On January 28, 1952, the plaintiff, attorney general of the United States and successor to the alien property custodian, acting under the authority conferred upon him by an act of Congress known as the Trading with the Enemy Act; 40 Stat. 411, as amended, 50 U.S.C. App. 1-40 (Sup. 1956); and by presidential executive orders made pursuant thereto, issued an order which purported to vest in himself immediately the interests of certain German nationals who were legatees under the will of Anna E. Hartmann, deceased. Vesting Order No. 18727, 17 Fed. Reg. 976. The plaintiff claimed that their shares in the estate were property which should be delivered to him by virtue of this order, a copy of which was filed in the Probate Court for the district of Middletown. The Probate Court treated the vesting order and a letter of transmittal accompanying it as an application for an order of distribution to the plaintiff and refused to issue the order. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, which rendered judgment sustaining the Probate Court. The plaintiff has appealed from this judgment.
The facts are not in dispute. Anna E. Hartmann, a Middletown resident, died testate on September 8, 1922, leaving her husband, Peter Hartmann, surviving. She named him as executor of her will and gave her estate to nephews and nieces, children of her two sisters, subject to a life use in her husband. One of the sisters was then living and the other was deceased. Peter died in West Haven on August 2, 1948. His will was duly probated, and his executor surrendered the property which he had held as a life tenant to the estate of his wife, Anna. On December *665 27, 1949, upon the application of The Union and New Haven Trust Company, administrator d.b.n., c.t.a., and after due notice, the Probate Court for the district of Middletown made an ascertainment of the distributees of Anna’s estate, together with their respective shares, but failed to order distribution to them. These distributees, Anna’s nephews and nieces, were, with two exceptions, German nationals residing in Germany.
The Probate Court, in refusing to issue an order of distribution to the plaintiff, ruled, in effect, that the decree of December 27, 1949, ascertaining the distributees of Anna’s estate determined the question of the title of the legatees and rendered res ad judicata the question who is entitled to distribution. The first decisive issue is whether the Probate Court was correct in that ruling. If it was not, the second decisive issue is whether it was required to act upon the vesting order filed by the plaintiff.
Our probate courts have a limited jurisdiction. Their powers are conferred by statute. General Statutes § 6813; 1 Locke & Kohn, Conn. Probate Practice, § 38. No question of the jurisdiction of the Probate Court over the parties or the subject matter is raised here. Unquestionably, the court had the power to enter a decree ascertaining the distributees under Anna’s will and ordering distribution to them. General Statutes § 7056;
Killen
v.
Klebanoff,
The decree of December 27, 1949, did not order distribution but merely purported to ascertain distributees. The ascertainment of distributees is incidental to an order of distribution.
Mack’s Appeal,
supra, 129;
Hotchkiss’ Appeal,
We pass now to consideration of the second issue. The plaintiff claims that the Probate Court should order distribution to him. He argues that, irrespective of its powers under Connecticut law, the Probate Court, as a matter of constitutional law, is bound to enforce his vesting order. An act of Congress and *667 executive orders authorized, as a war measure, the appointment of an alien property custodian who was directed and empowered to seize property of every description in the United States belonging to the nationals of every country with which our country was at war. 40 Stat. 415, 418, as amended, 50 U.S.C. App. §§ 5(b)(1), 6, 7(c); Exec. Order No. 9095, 3 C.F.E. Cum. Sup. (1943) 1121, as amended, Exec. Order No. 9193, 3 C.F.E. Cum. Sup. (1943) 1174. Section 2(f) of the last cited executive order gave the alien property custodian power to vest in himself, for the United States, “any property of any nature whatsoever which is in the process of administration by any person acting under judicial supervision . .. and which is payable or deliverable to, or claimed by, a designated enemy country or national thereof.” This power was transferred to the attorney general of the United States by executive order No. 9788. 3 C.F.E. Sup. (1946) 169. It was pursuant to the authority conferred upon the plaintiff by statute and order that he purported, on January 28, 1952, to seize the interests of those of Anna’s legatees who lived in Germany by issuing, in the usual course, vesting order No. 18727. 17 Fed. Reg. 976.
In the exercise of war powers Congress and the president can, unhampered by constitutional provisions concerning due process and just compensation, divest the title of property located in the United States and owned by enemy nationals.
Silesian-American Corporation
v.
Clark,
The effect of a vesting order is to divest title in the enemy national and transfer it to the alien property custodian.
Central Union Trust Co.
v.
Garvan,
A determination by the alien property custodian and by this plaintiff, his successor, that certain properties are subject to seizure is conclusive. But after they have been seized, his right to continue to hold them may be raised in an administrative procedure provided for by the act or in an action in the federal courts. 40 Stat. 419, as amended, 50 U.S.C. App. § 9(a), and 60 Stat. 50, as amended, 50 U.S.C. App. § 32 (Sup. 1956); Exec. Order No. 9193 § 2, 3 C.F.R. Cum. Sup. (1943) 1174;
Stoehr v. Wallace,
We are presently concerned, not with the powers of a court of general jurisdiction, but with the powers of a probate court. Article VI of the federal constitution makes that constitution and the laws of the United States adopted pursuant to it the supreme law of the land and concludes: “. . . the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” In
Hoxie
v.
New York, N.H. & H.R. Co.,
Whether the vesting order and the letter which
*671
accompanied it should be treated as an application for an order of distribution or not, it was nevertheless the duty of the Probate Court to cause the estate to be settled and distributed. The assets of the estate are in the hands of the administrator d.b.n., c.t.a., under the supervision of the court, which has the implied powers necessary and incidental to the performance of its statutory duties. General Statutes § 6813; 1 Locke
&
Kohn, Conn. Probate Practice, §§ 86, 87;
Hall
v.
Pierson,
If we grant that the vesting order and the accompanying letter amounted to an application for an order of distribution to the plaintiff, we nevertheless have to conclude that the Probate Court acted correctly in denying distribution to the plaintiff, although the court placed its decision on erroneous grounds.' A distribution is only the separation and division of that to which the distributees are already entitled by virtue of a will or the Statute of Distributions. It relates back to the date of the death of the testator and disregards equities arising after death.
Kingsbury
v.
Scovill,
The questions presented in these proceedings are novel and unprecedented in this state. In the interests of justice they should be determined now as finally as it is possible. To resolve what appears to be an impasse we outline the following procedure: The Probate Court should make a proper order of distribution. In that way the specific property belonging to the German nationals can be determined. It is the duty of an executor or an administrator upon settlement of the administration account to apply to the court for such an order.
State
v.
Culhane, 78
Conn. 622, 626,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
