In re McLeod Estate
In re McLeod Estate
Opinion of the Court
December 21, 1960, the Wayne probate court entered an order allowing the second account of the executors, directing partial distribution of the estate, and approving for payment certain executors’ and counsel fees. The order also directed partial distribution of the estate. All this was done pursuant to a petition filed July 13, 1960, by the coexecutors. Such partial distribution was in accordance with that construction (disputed) of the will which entitled the widow to 1/3 of the gross estate.
October 3,1961, Mrs. Lilly filed in circuit an application for leave to take delayed appeal from the above order. Her purpose among other things was that of obtaining a determination that the widow, by allegedly proper construction of the will, should receive 1/3 of the net estate after deductions for debts and administrative costs. Mrs. Lilly was granted such leave by circuit court order entered November 15, 1961. From such order the coexecutors appeal upon leave granted.
The sole question is whether Mrs. Lilly’s application to circuit for leave to take a delayed appeal, from the probate order of December 21st, was late under section 44 of chapter 1 of the probate code-, (CL 1948, §701.44 [Stat Ann 1962 Rev §27.3178 (44)]).
Section 43 of the chapter allows, upon requisite showing, delayed appeals from probate court orders. Section 44 then proceeds:
“No such appeal as provided in the preceding section shall be allowed without due notice to the party adversely interested, nor unless the petition therefor shall be filed within 1 year after the making of the-decree or order complained of, and then such appeal shall not be allowed if the debts of said estate have been paid, or the estate distributed in due course of law.”
The parties appellant and appellee duel over allegation of the coexecutors and denial by the daughter-legatee that the “debts” of the estate have been
“Until the issuance of the Federal estate tax clearance and the allowance of the final account, the true amount due the State of Michigan cannot be determined and there is at least 1 debt of the estate not paid.”
Following the reasoning of the Court in Hamler v. Shiawassee Circuit Judge, 227 Mich 235, and In re Graham’s Estate, 276 Mich 321,
In arriving at this conclusion Court Rule No 75, § 6(d) (1945), has not been overlooked. The rule limits its relevantly permissive scope to allowance of delayed appeals “within such further time as may be permitted by law.” This refers us in present context to said section 44. That section, having been incorporated in the rule, required denial of Mrs. Lilly’s delayed application.
Reversed and remanded for entry of order in accord with this ruling. Costs to appellant executors.
The provision made by the testator, for his wife, reads:
“I give, devise and bequeath to her so much of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate as shall equal 33-1/3% of the value of my estate. The portion of my estate so given to my wife under this article of my will shall not be diminished by the payment of any taxes, State or Federal.”
“We held in Hamler v. Shiawassee Circuit Judge, 227 Mich 235, that the word ‘debts’ as used in the above statute has a limited meaning, and we there indicated that it was persuasive of a construction which contemplated only ‘debts’ existing at the time of the death of deceased.” (In re Graham’s Estate at 324.)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In re McLEOD ESTATE
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published