Court Opinion

ID: 3494019
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:02:05.576079+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:10.732245
License: Public Domain

The claimed will of Matt Miller, who died October 4, 1934, was admitted to probate in Wayne county December 4, 1934, an executrix, Katherine Layman, appointed, his estate administered, and the final account of the executrix presented to the probate court for allowance. The State, by its attorney general, then petitioned the circuit court to allow it a delayed appeal from the order of the probate court admitting the will of decedent to probate.
The petition for the probate of the will showed decedent had one brother, Charles Miller. Notice by publication was given to all persons interested of the application to admit the will of deceased to probate, and, in addition, notice by registered mail was given to his brother Charles, addressed to his last known address in Chicago, Illinois. This registered notice was returned undelivered.
The petition of the State, by its attorney general, for leave to grant the delayed appeal filed June 21, 1935, alleged in substance that Matt Miller was mentally incompetent to make the will in question, and that there was good reason to believe Charles Miller, his brother, was dead. Affidavits were filed, attached to the petition, to support its allegations. *Page 193 
This petition was answered, and supporting affidavits attached to the answer. The allegations of the petition were denied.
The circuit court granted the prayer of the State's petition, and Katherine Layman, executrix of the will of deceased, and, it is said, principal beneficiary under his will, prosecutes this appeal in the nature of mandamus to set aside the order of the circuit court granting the delayed appeal, claiming the State has no such interest in the estate of the deceased as to entitle its attorney general to appear and contest the will of deceased, and that the application for leave to appeal was not seasonably made.
If Matt Miller was mentally incompetent to make the will in question and left no legal heirs entitled to inherit his estate, the State may successfully maintain proceedings to escheat the property of deceased to the State.
The freehold must always vest somewhere and it is on this account that the authorities uniformly hold that whenever there is a defect of heirs the title passes at once. Crane v. Reeder,21 Mich. 24 (4 Am. Rep. 430).
It is well settled that to entitle the State to appeal, it must have a direct pecuniary interest in the outcome of the case, and that it may not appeal if it has no interest therein and is not aggrieved. If Matt Miller was mentally incompetent to make the will in question, and left no legal heirs entitled to inherit his estate, then, under the statute of escheats,* the State has sufficient standing from its prospective contingent interest in the estate to entitle it in regular legal proceedings to have it judicially determined whether deceased made a valid will and whether he *Page 194 
left living heirs or next of kin entitled to inherit his estate in the absence of a will. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 15604, 15605.
The statute authorizes delayed appeals by anyone aggrieved by any act of the judge of probate if such person shall from any cause, without default on his part, have omitted to claim or prosecute his appeal according to law, if it shall appear that justice requires a revision of the case. Such delayed appeal, if granted, may be upon such terms as the circuit court shall deem reasonable. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 15969, 15970.
The question of who may be aggrieved was settled inLabar v. Nichols, 23 Mich. 310. To be aggrieved, one must have some interest of a pecuniary nature in the outcome of the case, and not a mere possibility arising from some unknown and future contingency. This is the general rule. 3 C. J. pp. 632-634.
It is well settled that the parties in interest in a proceeding to probate a will are the beneficiaries under the will and those upon whom the law would cast the property in the event the will was set aside. This was the rule recognized inRe Bailey's Estate, 186 Mich. 677, and is stated in 68 C. J. p. 902.
This court ought not to issue its mandatory writ to the circuit court to compel it to set aside its order already made granting the State the right to take a delayed appeal from the order of the probate court admitting the will of deceased to probate unless, upon the face of the papers presented to it, it was mandatory for the circuit court to deny the petition presented. The showing made by the State by its petition and by the affidavits in support thereof are sufficient to invoke the exercise by the circuit court of its discretion, and the action of the circuit court is binding and conclusive upon this court if exercised *Page 195 
reasonably and not arbitrarily and capriciously in disregard of the facts, the law, or the rights of the opposite party.
If the will of Matt Miller was made by him when he was mentally competent to make it, and the affidavits filed in the circuit court in support of the answer of Katherine Layman, executrix, so indicate, then it is entitled to be admitted to probate. It is only when Matt Miller has been found by a competent tribunal to have been mentally incompetent to make the will in question that it may be set aside and refused probate.
The State, under the showing made, has such an interest in the outcome of the case as to entitle it to ask for a delayed appeal from the order of the probate court admitting the will to probate, and we cannot say, even though we might not agree with the circuit court under the showing made, that the making of the order complained of was an abuse of discretion.
It follows that the writ of mandamus is denied.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred. Toy, J., did not sit.
* See 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13440, subd. 6 — REPORTER. *Page 196