 12080, General Code, naming those who must be made parties to an action to contest a will, was not enacted until approximately eight years after the decision in the Bradford case; that the decision in the Draher case is in conflict with that in the McCord case which was approved and followed in the recent case of Case v. Smith, Admx., 142 Ohio St. 95, 50 N.E.2d 142; and that the provisions of Section 11230, General Code, relied on by the plaintiff and relating to defendants united in interest, are by their own terms limited in their effect to the chapter on limitation of actions and are not applicable to special statutes imposing a condition precedent or a limitation qualifying a given right, such as the period of six months within which a will contest may be instituted. Section 11230, referred to by the defendant Lotus Moore, reads in part as follows:

"An action shall be deemed commenced within the meaning of this chapter, as to each defendant, at the date of the summons which is served on him or on a codefendant who is a joint contractor, or otherwise united in interest with him. * * *"

In addition to these contentions the appellant insists that, irrespective of the correctness or incorrectness of the decision in the Draher case, the instant case is distinguishable on the facts and the plaintiff has not brought himself within the purview of the Draher case decision. A study of the record sustains this contention.

Section 12080, General Code reads:

"All the devisees, legatees, and heirs of the testator, and other interested persons, including the executor or administrator, must be made parties to the action." (Italics supplied.)

In the Draher case there was a compliance with this mandatory jurisdictional provision. When the suit was instituted the executor was named as one of the defendants. To the petition was attached a precipe requesting issuance and service of summons on all defendants. However, the clerk failed to issue a summons for the executor. This fact was not discovered by the plaintiff until the statutory period had elapsed. She immediately filed another precipe for a summons, and service was had.

In contrast, in the instant case there was no compliance with this statute. The sole executrix as such was not named as one of the defendants in the petition, and, of course, there was no precipe for the issuance of a summons for her and none was served on her as executrix. As a further complication, in his petition the plaintiff included among the defendants Leroy Peters as executor, although he never had been appointed as such; but a precipe was filed and he was served with a summons in that capacity.

Thus the matter was permitted to stand until approximately ten months after the action was instituted and eleven months after the will had been probated, although Lotus Moore had been appointed executrix and had served as such during the entire period. Finally the plaintiff filed an amended petition naming Lotus Moore as a defendant in her distinctive, official, fiduciary capacity as executrix, and a summons was served on her as such. Thereafter the action was dismissed on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction since the executrix had not been made a party within the statutory period of six months after the probate of the will, as required by Section 12080, General Code. In the first sentence of the opinion in the Draher case appears the statement: "Defendants in error concede that all necessary parties were named in the petition as provided by Section 12080, General Code."

But in the instant case the plaintiff contends further that the additional service of summons on Lotus Moore as executrix was unnecessary inasmuch as he had named her individually as one of the defendant heirs and legatees in his original petition and she was so served with a summons. In other words, he insists that the designation of her capacity is immaterial and that as long as she is a party in one capacity she may be considered inferentially a party in any other capacity. However, the fallacy of that argument is cogently illustrated by the fact that not only was Lotus Moore not sued as executrix but another person alone was specifically named in the petition as the duly appointed and qualified executor of the estate. The plaintiff's theory would place the court in the anomalous position of substituting a mere, unwarranted inference for a specific, contrary allegation — hardly a proper rule for construing a pleading.

Furthermore, the appellant is correct in her contention that the decision in the Bradford case, supra, does not serve as a basis for the decision in the Draher case.

A careful study discloses not only that at the time of the Bradford case decision in the year 1870 Section 12080, General Code, had not been enacted but that this section was not preceded by any similar statute. Hence, when the section was enacted in 1878, the provisions were new and, of course, were not under consideration in the Bradford case.

But this section was in effect in 1922 when the McCord case, supra, was decided. The syllabus in that case reads in part as follows:

"2. Codefendants are `united in interest' within the meaning of the provisions of Section 11230, General Code, only when they are similarly interested in and will be similarly affected by the determination of the issues involved in the action.

"3. An executor named in a will is not `united in interest' with the heirs and devisees, and an action to contest a will is not commenced as to the heirs of the testator and the devisees under the will by the issuance of a summons for the executor, though duly served upon him."

Hence the court is unanimously of the opinion that that part of the Draher case syllabus relating to an executor must be overruled.

Furthermore, if there is not unity of interest between the executor and heirs and devisees sufficient to support service of summons on the heirs and devisees after service on the executor, obviously service on the heirs and devisees is likewise not sufficient to support service on the executor, as in the instant case. Restated more simply, the rule is as broad as long and works both ways.

Inasmuch as the right to contest a will in Ohio is based on mandatory, jurisdictional statutes and the plaintiff has failed to comply with the requirement that the executor be made a party and a summons issued within six months after the will has been admitted to probate, the trial court was correct in dismissing the action. Hence, the judgment of the Court of Appeals must be reversed and that of the Court of Common Pleas affirmed.

Judgment reversed.

MATTHIAS, HART, ZIMMERMAN, STEWART, TURNER and TAFT, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Peters v. Moore

Supreme Court of Ohio
Jul 26, 1950
154 Ohio St. 177 (Ohio 1950)

In Peters v. Moore, 154 Ohio St. 177, 93 N.E.2d 683, this court unanimously held that it is mandatory and jurisdictional that the executor be made a party to a will contest, and that the court is without jurisdiction unless the executor is made a party, and a summons, duly followed by service, is issued within six months after the will has been admitted to probate.

Summary of this case from Abbott v. Dawson

In Peters v. Moore, supra, Lotus Moore, daughter of the decedent, was named as a defendant and was served only in her individual capacity.

Summary of this case from Beverly v. Beverly
Case details for

Peters v. Moore

Case Details

Full title:PETERS, APPELLEE v. MOORE, APPELLANT, ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Jul 26, 1950

Citations

154 Ohio St. 177 (Ohio 1950)
93 N.E.2d 683

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