Court Opinion

ID: 6549566
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:22:55.201286+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:04.268693
License: Public Domain

Smith, J., (after stating tbe facts). Tbe first question is tbe right of administration pending tbe contest. Section 13 of Kirby’s Digest provides that if tbe validity of any will be contested, letters of administration shall be granted during tbe time of such contest to some person other than tbe executor, who shall take charge of tbe property and administer tbe same under tbe direction of tbe court and account for, pay and deliver all moneys and property of tbe estate to tbe executor or regular administrator when qualified to act. It appears from tbe record that Mrs. Evins consented to tbe appointment of Turley as administrator, but there is nothing to indicate that she was thereby waiving her claim to bave letters testamentary issued to her upon tbe determination of tbe contest. In fact, it affirmatively appears that such was not her intention. Prior to tbe probate of tbe will, she could not act, and her consent to tbe appointment of Turley during the time of her disqualification is not inconsistent with her subsequent demand for the issuance of letters to her. Nor is she required to postpone her demand for letters until the litigation is finally settled. In the case of Steen v. Springfield, 91 Ark. 75, it was held that section 13 of Kirby’s Digest, above quoted, did not require the appointment of a temporary administrator to take the place of the executor during the period of the contest after the will has once been admitted to probate and letters testamentary have been issued to the executor. It was there said, “The sole design (of section 13) is to provide for a temporary administrator to take charge of and preserve the estate until the will can be admitted to probate and letters testamentary issued to the executor, if qualified. It is merely for the protection of the estate, and not to provide for neutrality towards both contestants and the beneficiaries under the will. * * * The pendency of a contest does not disqualify; even temporarily, the executor named in the will, but the delay in admitting the will to probate prevents his appointment by the court, and may render it necessary that a temporary administrator be appointed. If the will be admitted to probate and the letters testamentary granted, then there is no necessity for the appointment of a temporary administrator under section 13, even though the contest continue or is thereafter instituted.” The circuit court was therefore not in error in ordering the issuance of letters to Mrs. Evins. It is urged that Mrs. Horn shows no right to prosecute this contest, and that if there was a lost or destroyed will which gave her any interest in Doctor Stone’s estate that she would first have to establish it in the manner pointed out in sections 8062 to 8065 of Kirby’s Digest. The existence of the will of May 4, 1905, is recited in the will of March 5, 1912, and is expressly revoked by it, and, under the terms of the first will, Mrs. Horn is made the residuary legatee, although she was only a sister-in-law of the testator. Under the allegations of the remonstrance, the 1905 will was not revoked because of the lack of testamentary capacity at the time the 1912 will was made. We think the proceeding adopted by Mrs. Horn was a proper one to raise the question of the validity of this 1912 will and to defeat its probate, if invalid. Sections 8038, 8039 and 8040 of Kirby’s Digest provide for the contest of probate of wills before the probate court and define the practice by which all persons interested in the probate may be summoned to appear. And when any contest has been decided in the probate court and an appeal taken to the circuit court, the decision there given is a bar to any other proceeding to call the probate or rejection of the will in question, subject to the right of appeal or writ of error to the Supreme Court, and subject also to the right of a court of chancery to impeach such final-decision for any reason which would give it jurisdiction over any other judgment at law. Kirby’s Digest, § 8041. And when a will has been probated, the court’s order to that effect is not subject to collateral attack. Caraway v. Moore, 75 Ark. 146; St. Joseph’s Convent v. Garner, 66 Ark. 623; Ludlow v. Flournoy, 34 Ark. 451. The establishment of the wall of 1905, whether lost or destroyed, is one question, the probate of the will of 1912 is another. Mrs. Horn, under the allegations of her remonstrance, had the right to resist the probate of the 1912 will, and for that purpose could offer proof of the first will which gave her an interest in the estate which she would not have if the 1912 will was a valid one. Flowers v. Flowers, 74 Ark. 215. If by the introduction of this proof the probate of the 1912 will was defeated, then Mrs. Horn could proceed under the provisions of sections 8062 to 8065 of Kirby’s Digest to establish the 1905 will as a lost or destroyed will, and, if successful in that attempt, the title to the property devised would vest in the legatees therein named. It would require this proceeding to vest the title to property devised in the 1905 will. But appellant’s purpose is not to vest title, but to defeat tbe probate of tbe 1912 will. Kirby's Digest, § 8062, is as follows : “Whenever any will shall be lost, or destroyed by accident or design, the court of chancery shall have the same power to take proof of the execution of such will, and to establish the same, as in the case of lost deeds." But this provision of the statute for the restoration of lost deeds and mils is not exclusive. The existence of a deed may be proved at a trial, although it has never been reinstated as a lost record. Carpenter v. Jones, 76 Ark. 163; Stewart v. Scott, 57 Ark. 153; Calloway v. Cossart, 45 Ark. 81. So in this contest the existence of the 1905 will may be proved for the purpose of defeating the probate of the 1912 will. But a proceeding in chancery under the provisions of sections 8062 to 8065 would be necessary to establish the 1905 will as an instrument devising property and vesting title. The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.