Butcher et al. v. Kuxst et al

Citation65 W.Va. 384
PartiesButcher et al. v. Kuxst et al
Decision Date23 March 1909
CourtSupreme Court of West Virginia
1. Appeal and Error Decisions ReviewableFinality.

Where an appeal from a judgment or order of a county court appointing or refusing to appoint an administrator, has been allowed by and docketed in a circuit court, and the person appealing has right of appeal, the order of dismissal thereof by the circuit court, as improvidently awarded, will be treated as a final judgment, from which a writ of error will lie to this Court, (p. 388.)

2. Executors and Administratoes Persons Entitled to Act Nonresident.

A distributee of the estate of one dying intestate in this state, and who would, if a resident of this state, be entitled to precedence in administration, and, as the law was prior to 1903, would notwithstanding such non-residence have been entitled to administer on such estate, is now by amendment of section 3258, Code 1906, by chapter 13, Acts 1903, wholly disqualified to act as such administrator, (p. 390.)

Same Appointment Review Persons Entitled.

But though such non-resident distributee be disqualified by non-residence to act as administrator, nevertheless his interest as distributee entitles him to be heard, by protest, objection and advice in the appointment of a proper and competent person, with right of appeal to the circuit court, and writ of error to this Court, where there has been any abuse of the discretion of the court below in such appointment, (p. 390.)

4. Abatement and Revival Death of Plaintiff in Error Effect.

On the death of such non-resident distributee, pending a, writ of error brought by him to this Court, though such death be suggested on the record of this Court, and order be made reviving the cause in the name of his next of kin or next friend by whom the writ of error is prosecuted, the case may be heard and disposed of here on its merits, upon the writ of error as originally awarded, without reference to such death, as provided by section 3900, Code 1906. (p. 390.)

5. Executors and Administrators Failure of Distributee to Apply Appointment of Creditor.

By authority of section 3258, Code 1906, if no distributee of an estate apply for administration within thirty days from the death of the intestate, the county court may grant administration to a creditor, or to any other person, without waiting for an adjudication as to the sanity or insanity of a resident or non-resident distributee thereof, the statute imposing no such limitations on the appointing authority, (p. 391.)

6. Same Two Grants of Administration.

While the general rule is that there can not be two valid grants of administration on the same estate at the same time, within the same state jurisdiction, and the second is a nullity, while the first continues, yet such rule is inapplicable to the case of a temporary commitment of such estate to the sheriff as curator thereof, pending the determination of the right of administration by the county court, (p. 391.)

7. Same Administration Persons Entitled.

While the county court may rightfully require evidence of a creditor's claim, as a condition precedent to his appointment as administrator of an estate, yet, as the statute authorizes the appointment of any other person, if such appointee be not in fact a creditor, if he be otherwise competent to act, his appointment will not be invalid, (p. 392.)

8. Same RevieioDiscretion of Court.

An order of the county court appointing an administrator, whether distributee, creditor, or other person, will not be set aside on writ of error to this Court, unless it plainly appears that there was abuse of the discretion of the county court in making such appointment, (p. 393.)

9. Judgment Validity Disqualification, o/ Judge.

The rule in this State is that a judgment pronounced by a judge disqualified by personal interest to give judgment is not void but voidable only, as being a decree not according to law, and to be set aside only when brought under review and objection taken at the proper time. (p. 393.)

10. Question Not Decided.

Quaere: Where two or three commissioners of a county court are interested so as to be disqualified by reason thereof to give judgment in the matter of appointment of an administrator, there being no provision of law for calling in another commissioner, and no other tribunal with jurisdiction to make such appointment, would not they ex necessitate have jurisdiction to sit in judgment? (p. 394.)

[Robinson, Judge, absent.] Error to Circuit Court, Taylor County.

Contest to determine the right and priority to administration of the estate of Adolphus Armstrong, deceased, between Louisa Butcher and others and G. H. A. Kunst and others. From the final order of the county court appointing Kunst administrator of the estate, Louisa Butcher and such others appealed to the circuit court, which court dismissed the appeal, and Louisa Butcher and such others bring error. On death of said Louisa Butcher pending hearing on writ of error, said, cause was revived and proceeded in by George Woofter and others as her heirs and. next of kin.

Affirmed.

Dent & Dent, B. F. Bailey, and 0. P. Guard, for plaintiffs in error.

.John L. Hechmer, for defendants in error.

Miller, Bresident:

This case had its origin in a contest over the right and priority of administration of the estate of Adolphus Armstrong, deceased, begun in March, 1907, in the county court of Taylor county and continued on appeal of Louisa Butcher by George Woofter and others, her next of kin, to the circuit court of said county, from the final order of the said, county court appointing, on motion of creditors, and others, G. H. A. Kunst, administrator of said estate. The case is here upon a writ of error to the judgment of the said circuit court dismissing said appeal.

On June 13, 1908, since the case was docketed here, the death of Louisa Butcher, pending this writ of error, being suggested, on motion of said Woofter and others, it was ordered that the case be revived and proceeded in in their names in place of said Louisa Butcher.

On final hearing, September 4, 1908, said Kunst moved the court as follows: First, to require plaintiffs in error to mature the case as to L. E. Matz, not served with process; second, to require plaintiffs in error to amend their petition so as to bring in as defendants, Eugene Sommerville, and L. E. Matz, the latter in his representative capacity; third, to set aside the order of revival herein, and, in support thereof, exhibited a certified copy of the will of said Louisa Butcher, and of the order of the county court of said Taylor county appointing W. B. Lynch, executor; fourth to dismiss the writ of error and supersedeas, on the ground that the judgment appealed from, dismissing the appeal as improvidently awarded, is not a final judgment on the principles of the cause, from which an appeal lies to this Court.

So far as the record, shows Matz has no individual interest to subserve, wherefore mot a necessary party. He appeared by petition in the county court as foreign guardian of the said Louisa Butcher, appointed by the probate court of Monroe county, Ohio, which court also adjudged her an imbecile and incapable of taking care of and preserving her property, and also joined in the motion of creditors to appoint said Kunst, administrator. The death of Louisa Butcher annulled the authority of the said Matz, as a, representative of deceased, and therefore he is no longer a necessary party. In the county court Eugene Sommer ville appeared by petition, claiming right of administration by virtue of a power of attorney and nomination therein of said Louisa Butcher, and also filed a protest in writing against the appointment of any other person. He did not appeal from the order appointing said Kunst, and has not appeared to cross assign errors in this Court. The question of Sommerville's right of administration, and the questions presented by the other motions are all involved in the merits of the controversy presented upon this writ of error, if the judgment below was final, so as to give us jurisdiction, and need not be separately considered.

The order of the circuit court was that the appeal be dismissed as improvidently awarded. It is argued on behalf of Kunst that this order was in effect only a refusal of the appeal, and not an adjudication.of the rights of the parties, and that no appeal having been applied for or allowed by a Judge of this Court, as provided by section 3634, Code 1906, and there being no final adjudication by the circuit court this Court is without jurisdiction of the case and the writ of error should be dismissed. We do not think this position well founded. An appeal was allowed by the circuit court, and if appellant, Louisa Butcher, had right of appeal from a judgment denying her right and priority of administration, or right to nominate said Sommerville, or right of protest against the appointment of said Kunst, she had right of appeal to the circuit court by virtue of section 1261, Code 1906, and to writ of error to this Court by virtue of section 4038, Code 1906, entitling her to a writ of error to the judgment or order of the circuit court, in controversy concerning tie probate of a will or the appointment of a personal representative, guardian, committee or curator.

In Bridgman v. Bridgman, 30 W. Va. 212, 216. a like order of the circuit court dismissing an appeal was treated as equivalent to the affirmance of the order of the county court, and we think we should so treat the judgment in this case. The dismissal of the appeal, so far as the record shows, could have been upon no other ground except want of error in the judgment of the county court. That judgment was final and determined the right of administration as between the contestants. And although the motion may not have been well founder!, and the court may have given a wrong reason for its judgment, it must necessarily be treated...

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1 cases
  • Heirs v. Kunst
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of West Virginia
    • March 23, 1909
    ...64 S.E. 967(65 W. Va. 384)BUTCHER'S HEIRS et al.v.KUNST et al.Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.March 23, 1909.        Rehearing Denied June 9, ......

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