Court Opinion

ID: 3428097
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:56:51.251699+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:17.247885
License: Public Domain

Joseph Abbott died testate in Franklin county, February 21, 1925. His will, which was admitted to probate March 2, 1925, bequeathed $1,000 to each of five grandchildren. The residue of his estate was devised and bequeathed to his four children, Clarence W. Abbott, John E. Abbott, Ellis S. Abbott and Retta Stinger, said Clarence W. and John E. being named in such will as joint executors.
On November 13, 1925, Perry Appleton, hereafter designated as "appellee," filed an application in vacation with the clerk of the Franklin Circuit Court, asking that he be appointed administrator with the will annexed of estate of said decedent. The clerk issued letters in accordance with such application and, on November 16, 1925, that being the first day of the next term of court, reported his action to the court for approval. None of the residuary legatees learned of this appointment until in the evening of November 16. As soon as Clarence W. Abbott learned of the action of the clerk, he filed his application for letters in case the appointment should not be confirmed, and, on November 18, the four residuary legatees filed their verified written objections to the confirmation of appellee. Demurrers having been sustained to these objections, other and additional objections were filed, to which a demurrer *Page 611 
was also sustained and the appointment of appellee confirmed; hence this appeal. The objections so filed, after setting out the facts as above stated concerning the death of the testator, the probating of his will and the appointment of appellee as administrator with the will annexed, alleges that said administrator is the father of three of the grandchildren of the testator, each of whom, by the terms of the will, was given $1,000; that said three legatees were the only ones dissatisfied with the testator's will, and the only ones entitled to contest the same, it being alleged that the other two specific legatees had received the amount of their legacies from the residuary legatees; that the residuary legatees, following the probating of the will, had, as between themselves, entered into a written agreement for a settlement of the estate by Clarence W. and John E. Abbott as agents of the residuary legatees without administration, and in accordance with that agreement, said agents had paid $1,000 to each of the specific legatees other than the children of appellee, and had made partial distribution of the estate among the residuary legatees; that all of the legatees named in the will and appellee were notified of the agreement and were invited to make objections to such manner of settlement if they desired; that no objections were made to such plan; that all of the specific legatees and appellee since that time negotiated with the said sons who were named in the will as executors in connection with the settlement of the estate; that some of the personal property had been sold by the residuary legatees, items of indebtedness, including funeral expenses, medical bill, cost of monument and other general claims against the testator had been paid by the residuary legatees, acting through said Clarence and John, who undertook, as agents of the other residuary legatees, to settle the estate without letters of administration, all of which acts were done *Page 612 
with the knowledge of all of the legatees and devisees and without any objection from any of them; that said agents had set apart and were holding intact an amount sufficient to pay the three children of appellee the amount of their legacies. It also appears that the three children of appellee are not satisfied with the will of their grandfather and are threatening to contest the same, and that appellee has given active support to his children in their opposition to the terms of such will. The attention of the court was also called to the fact that under the law it was the duty of an administrator of an estate with a will annexed to defend any action to contest the will of his decedent, and that, because of the interest of the administrator so appointed by the clerk in assisting his children in contesting the will, he was not a proper person to act as administrator of the estate. It is also alleged that neither of the persons designated by the testator as executors had waived or abandoned his right to act as executor except by his act in refraining from being appointed in accordance with the agreement of the residuary legatees, which was done with the knowledge and without objection by any one interested in the estate. Appellee is not a creditor, heir or devisee of the testator and is not interested in said estate except as father of three of the specific legatees. It is also alleged that appellee, without consultation with any of the residuary legatees, and without notice to them, and without the knowledge or consent of such legatees, procured his appointment by the clerk.
For the purpose of this appeal, the demurrer admits the truth of all the material facts stated in the objections. Section 3061 Burns 1926, Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.) p. 423, § 6, provides 1.  that: "Whenever any will shall have been duly admitted to probate, the clerk of the circuit court in which the same *Page 613 
shall have been probated shall issue letters testamentary thereon to the person or persons named as executors who are competent by law to serve as such, and who shall appear and qualify." Section 3063 Burns 1926, being § 8 of the above mentioned act of 1881, provides that: "Any person who is appointed executor, who shall renounce his trust in writing filed with the clerk, or who shall fail to qualify and give bond within twenty days after probate of such will, shall be deemed to have renounced such appointment, and such letters shall issue to any other person named in the will capable and willing to accept such trust." Section 10 of that act, § 3065 Burns 1926, reads as follows: "If there be no person named in the will as executor, or if those named therein have failed to qualify, have renounced, or have been removed, letters of administration with the will annexed shall be granted by the proper clerk or court to any competent residuary legatee named in such will willing to accept, or if there be none willing to accept, then to a competent specific legatee, or if there be none such willing to accept, then to any competent person, under the same regulations as in granting letters of administration in the case of intestacy."
A reading of these sections clearly indicates the legislative intention that those named in the will by the testator as executors, and residuary or specific legatees should be 2-4.  given preference in the order named when it comes to the appointment of an executor or administrator with the will annexed. The appointment of a person other than one of the persons named in the will as executor or legatee is limited to cases where none of the legatees is competent or willing to act. A mere reading of the above sections of the statute ought to be sufficient to indicate to the clerk that, when the person named in the will as executor has failed to qualify, has renounced, or has been removed, *Page 614 
he, before appointing a person other than a residuary or specific legatee, should be informed or ascertain that none of the named legatees is competent or willing to accept the appointment.
Appellee calls attention to § 3067 Burns 1926, Acts 1901 p. 281, relating to the appointment of an administrator for the estate of an intestate and which provides that letters of 5.  administration shall be granted in the following order: (1) To widow or widower; (2) to next of kin; (3) to largest creditor applying and residing in the state; and (4) if no person thus entitled to administer shall apply within twenty days after the death of the intestate, the clerk shall appoint a competent inhabitant of the county.
It is appellee's contention that this section applies to the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed and that, upon the failure of any one named in the will as executor, or as legatee to qualify, the clerk "shall appoint a competent inhabitant of the county." The statute relating to the appointment of an administrator provides that if no one named therein as being entitled to administer "apply within twenty days" after the death of the intestate, the clerk shall then appoint a competent inhabitant of the county. The statute relating to the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed authorizes the appointment of a "competent person" when neither a competent residuary nor a competent specific legatee is "willing to accept." Here it is the incompetence or the unwillingness of any legatee to accept that gives the clerk authority to appoint some other person when the executor named in the will fails to qualify.
Legatees should at least be given a reasonable time and a reasonable opportunity after the expiration of the time 6, 7.  allowed the executor named in the will to qualify, before a stranger should be appointed. *Page 615 
And it is our judgment that the person applying for letters of administration with the will annexed should in his application state that no legatee is competent and willing to accept the trust. If it be conceded that the clerk was under no obligation to require a showing that none of the legatees named in the will was competent and willing to accept the appointment before he appointed a stranger, it does not follow that the court should have confirmed the appointment made by the clerk in the instant case, or that the judgment must be affirmed.
When there is a will, the estate should be settled and administered under the direction and obligations of the will, and by one whose duty and oath require him to follow the 8-11.  will. The duties of an administrator with the will annexed toward the will are the same as those of an executor. Accepting the trust, it becomes his duty to defend the will, to carry out its provisions; and he is not allowed to set up an adverse interest. An attack upon a will by an executor or by an administrator with the will annexed would not be compatible with his duties. The policy of the law is to give administration to the person most interested in the estate. As was said by this court in Cooper v. Cooper (1908), 43 Ind. App. 620: "The paramount object and purpose of our statute, and of all statutes, in fixing the order of preference in which letters of administration shall be granted, is to secure to those having a beneficial interest in the property to be administered upon the right to administer. It is to be supposed that those who will reap the benefit of a wise, speedy and economical administration of the estate, or, on the other hand, suffer the consequence of waste, improvidence or mismanagement, have the highest interest and most influential motive to administer the property correctly. The right to administer follows the right to the personal *Page 616 
property." As was said in Georgetown College v. Browne
(1871), 34 Md. 450, 459: "The appointment and the rights of administrators are regulated by law. There must be some sufficient reason in designating the particular parties in their order to whom the administration of the estate is committed; and the first reason why the custodiary is thus distinctly designated, is to prevent litigation about the possession." To the same effect, see Dalrymple, Admr., v. Gamble (1886),66 Md. 298, 305, where the court said: "But the whole policy of our testamentary system is to commit administration to the hands of those most interested in the property." The statute contemplates that the person to be appointed shall be not only competent to perform the duty, but also suitable in view of his situation or relation to the estate. Emsley v. Young (1895), 19 R.I. 65. Where no executor was named in the will, it was held that the oral preferences of the person making the will were entitled to great weight in making the selection, other things being equal.Matter of Powell (1886), 5 Dem. (N.Y.) 281.
Any person named in the will as executor, failing to qualify within twenty days after the probate of the will, shall be deemed to have renounced such appointment. When this happens, the 12.  statute says "such letter shall issue to any other person named in the will, capable and willing to accept such trust." There are two residuary legatees other than the two who are named in the will as executors, and there is no claim that either of them was not both competent and willing to act.
In Hays v. Vickery (1873), 41 Ind. 583, one of the legatees named in the will as executor, by a common understanding among the persons interested in the estate, acted as executor and proceeded to make distribution *Page 617 
of the personal property, without qualifying as executor. Later, two of the legatees, who were daughters of the testator, became dissatisfied with the manner in which the business was conducted, and, without consultation with the other legatees, and without notice to the one named in the will as executor, or to either of the other devisees or legatees, of any dissatisfaction or objection to the settlement without letters testamentary, procured the clerk in vacation to issue letters with the will annexed to the appellee Vickery, who was neither a creditor nor legatee under the will. The court, after calling attention to the fact that neither of the legatees or devisees had relinquished or waived any right to administer upon the estate, otherwise than by failing to qualify by the common understanding and consent of all the interested parties, held that, as between the parties to the agreement, the person named in the will as executor would not be deemed to have waived his rights to administration. On page 586, the court said: "If the daughters, or their husbands, were not satisfied with the understanding that the executor should act as such without taking out letters, good faith required that they should give notice of it before proceeding to procure letters of administration to some one else. Having acquiesced in his acting without qualifying as executor, and having induced him to delay taking out letters until after the time fixed by law, it was a fraud upon him and the appellants to undertake to deprive him of his rights without notice."
Appellee contends the Hays-Vickery case is not in point, because, as he says, one of his daughters, who is one of the specific legatees under the will, was a minor and 13.  consequently not bound by the agreement and understanding. The objections filed by the residuary legatees to the confirmation of appellee *Page 618 
does not disclose the age of any of the legatees. Appellee calls attention to the application of Clarence W. for letters of administration, wherein the names and ages of the heirs of the testator are given, and where one of appellee's children, who is also one of the legatees, is said to be twenty years of age. This application is no part of the objections to the confirmation of appellee and cannot be looked to in order to add to or detract from the facts stated in the written objections. The written objections charge that appellee as well as all of the legatees named in the will entered into negotiations with Clarence W. and John E. in connection with the settlement of the estate without the appointment of an executor and that thereafter, without consulting with any of the legatees, and without notice that he or his children were dissatisfied, procured the letters of administration without the knowledge or consent of the residuary legatees.
Appellee had notice and knowledge of the agreement between the residuary and specific legatees for a settlement of the estate without letters testamentary being issued. He and his 14.  children entered into negotiation with the two residuary legatees who were acting as agents in the settlement of the estate. Neither he nor his children made any objection to settling the estate in that manner. No notice was given that he or they were dissatisfied with the agreement. Appellee, having acquiesced in the settlement of the estate without administration, thus inducing those named as executors to delay taking out letters until after the date fixed by law, it was a fraud upon appellants for him to undertake to deprive them of their rights without notice. This is true without regard to the claim that one of the specific legatees was a minor.
Judgment reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer to the objections, to sustain the objections and *Page 619 
to grant letters testamentary to Clarence W. Abbott upon his filing a proper bond.
Dausman, J., absent.