Opinion
Opinion filed December 8, 1942. Respondent's Motion for Rehearing Overruled December 22, 1942.
1. — Executors and Administrators. Notes held by an intestate at the time of her death which were listed in the inventory became, under Section 100, R.S. Mo. 1939, assets in the hands of the administrator to be accounted for in the final settlement; if they were valid obligations the administrator had the duty to charge himself with them in his final settlement; if they were not valid obligations but had been paid he had the right under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, to request the probate court to give him credit for the amount thereof.
2. — Courts — Executors and Administrators. In the absence of Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, providing that the probate court "shall give credit to the executor or administrator for all the debts which have been charged in the inventory as due to the estate, if the court be satisfied that such debt was not really due the estate," the probate court would have no jurisdiction to determine the matter of an administrator's liability on notes made by him and held by the intestate at the time of her death and which had been inventoried.
3. — Courts — Executors and Administrators. The validity of a debt claimed to be owed to an estate from an administrator cannot be tried in the probate court, but must be litigated in the circuit court, except where, prior to final settlement, a proceeding against the administrator for discovery of assets is available under Sections 63-67, R.S. Mo. 1939, and except for the authority given the probate court by Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, to give credit to the executor or administrator for a debt charged in the inventory as due to the estate if the court be satisfied that such debt was not really due to the estate, which section, however, is applicable only where the debt has been charged in the inventory as due the estate.
4. — Courts — Executors and Administrators. If a debt claimed to be due from an administrator to an estate has not been charged in the inventory, and the heirs contend that the administrator has failed to account to the estate therefor, they will have recourse against the administrator and the sureties on his official bond, but the probate court will be without jurisdiction in the premises.
5. — Executors and Administrators. Where an administrator filed a motion in the probate court based upon the theory that notes made by him and held by the intestate at the time of her death, and which had been inventoried, had been paid, and sought to be allowed to take credit therefor, and the probate court in its order adjudging the matter in the administrator's favor, made at a term prior to that of the final settlement, ordered that he be authorized "to take credit for the notes in his settlement of said estate," the proceeding was in contemplation of final settlement and one under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939; the fact that such motion was filed and the matter determined prior to the submission of the final settlement for approval and at a prior term of court being a mere irregularity in the procedure, the effect of which was to make the judgment rendered on the motion an interlocutory judgment which would become final upon the approval of the final settlement.
6. — Appeal and Error — Exceptions — Executors and Administrators — Exceptions to Final Settlement. The purpose of an exception in the trial of an ordinary civil action is to preserve for consideration on a motion for new trial and on review upon appeal errors which occur during the progress of the trial but which do not appear upon the record proper; but exceptions to objectionable items of an administrator's final settlement in the probate court are of an entirely different character, being used to frame the issues to be tried before the probate court and to inform the appellate court of the issues actually tried in the probate court.
7. — Executors and Administrators — Exception to Final Settlement. Exceptions to objectionable items of an administrator's final settlement in the probate court, though having no specific statutory sanction, are ordinarily necessary to be filed if a review is desired, since the jurisdiction of the circuit court on appeal from the probate court is derivative and is to be exercised only over the matter actually litigated in the probate court and from which the appeal is taken.
8. — Executors and Administrators — Jurisdiction of Circuit Court on Appeal from Probate Court. In determining whether the circuit court will exercise its jurisdiction on appeal from the probate court, the important consideration is whether an issue was presented to the probate court in respect to the matter; it is immaterial whether information in respect thereto is acquired from formal exceptions filed in the probate court or whether it appears otherwise from the record.
9. — Executors and Administrators — Exceptions to Final Settlement. Where the record shows that the issue of the administrator's liability to the estate on notes was tried in the probate court, not upon exceptions filed by the heirs but upon motion filed by the administrator himself, such motion served the purpose that formal exceptions to the final settlement would have served, that is, it framed an issue for the probate court to pass upon.
10. — Executors and Administrators — Courts — Jurisdiction of Circuit Court on Appeal from Probate Court. Where an administrator filed a motion in the probate court based upon the theory that notes made by him and held by the intestate at the time of her death, and which had been inventoried, had been paid, and sought to be allowed to take credit therefor, and the probate court, in ruling on the motion at a term prior to that of the final settlement, found and adjudged that the notes had been paid and constituted no part of the estate and authorized the administrator to take credit for them in his settlement of the estate, from which no appeal was taken, and the administrator took credit for the notes in his final settlement and the heirs appealed to the circuit court from such final settlement, the circuit court erred in holding that the judgment of the probate court in ruling on the motion was res adjudicata and deprived the circuit court of jurisdiction to pass upon the merits of the controversy.
11. — Appeal and Error — Motion for New Trial. Where heirs appealed to the circuit court from an administrator's final settlement in the probate court, and appealed to the Court of Appeals from an adverse judgment in the circuit court, assignments in the motion for new trial filed in the circuit court charging that "the finding, verdict and judgment are against the law and the evidence and against the law under the evidence," and that "the findings, verdict and judgment of this court in this case is null and void on its face," were sufficient to preserve for review the question whether the circuit court erred in adjudging that it was without jurisdiction to pass upon the merits of the controversy.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Marion County. — Hon. Branham Rendlen, Judge.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Roy Hamlin for appellants.
On appeal from a final settlement in the probate court, the circuit court must try the matter of the final settlement de novo. Coulter v. Lyda, 102 Mo. App. 401. On appeal from the circuit court, the appellate court is required to examine the record and award a new trial, reverse or affirm the judgment or decision of the circuit court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given, as to the court shall seem agreeable to law. Sec. 291, R.S. Mo. 1939; In re Hutton's Estate, 92 Mo. App. 132; In re Claus' Estate, 147 S.W.2d 199. The administrator offered no evidence pertaining to his final settlement, and there was a total failure of proof to sustain the purported final settlement. An administrator may take credit for property that has been inventoried only under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, authorizing the probate court to give credit to the executor or administrator for a debt charged in the inventory as due to the estate if the court be satisfied that such debt was not really due to the estate. The order of the probate court of February 7, 1941, authorizing respondent to take credit for the notes was not res adjudicata. Picot v. Biddle's Adm'r., 35 Mo. 29. It was interlocutory, and subject to review at the final settlement. In re Hutton's Estate, 92 Mo. App. 132. The circuit court erroneously said this interlocutory order was a final judgment. The inventory is filed for the purpose of informing heirs and creditors of the amount, extent and value of the estate. Limbaugh, Missouri Practice, sec. 592. It is prima-facie correct, though not conclusive. 21 Am. Juris. 471. Deductions from the inventory should not be permitted unless the interested parties have notice of such intended deductions and an opportunity to be heard. Under the laws of Missouri, the only notice they receive is for the final settlement of the estate. No notice was given of respondent's motion. And Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, makes it plain that the question of allowing credit to the administrator of incorrectly inventoried items shall be tried out at the time final settlement is made. It follows that the probate court's order of February 7, 1941, was prematurely made, and can be effective only as an interlocutory order subject to review at the time of final settlement, and that the correctness of the credit must be determined by the circuit court on appeal. The administrator is a lawyer and was in a confidential and fiduciary relation with the deceased, and the burden was upon him to show by clear proof that the notes had been paid. Bybee v. S'renco, 291 S.W. 459, 461. The law presumes the notes were not paid because they were in the possession of the deceased at the time of her death. Courtney's Estate v. Lanznar's Estate, 296 S.W. 269, 272. The burden is on the maker of a note to prove payment. Meinholz v. Lampert, 101 S.W.2d 503. On appeal to the circuit court, the burden of proof is upon the administrator to establish the matters of his final settlement, and to show any credits that he would be entitled to. Under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, it is necessary for him to show in the circuit court that the items of his indebtedness for which he claims credit were actually paid, especially since these notes were inventoried. Under Section 291, R.S. Mo. 1939, the trial in the circuit court is a trial de novo, irrespective of any entries or orders made by the probate court. Appeals in probate matters are favored by the courts, and the statutes granting the right to appeal are to be liberally construed. State ex rel. v. Mueller, 39 S.W.2d 1075. Harry Carstarphen for respondent.
(1) The assignments in the motion for new trial, and the assignments of error in appellants' brief, are insufficient in that they are not specific. Further the complaints of the motion for new trial have no relation at law to the assignment of error in the brief, and the latter are not embraced within the former. J.C. Nichols Inv. Co. v. Roorbach, 162 S.W.2d 274; Raifeisen v. Young, 183 Mo. App. 508, 167 S.W. 648, 649; Osage Tie Timber Co. v. Gorg-Murphy T. G. Co., 191 S.W. 1026, 1029; Whitfield v. Union Electric L. P. Co., 271 S.W. 52, 54; In re Franz' Estate, 145 S.W.2d 400, 406. (2) Exceptions are required where one appeals from a final settlement of an administrator. The probate court has the original exclusive jurisdiction in matters of administration, and the circuit court acts as a Court of Appeals. The issues are made up by exceptions to matters of the final settlement that the one complaining objects to, and those issues tried in the probate court are tried anew in the circuit court. Where no exceptions are filed, no issues are made for trial in the circuit court, but the circuit court having acted upon the appeal and approved the order of final settlement in the probate court, the matter is concluded. Const. Mo., Art. 6, Secs. 1, 34; Sec. 283, R.S. 1939; In re Mills' Estate, 162 S.W.2d 807, 810, 811; Enright v. Sedalia Trust Co., 323 Mo. 1043, 20 S.W.2d 517, 518; In re Hall's Estate, 337 Mo. 658, 85 S.W.2d 621, 624; Hoffmeyer v. Mintert, 93 S.W.2d 894; In re Campbell's Estate, 274 Mo. 343, 202 S.W. 1114, 1115. (3) The witnesses and appraisers make a list of what they find, but the inventory is made up by the administrator. Where the administrator by his affidavit excludes matters in the list from the inventory, then they are not inventoried. Until 1917 the list and inventory were separate papers. They are now combined in one paper but preserve their identity. Sec. 77, R.S. 1909; Laws of Missouri, 1917, p. 94, sec. 65; Laws of Missouri, 1921, p. 120; Sec. 61, R.S. 1939. (4) The probate court is created by the Constitution of the State, and it is given original exclusive jurisdiction of "probate business and administration." In that field it is a court of general jurisdiction. Const. Mo., Art. 6, secs. 1, 34; Sec. 2437, R.S. 1939; Scott v. Royston, 223 Mo. 568, 589, 590; In re Mills' Estate, 162 S.W.2d 807, 810; State ex rel. Pargeon v. McPike, 243 S.W. 278, 281. (5) Appeals from the probate courts are by statute segregated and separated. Only those things are carried up that are appealed from. Secs. 283, 285, R.S. 1939; Lucitt v. Toohey's Estate, 338 Mo. 343, 89 S.W.2d 662; In re Campbell's Estate, 274 Mo. 343, 202 S.W. 1114, 1115; Keet Rountree Dry Goods Co. v. Williams, 202 S.W. 620, 622; Baker v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 234 S.W. 858, 860, 861; Hyde v. Honiter, 175 Mo. App. 583, 158 S.W. 83, 85; State ex rel. Rose v. Fry, 228 Mo. App. 309, 67 S.W.2d 550, 551. (6) Judgments in probate courts on probate matters or probate business become final at the end of the term unless timely appealed. Scott v. Royston, 223 Mo. 568, 589, 590; Munday v. Leeper, 120 Mo. 417, 419; Ussery v. Haynes, 344 Mo. 530, 127 S.W.2d 410, 416; Hoffmeyer v. Mintert, 93 S.W.2d 894, 897. (7) The two cases cited by appellants are not in anywise related to the point here. One deals merely with the probate court correcting an error in an accounting in annual settlement, and the other is that an interlocutory judgment is not a final judgment. (8) It is the duty of the probate court to determine the assets of the estate. Determining assets is a part of the administration of an estate, and such matters having been reduced to judgment, it is final unless timely appealed. Hax v. O'Donnell, 234 Mo. App. 636, 117 S.W.2d 667, 672; State ex rel. Lamm v. Lamm, 216 S.W. 332.
Appellants Mary S. McPike and Clara M. Patterson et al., brought this appeal from a final judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Marion County affirming a judgment of the probate court approving a final settlement in the estate of Ada M. Nelson, deceased.
Ada M. Nelson died intestate on February 10, 1940, and on February 12, 1940, letters of administration were issued to respondent, E.W. Nelson. Thereafter, the administrator and the witnesses to the inventory and appraisal, also appointed by the court, met at the Farmers Merchants Bank, at Hannibal, to inventory and appraise the contents of a safe deposit box at said bank and belonging to the deceased. They found in said box certain government bonds and other property, which were duly appraised and listed in the inventory. They also found in said box two notes executed in favor of the deceased by the respondent herein, one dated October 10, 1938, for $2304.51, and the other dated December 16, 1938, for $2268.96. These notes were listed and appraised in the inventory, but, in the affidavit to the inventory the administrator, after alleging the usual allegations, including "and that he was not indebted or bound in any contract to the deceased at the time of her death, except as stated in said inventory and appraisement," added the following: "and E.W. Nelson notes listed and appraised by appraisers have been satisfied and no indebtedness thereon."
Respondent thereafter filed in said estate the following motion:
"Now comes E.W. Nelson and shows to the court that on February 12th, 1940, he was appointed administrator of the estate of Ada M. Nelson, who died in and a resident of Hannibal, Missouri, on February 10th, 1940; the said E.W. Nelson further shows to the court that upon the opening of the safe deposit box at the Farmers Merchants Bank, at Hannibal, Missouri, after due notice to the designated department of state, and accompanied by the witnesses and appraisers appointed by this court, there were found in said safe deposit box two notes by E.W. Nelson to deceased, as follows: One dated October 10, 1938, for $2,304.51, 5%, and one dated December 16, 1938, 6%, for $2,268.96, which said notes had been paid and satisfied and such facts called to the attention of the witnesses and appraisers, but said witnesses Joseph C. Raible, Jr., Edward Plowman and Albert E. Hoffmann having found said paid notes in the said box did place and list the same as papers being found in the said safe deposit box in the specified list prepared by said witnesses and appraisers and listed same at the amount on the face (Section 58, R.S. 1929) of said paid notes for the information of the court; whereon the undersigned, E.W. Nelson, did, by affidavit set out on his inventory and appraisal show that said notes had been paid and satisfied and were not an indebtedness to the estate, and were not a part of the estate of Ada M. Nelson, and the undersigned, E.W. Nelson, avers that for the aforesaid reason the said notes were not by him as such administrator inventoried as assets of the estate of Ada M. Nelson, but excluded from his inventory by his affidavit, and that said two paid notes should be excluded from the list of articles set up by the witnesses and appraisers.
"And now the said E.W. Nelson calls to the attention of this court the facts herein set out and states that the said two notes above mentioned have been paid in full and satisfied prior to the death of Ada M. Nelson, and asks that appropriate order of this court be made of record herein whereby the listing of said notes by the witnesses and appraisers herein may be excluded and the action of the witnesses and appraisers in listing said notes be found unwarranted, and that the listing of said notes by said witnesses be corrected, and that the court order the reduction of the listing made by said witnesses and appraisers to the extent of the two notes hereinabove mentioned of $2,304.51 and $2,268.96, and that the proper credit covering the erroneous listing of the notes by said witnesses and appraisers be made by order of this court.
"WHEREFORE, the undersigned E.W. Nelson prays that an order be made on the listed assets of Ada M. Nelson, made by the witnesses and appraisers under Sections 61, 70 and 71, R.S. 1929, and that said list be corrected to exclude the said paid and satisfied notes mentioned above and that reduction be made in the total listed and appraised items accordingly, and that proper credit be ordered and adjudged thereon."
Upon the filing of the foregoing motion the court appointed an administrator pendente lite to represent the estate in the presentation of said motion, and on February 7, 1941, during the November Term, 1940, the matter came on for hearing and resulted in the following judgment:
"Now on this day comes E.W. Nelson, in person and by his attorney, and also comes Ben E. Hulse, heretofore appointed administrator pendente lite, to represent the estate in the presentation of the said motion, and the Court takes up the motion filed herein January 29th, 1941, by agreement of parties. And the Court having heard the testimony offered, and it appearing to the Court from the testimony offered, that the two notes of said E.W. Nelson listed in the inventory and appraisement have been paid and cancelled, and said administrator is therefore authorized to take credit for said notes in his settlement of said estate, and to deliver said notes to the said E.W. Nelson and that the same constitutes no part of the assets of said estate.
"It is further ordered that the sum of Twenty-five dollars ($25.00) be and the same is hereby allowed to the said Ben E. Hulse for his services herein and the same to be taxed as costs."
No appeal was taken from this judgment during the November Term or within the time thereafter allowed by the statutes for the taking of an appeal.
Thereafter, during the February Term, 1941, of said court, and on April 8, 1941, respondent filed his final settlement, in which he neither charged himself with said notes, nor listed them among the items for which he asked credit, but he did include in the settlement the following memorandum:
". . . Certain notes listed by the appraisers and not acknowledged by the administrator as assets of the estate have since been by order of this court determined to have been satisfied and not a part of the assets of the estate."
The settlement contained the usual affidavit reciting that the administrator had charged himself with all the money and personal effects belonging to the estate that had come into his hands and not theretofore accounted for. No exceptions were ever filed to this final settlement.
The February, 1941, Term of said court expired on May 13, 1941, and on May 20, 1941, an appeal to the circuit court from the order approving said final settlement was taken by Stella Day, T.L. Nelson, Lulu M. Johnson, Lucille McFarland, Clyde McFarland, Alvin J. McFarland, and others.
When the case reached the circuit court, respondent filed a motion requesting an order requiring appellants to file their exceptions to the final settlement, and as grounds for said motion alleged that unless said exceptions were filed respondent would not be able to ascertain the matter complained of by appellants.
The court overruled this motion, and at the same time ruled that the burden of sustaining the final settlement was upon the administrator. At the trial, however, the controversy was limited to only two issues, to-wit: Should respondent be surcharged with the amount of the two notes hereinbefore mentioned? And, What disposition should be made of the distributive share of one Cecil Williams, who had been declared legally dead by reason of seven years' absence some twenty years prior to the death of Mrs. Nelson?
The trial resulted in the following finding and judgment (formal recitations omitted):
"The Court doth further find the issues against the appellants, and for the appellee administrator, on the first points, to-wit: Concerning the E.W. Nelson notes found among the papers and records of Ada M. Nelson. The Court finds that the Probate Court, after due consideration and hearing thereon, found and adjudged the said E.W. Nelson notes to have been paid and that they constituted no part of the estate, and that no appeal was taken from the judgment of the Probate Court thereon, and that judgment of the Probate Court became final.
"The Court further finds on the issue of the distributive share of Cecil Williams as set out in the order of distribution, that Cecil Williams has heretofore been adjudged by the Probate Court of Lewis County, Missouri, to be dead, after due and timely proceedings thereon held and had, and that having been so found and determined to be deceased by said Court that acts done in reliance upon the determination of death are valid, and no act or fact appearing to the contrary this Court is bound thereby and distribution shall be made among the heirs of Ada M. Nelson to the exclusion of Cecil Williams so found to be dead.
"Therefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the order of approval of the final settlement of the Probate Court of Marion County, Missouri, in the matter of the estate of Ada M. Nelson, deceased, be affirmed and stand approved as made by the said Probate Court of Marion County, Missouri.
"It is further ordered and adjudged that pursuant to the heretofore rendered decree and judgment of the death of Cecil Williams by the Probate Court of Lewis County, Missouri, rendered prior to the death of Ada M. Nelson, that the estate of Ada M. Nelson be ordered distributed to the heirs of said Ada M. Nelson to the exclusion of Cecil Williams according to their interests as determined by the Probate Court of Marion County, Missouri."
After timely motion for new trial was overruled, appellants Mary S. McPike and Clara M. Patterson prosecuted their appeal to this court.
In this court appellants, by an assignment of error, attack the correctness of the trial court's ruling that it was precluded from passing upon the merits of the controversy with respect to the Nelson notes by reason of appellants' failure to appeal from the judgment of the probate court on the respondent's motion which was tried and determined during the November, 1940, term of the probate court. We are compelled to sustain this contention.
It will be observed that the Nelson notes were listed in the inventory. They thus became assets in the respondent's hands, to be accounted for in the final settlement. [Sec. 100, R.S. Mo. 1939; R.S.A., Sec. 100.] If they were valid obligations, he had the duty to charge himself with them in his final settlement. If they were not valid obligations but had been paid, he had the right under Section 231, R.S. Mo., 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 231, to request the court to give him credit for the amount of the notes.
Section 231 reads as follows:
"At his final settlement, the court shall give credit to the executor or administrator for all the debts which have been charged in the inventory as due to the estate, if the court be satisfied that such debt was not really due to the estate. . . ."
Absent the foregoing statute, the notes having been inventoried, the probate court would not have had jurisdiction in this case to determine the matter of respondent's liability on the notes. [McManus v. McDowell, 11 Mo. App. 436.]
Ordinarily, the validity of a debt claimed to be owed to an estate from an administrator cannot be tried in the probate court, but must be litigated in the circuit court. There are but two exceptions to this rule. Prior to final settlement, a proceeding under Sections 63-67, R.S. Mo. 1939, R.S.A., Secs. 63-67, for the discovery of assets is available where the administrator has concealed or embezzled, or is otherwise wrongfully withholding any goods, chattels, money, books, papers, or evidences of debt of the deceased, and has them in his possession or under his control. In such a proceeding, the statutes have set up procedural requirements which guarantee that if such procedure is used there will be a bona fide adversary proceeding. Then there is the authority given by Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, R.S.A., sec. 231, but this statute is applicable only where the debt has been charged in the inventory as due the estate. If it has not been so charged, and the heirs contend that the administrator failed to account for a debt due from him to the estate, they would, of course, have recourse against him and his sureties on his official bond, but the probate court would be without jurisdiction in the premises. [Wilson v. Ruthrauff. 82 Mo. App. 435.]
For obvious reasons, the proceeding on respondent's motion to be relieved of liability on these notes was not one brought under Sections 63-67. R.S. Mo. 1939, R.S.A., secs. 63-67. Therefore, to be valid it could only be considered as an application under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, R.S.A., sec. 231, by the administrator to be permitted to take credit in his final settlement for the amount of the notes on the ground that such debt was not really due the estate.
Respondent's motion was based upon the theory that the notes had been paid and in the prayer of his motion he requested that proper credit be ordered and adjudged. It is true that other relief was asked, such as that said items be stricken from the inventory, etc., but the essential nature of the motion was to relieve respondent of liability on the notes, which could only be done at that stage of the proceedings by taking credit under Section 231. The court in its order adjudging the matter in respondent's favor ordered that "said administrator is therefore authorized to take credit for said notes in his settlement of said estate . . ." Therefore, considering the allegation of the motion and the order of the court, we must hold that the proceeding was in contemplation of final settlement and was one under Section 231, R.S. Mo. 1939, R.S.A., sec. 231; otherwise we would have to hold that it was coram non judice. Such being the case, the fact that the motion was filed, the hearing had, and the matter determined prior to the submission of the final settlement for approval and at a prior term of court could make no difference. The only effect of such an irregularity in the procedure would be to make the judgment rendered at the November Term, 1940, interlocutory, which judgment would become final upon the approval of the final settlement, and which settlement in effect gives credit to the respondent for the notes in controversy.
The appeal of the heirs brought before the circuit court for trial de novo the issue of respondent's liability on the notes, provided, of course, that that question was not foreclosed by the failure of the heirs to file formal exceptions to the final settlement presenting that issue for trial in the probate court. This latter question is raised and insisted upon by respondent.
The purpose of an exception in the trial of an ordinary civil action is to preserve for consideration on a motion for new trial and on review upon appeal errors which occur during the progress of the trial but which do not appear upon the record proper. Absent such an exception, the appellate court can review nothing but those errors which appear in the record proper.
In the case at bar, however, we are dealing with an entirely different kind of an exception than the one used to preserve matters for review by an appellate court. The exceptions here referred to have no specific statutory sanction, but their use has been a part of our practice for many years. They are used to frame the issue to be tried before the probate court and to inform the appellate court of the issues actually tried in the probate court. Exceptions, therefore, are ordinarily necessary to be filed if a review is desired, because the jurisdiction of the circuit court on appeal from the probate court is derivative and is to be exercised only over matter actually litigated and fought out in the probate court and from which the appeal is taken. [Leahy v. Campbell, 274 Mo. 343, 202 S.W. 1114; State ex rel. Burns v. Woolfolk, 303 Mo. 589, 262 S.W. 346; In re Ermeling's Estate (Mo.), 119 S.W.2d 755; In re Mills Estate (Mo.), 162 S.W.2d 807.]
In determining whether the circuit court will exercise its jurisdiction on appeal, the important consideration is, Was an issue presented to the probate court in respect to the matter? It is immaterial, in our view, whether that information is acquired from the formal exceptions filed or whether it appears otherwise from the record. In the case at bar, the record shows that the issue of respondent's liability on the notes was tried in the probate court not upon exceptions filed by the heirs but upon a motion filed by respondent himself. The motion served the same purpose that formal exceptions to the final settlement would have served, that is, it framed an issue for the probate court to pass upon, and from it we learn what was tried below. Certainly, upon this record respondent is in no position to contend that the matter was not tried in the probate court, and at the same time assert that the order, which we have held to be merely interlocutory, was res adjudicata.
Respondent also says that the allegations in the motion for new trial filed in the circuit court are insufficient to preserve the matters complained of for review. Said motion sets out the following grounds: "Because the finding, verdict and judgment are against the law and the evidence, and against the law under the evidence." And, "Because the findings, verdict and judgment of this Court in this case is null and void on its face." These assignments under the authorities are sufficient to raise the point under review here. [Municipal Securities Corporation v. Kansas City, 265 Mo. 252, 177 S.W. 856; Albrecht v. Piper et ux. (Mo. App.), 164 S.W.2d 105; Franklin v. Local Finance Co., 234 Mo. App. 973, 136 S.W.2d 112; Hoppe v. Boerger et al. (Mo. App.), 116 S.W.2d 195; Burns v. School District (Mo. App.), 50 S.W.2d 677.]
In view of what we have said, we hold that the trial court was in error when it ruled that the order of the probate court of February 7, 1941, was res adjudicata, and we overrule respondent's contention here that the circuit court could not try the issue of respondent's liability on the notes because no formal exceptions were filed to the final settlement. The judgment appealed from will have to be reversed and the cause remanded so that that issue may be tried on its merits. It is so ordered. Hughes, P.J., concurs; McCullen, J., not sitting.