31 Barb. 661 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1859
The question to be determined in this case is one of jurisdiction; whether the surrogate of Rensselaer county had jurisdiction to take proof of the will of Thomas Bumstead deceased. Ho doubt, upon the petition presented to the surrogate of Saratoga, considered without reference to the other proceedings, he had jurisdiction to take proof of this will; but this prima facie case is met by proof showing that, previously, upon a petition in all respects similar, except that it showed that the residence of the testator at the time of his death was in Rensselaer and not in Saratoga, to which and the proceedings consequent upon it the appellant and all other proper persons were made parties, the surrogate of Rensselaer assumed jurisdiction of the case, necessarily decided the jurisdictional question of residence, and admitted the will to probate as that of a man who at the time of his death resided in the county of Rensselaer. The question of residence was before him; all proper parties were cited;
It is now sought to be reviewed collaterally. It is claimed to be purely a jurisdictional question and one touching the subject matter, and not merely the person, and therefore open to contestation in a collateral proceeding.
This alleged jurisdictional question is the question of residence—the residence of the testator at the time of his death; the appellant claiming it to be in the county of Saratoga, the respondents in the county of Eensselaer.
It is unquestionably an elementary principle—perhaps a universal one—that unless a court, and more especially one of special and limited jurisdiction, entertaining judicial proceedings, acquires jurisdiction of the subject matter of the controversy, its proceedings are void, and present no bar to subsequent proceedings before another and a proper tribunal.
It becomes necessary, therefore, at the outset, carefully to inquire what is meant by jurisdiction of the subject matter, and how it may be acquired. By jurisdiction, as applied to judicial proceedings, is meant the right to act—the lawful power to hear and determine. A court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, when it has the legal right to sit upon the case and determine it. This right, it is obvious, may be derived from various sources; from the very constitution of the court and the nature of the controversies which from time immemorial it has been in the habit of hearing and determining, or from legislative enactment. In this case the tribunal in question derives its power from the legislature.
The taking proof of wills is a marked and peculiar attribute of surrogates’ courts; and in a certain sense surrogates’ courts may be said to have general jurisdiction of that subject; in some cases exclusive jurisdiction; in others, concurrent juris
A particular surrogate’s court, however—the surrogate of a particular county—* has exclusive jurisdiction to take proof of the wills of all persons residing in that county at the time of their decease. And thus the question of residence or inhab=itancy is an important, a vital element in conferring jurisdiction. I am not entirely clear, however, that on this point it may not be said to be jurisdiction rather affecting the person than the subject matter. It is true the testator is dead, and it may be said no jurisdiction of his person can be obtained; but in a certain and in a legitimate sense he may be said to be in court through his representatives. And if all his representatives of every description, his executors, heirs at law and next of kin, all consent to the jurisdiction of a particular tribunal—there being no other person to object—may it not be said, in a strictly proper sense, that the court has obtained jurisdiction of the person of the testator, or of his representatives ? Suppose it were possible that the last will and testament of a party might be proved in his lifetime, at the instance of an executor or a legatee, and upon citation to the testator and others ; suppose further, that the test of the surrogate’s jurisdiction was the residence of the testator at thq time o'f making the will; that at such time the testator resided or claimed to reside in the county of Saratoga, tmt actually executed the will in the county of Eensselaer, and had been living or staying in the latter county for some time preceding, so that a plausible question might be raised as to which was the county of his residence at the time of making the will. If, on proceedings taken by the executor to prove the will in the county of- Eensselaer upon the ground that that was the county of his residence, neither the testator nor any other person, on being cited, should object to the jurisdiction on the ground that the testator actually resided in Sara-
But assume this to be strictly a question respecting subject matter, then how does the question present itself. There are many cases where the want of jurisdiction would be at once and clearly apparent upon the face of the proceedings. Thus if an action for slander or assault and battery were brought in a justice’s court, or in a surrogate’s court, the want of jurisdiction would be instantly apparent, and no consent could confer it, because the legislature has forbidden it. The subject matter of the controversy is wholly outside of the range of subjects Upon which those tribunals can adjudicate ; and I think the judgments wotild be absolutely void, and the persons coticerned in enforcing them trespassers ; and that a new action for the same cause might instantly be commenced in the proper tribunal. But this is by no means true in the case before us. The taking proof of wills is a proper subject for the action of a surrogate’s court. It is true also, that to entitle a particular surrogate to take proóf of a particular will, the testator must have resided in his county at the time of his decease. How is the fact of such inhabitancy to be ascertained ? It must in some Way be made to appear. In this case, as was proper, it was shown in a verijied petition, and not controverted. The surrogate passed upon the question.
Without further pursuing this train of thought, my impressions upon the question of jurisdiction are as follows :
1. Where the judicial tribunal has general jurisdiction of the subject matter of the controversy or investigation, and the special facts which give it the right to act in a particular case are averred, and not controverted, upon notice to all proper parties, jurisdiction is acquired, and cannot be assailed in any collateral proceeding. (Vanderpoel v. Van Valkenburgh, 2 Seld. 190. Jackson v. Robinson, 4 Wend. 436. Jackson v. Crawfords, 12 id. 533. Davis v. Packard, 6 id. 327. Gorgnon v. Astor, 7 How. U. S. Rep. 319. Sheldon v. Wright, 7 Barb. 39; S. C. 1 Seld. 497.)
2. Where the judicial tribunal has not general jurisdiction of the subject matter under any circumstances, no averment can supply the defect; no amount of proof can alter the case; no consent can confer jurisdiction. (Borden v. Fitch, 15 John. 141. Bigelow v. Stearns, 19 id. 39. Dudley v. Mayhew, 3 Comst. 9. Coffin v. Tracy, 3 Caines, 129. Davis v. Packard, 7 Pet. 276.)
3. Where the judicial tribunal has not general jurisdiction of the subject matter, but may exercise it under a particular
The result is, that as the residence of the testator in the county of Rensselaer was plainly averred in the petition for probate in the surrogate’s court of that county, and was not in any way controverted, but substantially admitted by all parties interested in the will, and was practically established, upon sufficient evidence, as a fact, by that tribunal, that court had jurisdiction of the case ; its determination was conclusive as to the validity and probate of the will, and could not be re-* examined or assailed in any collateral proceeding, or in any other tribunal of original jurisdiction.
The decree or order appealed from was therefore proper, and must be affirmed with costs.
Wright, Gould and Bogeloom, Justices.]