71 Pa. 405 | Pa. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
Every register has, within his county, jurisdiction of the probate of wills, and of granting letters testamentary and of administration, but he has not the power at discretion of disposing of every matter which may arise in the performance of his functions, if objected to by a competent party. The 25th section of the Act of March 15th 1832 plainly shows this. It says: “ Where objections are made, or a caveat is entered against the probate of any last will and testament, and no precept for an issue is directed by the register into the Common Pleas as aforesaid (sect. 13), or where objections are made to the granting of letters of administration to any person applying therefor, or where any question of kindred or other disputable and difficult matter comes into controversy before any register, he shall, at the request of-any person interested, appoint a Register’s Court for the decision thereof, to be held at a time certain, and as soon as convenient,” &c.
These are plain words, and are imperative beyond a doubt, in any of the contingencies mentioned in the section, that the register shall proceed no farther himself but call a Register’s. Court. The only serious argument against this construction, it was thought, arose out of the 13th section of the same act, which provides that “ whenever a caveat shall be entered against the admission of any testamentary writing to probate, and the person entering the same shall allege as the ground thereof, any matter of fact touching the validity of such writing, it shall be lawful for the register, at the request of any person interested, to issue a precept to the Court of Common Pleas of the respective county, directing an issue to be formed upon the said facts, and also upon such others as may be lawfully objected to. the said writing,” &c. In several cases in this court the action of the register has, under this section, been held to be discretionary as to issuing the precept to the Common Pleas for the trial of facts alleged in the caveat as objections to the probate of a will: Wikoff’s Appeal, 3 Harris 281; Cozzens’s Will, 11 P. F. Smith 196. The words in the section “ that it shall be lawful for the register, at the request of any person interested, to issue” the precept to the Common Pleas, clearly imply a discretion. Not so the 25th section. The words there used are as clearly imperative. They are, the register “ shall, at the request of any person interested, appoint a Register’s Court,” on the happening of any of the contingencies mentioned in it. That one of these sections should imply a discretion in the register, and the other not, is to be ascribed to the widely different purposes of the sections. A careful reading of them will very plainly show this. The 13th section has no reference to the Register’s Court at all. It enables the register to ignore it, and apply directly to the Common Pleas for the determination of the disputed facts alleged as the grounds
This is simple, and need not occasion delay, a remark that has been made with force of the 13th section, and against the idea that its directions were imperative. But under the 25th section a delay of over three or four weeks at most need not occur, as incident to the call of a Register’s Court. This delay is altogether easier to be endured than the grant of letters by the register to objectionable parties, or the probate of a will in the face of “disputable or difficult matters,” only to be reversed on appeal to the Register’s Court. It seems to me the line of action under these two sections is so distinct that the necessary interpretation of either is no precedent for a like construction of the other.
Now, it is not at all intended to be asserted that the register must call a Register’s Court without being presented with a statement of disputed facts, “ disputable and difficult matters,” as the act says. Where that is done, the register is bound to send the case to the Register’s Court: Cozzens’s Will, 11 P. F. Smith, 196. This is the only clause in the 25th section which can be said to imply a discretion on bis part; but where the matter is plainly disputable, his discretion ceases and his ministerial duty begins; that duty is enforceable by mandamus. Where there is nothing disputable and difficult we would not interfere on account of the refusal of the register to call a Register’s Court.
In the case in hand, the suggestion copied into the alternative
The answer of the respondent, the register, to the alternative mandamus, is simply that whether he is to call a Register’s Court or not, is a judicial duty and act, and cannot be coerced by mandamus ; and that the only remedy of the relator is by appeal when he shall have decided the question before him, which he still reserves for a future opinion upon.
We have decided the point already against this position on what has been said above on the 25th section of the act. When a sufficient case has been shown, we have said that the register is bound to call a Register’s Court, and so says the case of Cozzens’s Will, supra. Of course, at that point, the acts of the register are no longer judicial, they necessarily become ministerial. Mandamus lies not to enforce judicial action, it is admitted, but does
Bid the relator present to the register on requesting a Register’s Court to be called in relation to the probate of the will in question, such a case as entitled him to have his request granted ? We are of opinion1 he did. We discover no power in the register to subpoena and compel the attendance of witnesses other than the subscribing witnesses to, or witnesses alleged to be capable of proving a will, or to enforce the production of any paper, saving and excepting the testamentary writing itself. That power is expressly given by the 8th section of the Act of 1832, and by the 9th section of the act, the register is also authorized to issue commissions to take the depositions of witnesses on interrogatories filed in his office, in other counties or states, or in foreign countries. This is all the power on the'subject of testimony given to the register by the act. This being so, the register could not compel the production of the checks used by the witnesses for the will, and from which it would seem, comparisons were drawn, with the signatures to the will, and which J. Bolton Winpenny refused to produce, to be used by the relator. It is, therefore, very probable, that he could not meet the evidence of these witnesses without the production of these papers, and their production could only be certainly secured in a Register’s Court.
In nothing said herein do we mean to say that the acts of the register are in no case judicial. They are always so, where, without any objections probate has been made of a will, or upon granting letters of administration. There the redress is by appeal. These acts cannot be impeached collaterally.
There is a decision of the Register’s Court, in 6th Philadelphia Reports, p. 86, Alex. Herron’s Estate, which refers to the 25th and 41st sections of the Act of 1832, and seems to hold it discretionary under both sections with the register, under the former section, and the Register’s Court under the latter, whether in the one case the register shall call a Register’s Court when requested, or the Register’s Court shall direct all issues when requested. There is no parity in reason between the two acts. The Register’s Court, with judges learned in the law and with all the powers of a court, ought in r'eason unless expressly limited, to be allowed the discretion of a court in determining upon the necessity of employing auxiliary powers to determine upon ultimate results, especially where both delay and expense are sure to follow its exercise; but
Now, March 11th 1872, after argument by counsel, and consideration of the premises by the court, we are of opinion that judgment be entered herein for the Commonwealth, and that a peremptory mandamus do issue against the said William M. Bunn, register, to proceed forthwith to do the matters and things in the alternative mandamus mentioned, namely, to call a . Register’s Court for the hearing and determining upon the probate of the will of A. Jackson Winpenny, now pending before him, and he is ordered to pay the costs of this suit.