65 A. 946 | Conn. | 1907
The appellants, as the executors of the will of Jane E. Winchester, presented a claim to the commissioners on the estate of Robert T. Merwin for $9,400, which they disallowed. The administrator of the estate of John McKeon presented to them a claim for $2,400, which they allowed. From the doings of the commissioners in thus disposing of these two claims, this single appeal was taken to the Superior Court, and the reasons of appeal there filed present this case: Robert T. Merwin received $7,000 from Theresa Cunningham to apply on a note which had been signed by her in favor of Jane E. Winchester, and never accounted for it. Mrs. Winchester also held a note executed by John McKeon, and on that he paid $2,400 to Merwin to apply on the principal of the obligation, for which Merwin never accounted. The claim of the appellants, which was for $9,400, was made up of these two items. The administrator of McKeon, on account of the payments so made by his intestate, presented a claim for $2,400 to the commissioners, who allowed it.
The appeal was erased from the docket by the Superior Court on the ground that it was absolutely void.
In Mattoon's Appeal,
It is clear that Merwin's estate should not be held liable in the Court of Probate for this $2,400, both to the McKeon estate and the Winchester estate. It owes a single duty — that of accounting to the proper party. Union TrustCo. v. Stamford Trust Co.,
Under these circumstances, the appeal, even if irregular (as to which we intimate no opinion), was not void. The Superior Court unquestionably had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter. It was not deprived of jurisdiction over the cause by the mere fact that the appellants, in order that final justice might be done between all parties interested in the allowance or disallowance of the item for the payment of $2,400 forming part of their claim as presented, combined in a single paper an appeal from the allowance of the sum in favor of the McKeon estate, with an appeal from its disallowance as to them. This could be, at most, nothing more than ground for a plea in abatement. "It pertained merely to the process of bringing an appealable cause to the right court." Orcutt's Appeal,
The motion to erase should therefore have been denied.
There is error, and the cause is remanded to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.