State ex rel. Thompson v. Nortoni

GRAVES, C. J.

Certiorari to the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The pertinent facts are few and simple. Charles B. Scanland died in Pike County, Missouri, May 31, 1916. Shortly thereafter the widow Anna Estella, applied for letters of administration upon the estate. *567Relator herein was and is the probate judge of Pike County. Objections were interposed as to the appointment of the widow as administratrix. In the course of the investigation it appeared from the evidence that there was an ante-nuptual agreement between the deceased, and the widow. The probate court refused to appoint the widow as administratrix, and in his findings and judgment, among other things, found and adjudged:

“The court doth further find from the evidence that the deceased and the applicant, Anna Estella Scanland, just before their marriage, entered into and executed a marriage contract by the terms of which the applicant agreed and contracted to receive a stipulated sum of money before their said marriage and an annual stipulation thereafter during said marriage or so long as the said applicant should continue the wife of deceased, in lieu of all marital rights in the' estate of deceased, and thereby relinquish all right or interest in the estate of the decedent. . . .
“And the court doth further find and adjudge from the evidence that the applicant waived any right she might otherwise have to administer up on the estate of the deceased by and through the marriage contract by her and the decedent executed and entered into previous to their marriage.
“Wherefore the application of'the said Anna Estella Scanland to be appointed administratrix of the estate of the said Charles B. Scanland, deceased, is denied and refused by the court.”

The probate judge then appointed the public administrator to take charge of the estate. Thereupon the said Anna Estella Scanland brought mandamus proceedings in the St. Louis Court of Appeals to compel the relator here, as probate judge of Pike County, to appoint her as administratrix, of her husband’s estate.

The relator here, among other things, in his return set up in the Court of Appeals his judgment theretofore entered in the probate court, the material portions of which we have quoted supra. The St. Louis Court of Appeals, notwithstanding the return aforesaid, *568granted the writ of mandamus, directing relator here to vacate his order appointing the public administrator as administrator of the estate, and further directing him to appoint Anna Estella Scanland as administratrix of such estate. As against this judgment and the opinion upon which it is predicated our writ of certiorari is invoked. Other matters will be noted in the course of the opinion.

i'^suTt* I. It. is urged in the first place that the relator has no such interest in the controversy as entitles him to invoke our writ of certiorari. This position of counsel is untenable. The proceeding in the St, Louis Court of Appeals was one against the relator here and none other. The writ issued in that case was directed against-him, and none other. The judgment entered in that case was against him and none other. It would be a very singular condition if it could be said that the respondent in a mandamus proceedings is so interested that he is made the sole party, and then after judgment against him his interest at once vanishes so that he cannot question the validity of that judgment on certiorari. In other words, his interest is such that he is the necessary party to the suit, yet when he is beaten in the suit, his interest vanishes so that he cannot gainsay the validity of the record upon which the judgment against him is founded. This is one of the contentions here. It is untenable absolutely. When a party has such an interest in a controversy, that under the law he must be made a party thereto (in this case the sole party thereto) for a determination of the controversy, it should not be said that he has not sufficient interest (after judgment against him) to invoke our writ of certiorari, and thereby test the validity of the judgment. In the particular case, if relator could not question the judgment, no other person could, because he was the sole respondent in the mandamus proceeding, and any other party would be a stranger to that record. We are cited to State ex rel. v. Reynolds, 390 Mo. 578; but that case touches no part of the question.

*569It is urged that the suing out of a writ of certiorari is a new action, and we are cited to Macklin v. Allenberg, 100 Mo. l. c. 343. That case discusses a writ of error rather than a writ of certiorari, but this is immaterial. Grant it that the suing out of the writ is a new action, the situation as to interest is not changed. The purpose of the new action, so far as this relator is concerned, is to rid himself of a judgment against him. If he hasn’t an interest in that judgment no person has, because he is the sole person against whom the judgment is entered. We can but conclude that the relator had the right to apply for and secure our writ of certiorari.

II. A further preliminary mhtter should be determined. In respondent’s brief it is said:

Transfer.0 “Relator is not entitled to maintain this writ of certiorari under the provisions of the Constitution (Amendment 1884, sec. 6) without applying first to the Court of Appeals for a transfer of the cause to the
Supreme Court upon the ground of conflict some of its decisions, or with some previ- - ous ruling of the other Courts of Appeals.”

We are all familiar with this section. It provides: “When any one of said Courts of Appeals shall in any cause or proceeding render a decision which any one of the judges therein sitting shall deem contrary to any previous decision of any one of said Courts of Appeals, or of the Supreme Court, the said Court of Appeals must, of its own motion . . . certify and transfer said cause or proceeding ... to the Supreme Court,” etc.

Nothing in this section required the relator to file a motion to transfer the case here. The judgment in the Court of Appeals was by a united court. By motion for rehearing the court’s attention was called to the matters now urged, but this motion was overruled. The Court of Appeals was not left without notice of the things now urged against its judgment and opinion. The cases cited do not cover the question. It is not *570necessary to file a motion to transfer, after motion for rehearing has been overruled, before applying to this court for a writ of certiorari. The relator did all that he was required to do.

R rd eoor 1 III. The' gist of this case lies within a small compass. Mrs. Scanland applied for letters of administration upon, her husband’s estate. Her application was opposed by some heirs at law. In the course of the hearing there was evidence of an ante-nuptual agreement. The probate court heard this evidence, and then found therefrom, thus:

“And the court did further find and adjudge from the evidence that the applicant waived any right she might otherwise have to administer upon the estate of the deceased by and through the marriage contract by her and the decedent executed and entered into previous to their marriage.

This appears in the return filed in the St. Louis Court of Appeals. There were other findings as to her character and competency, but we put them aside. These also appeared in the return in the St. Louis Court of Appeals. In other words, the case there was one upon pleadings only and a motion for judgment on same. The Court of Appeals mentions this finding and judgment of the probate court in its opinion, but it would be immaterial whether it did or not, because it is in the very pleadings upon which the opinion and judgment is founded. It does not come by way of bill of exceptions, but is the record proper in the case, which record is before us by our writ of certiorari. On this return or record, the court by its opinion and judgment, directed a permanent writ of mandamus to be awarded directing the relator here, the respondent there, to appoint Mrs. Scanland as administratrix. The question is, does this ruling contravene rulings of this court1? We think so, for reasons we will assign. , 1

*571Widow as Administratrix. *570TV. The Court of Appeals properly announces the general rule, that under section 15, Revised Statutes, 1909, the probate court should have appointed the widow *571as administratrix, unless she was precluded from acting by some provision or rule of law. The Court of Appeals also properly rules that generally speaking mandamus will lie to compel the appointment of a person entitled thereto under section 15, which section reads:

“Letters of administration shall be granted-: First, to the husband or wife; secondly, to those who are entitled to distribution of the estate, or one or more of them, as the court or judge or clerk in vacation shall believe will best manage-and preserve the estate.”

We have held mandamus to be a proper remedy, State ex rel. v. Fowler, 108 Mo. 465. It runs amuck, however, when it rules that the- only things which will prevent her appointment are the disqualifications mentioned in section 14, Revised Statutes, 1909, which section reads:

“No judge or clerk of any probate court, in his own county, or his deputy, and no male person under twenty-one years of age, or female person under eighteen years of age, or of unsound mind, shall be executor or administrator. No married woman shall be executrix or administratrix, nor shall the executor of an executor, in consequence thereof, be executor of the first testator.”

There is such a thing as waiving the right to adminis- ■ ter. This may be done by contract, as indicated in. the case at bar, or it may appear from matters in pais, as in State ex rel. v. Holtcamp,- 267 Mo. 412. One entitled to administer cannot be compelled to administer, so the law denominates it a personal privilege which may be waived.

In the ease at bar the probate court found and adjudged that the widow had waived the right to administer, and yet with this solemn adjudication before it, in the return to the mandamus, the Court of Appeals made the writ permanent, and directed the appointment of the widow. This ruling was squarely in the face of Lie unanimous ruling of our brothers of Division Two ' - State ex rel. v. Holtcamp, supra, 267 Mo. l. c. 424, *572whereat, in discussing the question of waiving the right to administer, it was said:

“We are, therefore, of the opinion that the probate court was not only called upon to determine the legal effect of the resignation filed in Ohio, but also the question of fact as to what relator’s intentions were, and how far he had renounced in pais; and, in this connection, it had a perfect right to weigh and consider all of relator’s acts and conduct. This required the exercise of judicial discretion, and it is too well settled to even warrant the citation of authorities that such discretion cannot be controlled by mandamus.”

So in the case at bar, the question as to whether or not the widow by contract or otherwise had, waived her marital right to administer, was a judicial question for the determination of the probate court. When it acted its judgment was not for review upon mandamus. Judicial acts, completed as here, are not the subjects of mandamus proceedings. To illustrate, take the very statute, cited by the court, section 14, supra. Suppose the widow had applied. Suppose there were objections to her appointment, and the probate court upon hearing the facts, found that the widow was insane. Would it be said that such court could be compelled by mandamus to appoint the widow, with such an adjudication pleaded in the return! The determination would be a judicial act and not subject to review by mandamus. There can be no question that a woman by an ante-nuptual agreement can waive her right, to administer. That question of waiver is to be determined by the probate court to whom she applies for letters. If not, there is no place for its determination. The matter of whether there has been a waiver of the right is a judicial question, and as said in the Iloltcamp case, supra, the judgment can’t be controlled by mandamus. That mandamus will not lie under such situation is also ruled in State ex rel. v. Wurdeman, 187 S. W. 259, where Bond, J., says:

“In view of the foregoing constitutional and statutory provisions, the conclusion is inescapable that the report of the grand jury in the present proceeding pre*573sented matter requiring the exercise of the judicial faculty on the part of the circuit judge in determining whether it should be expunged or permitted to remain among the files and record of the court. But it is elementary that any decision which he might make in the exercise of his judicial discretion is one which cannot be directed by writ of mandamus from any court. The judge may be compelled to exercise his jurisdiction and make a decision or render a judgment, hut the kind of decision or the nature of his judgment, resting on his judicial discretion, cannot he controlled by this writ.”

We grant it, that if the return in the mandamus case had only disclosed a refusal to appoint the widow, without the showing of an adjudication upon the question of the waiver, a different situation might prevail. But it was for the probate court to determine the question of waiver upon the evidence before it, and not for the Court of Appeals to attempt to determine that question in a mandamus proceeding. It may be that some other probate judge might have rendered a different judgment on the question of waiver, with the facts found in this case, hut that is not a matter for consideration in mandamus. It may.be unfortunate that the statute provides for no appeal from the probate court in such cases, but the remedy is with the law-makers, and not with the courts.. Our cases have reached the limit in upholding mandamus to compel an appointment of the party entitled by virtue of the statute, but we have not gone so far as to hold that if, upon the application of the party entitled, a question arises which requires judicial determination, mandamus will nevertheless lie.

The opinion of our learned brothers contravene our opinions in the Holtcamp and Wurdeman cases, supra, as well as other cases we might cite. The court was wrong in proceeding as if they could determine the question of waiver in a mandamus proceeding.

Other matters found by the probate court we need not •discuss. But upon them the probate court had no right *574to refuse the application of the widow. We have selected the one vital question.

The judgment and record of the St. Louis Court of Appeals should be and is quashed.

All concur, except Bond, J., who dissents.