Bond v. Dunbar

2 N.H. 216 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1820

Richardson, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The third section of the statute of Feb. 11, 1791, entitled “ an act for the equal distribution of insolvent estates,” after giving an appeal both to the creditor and to the executor or administrator of an insolvent estate from the judgment of the commissioners appointed in the probate court to examine and allow the claims upon the estate, and directing the manner in which*such appeal shall be prosecuted in the court, *217contains the following clause : “ And the creditor and execu- “ tor or administrator may agree before the judge of probate “ to submit any dispute between them to referees, in which “ case their report being returned to the said judge, and ac- “ cepted by him, shall be final between the parties.5’ It is very manifest that “ the dispute” here intended, is a dispute with regard to claims upon an insolvent estate, which have been rejected or allowed by the commissioners. It is a strong argument in favor of this construction of the statute, that it contains no provision for enforcing a performance of the award o f the arbitrators, and that where the estate is insolvent, no such provision is necessary, because the award becomes a debt, which the judge of probate must consider in making a decree of distribution. This being in oar opinion the true construction of the statute, the question now before us is easily settled. This is an appeal from a decree of the judge of probate in this county accepting a report of referees made under a rule of reference entered into before him, and the question is, whether an appeal is authorized by law in this case? It does not appear from the papers furnished us, whether the estate of Ralston was insolvent or not, nor is it, in the view we have taken of the case, material whether it was or not. Because if the estate was not insolvent, the reference was wholly unauthorized by the statute, and the decree of the judge of probate accepting the report was ⅜ mere nullity, from which no appeal was necessary, and from -which no appeal could be claimed; and, on the other hand, if the reference was authorized by the statute,then the statute expressly declaring that the report accepted by the judge shall be final between the parties, has most clearly taken away an appeal.

Appeal dismissed.