ROSE CORLEY, Appellant, v. JAMES MCELMEEL et al., Appellants, and ANNIE E. STOVER et al., Respondents
Court of Appeals of the State of New York
April 14, 1896
149 N.Y. 228
Argued March 11, 1896
- APPEAL — RECORD. The Court of Appeals cannot disregard the record and look beyond its statement of the proceedings upon the trial, for the purpose of reviewing an alleged error of the court below in refusing the admission of evidence claimed on appeal to have been offered for a purpose other than that stated in the record.
- WILL — TITLE OF DEVISEE TO REAL PROPERTY INDEPENDENT OF PROBATE. While the probate of a will disposing of real and personal property is essential to authenticate the title of the executor to administer upon the personal property, the title to the real property vests in the devisee by virtue of the instrument itself, unaided by its probate.
- WILL — DECREE OF SURROGATE REJECTING WILL OF REAL ESTATE AS INVALID — NOT RES ADJUDICATA — JURY TRIAL. A surrogate‘s decree refusing probate to a will devising real and personal property upon the ground of its invalidity, is not res adjudicata between the parties to a subsequent partition action brought by an heir at law of the testator against a devisee under the will; and the latter is entitled to have the validity of the devise determined by a jury, although he may have voluntarily appeared in the proceedings before the surrogate and participated therein.
- PARTICIPATION IN PROBATE PROCEEDING — NOT A WAIVER OF JURY TRIAL. Voluntary appearance and participation by a devisee in proceed
ings by the executor for probate of the will do not constitute a waiver on the part of the devisee of the right to a trial by jury of the question of the validity of the devise, after the refusal of probate by the surrogate on the ground of the invalidity of the will.
Corley v. McElmeel, 87 Hun, 23, affirmed.
(Argued March 11, 1896; decided April 14, 1896.)
APPEAL from judgment of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the second judicial department, entered upon an order made May 13, 1895, which affirmed a judgment rendered at Special Term in favor of the defendant Annie E. Stover upon a verdict obtained on a trial of an issue of fact at Circuit, and also affirmed an order denying a motion for a new trial.
The nature of the action and the facts, so far as material, are stated in the opinion.
Charles E. Hughes and Edward F. Dwight for Margaret McCloskey, appellant. The Surrogate‘s Court has jurisdiction to determine all questions relating to the factum of wills of real property offered for probate. (Redf. on Surr. 150;
Robert Sewell for appellants McElmeel, McCarron and Corley. The surrogate‘s decree was conclusive. (
Charles J. Patterson, Ayres & Walker and Boardman & Boardman for respondents. The decree of the surrogate of the city and county of New York refusing probate to the will of Patrick Trenor, deceased, was not a conclusive adjudication against the right of Annie E. Stover to claim the real estate devised to her by that instrument, in this action. (Riggs v. Cragg, 89 N. Y. 479; In re Underhill, 117 N. Y. 471; In re Hawley, 104 N. Y. 250; Jackson v. Rumsey, 3 Johns. Cas. 234; In re Kellum, 50 N. Y. 298;
GRAY, J. In order to have a clearer understanding of the appellant‘s case, it is necessary to state a few facts connected with the litigation. The action was brought by plaintiff, as one of the heirs at law of Patrick Trenor, deceased, for the partition of certain real estate, of which he died seized, and she joined as parties defendant the other heirs, the executors of his will and Mrs. Stover, to whom he had devised his real estate. The complaint alleged the presentation of the will to the Surrogate‘s Court of the city and county of New York for probate and a decree thereof adjudging the will to be void; for having been obtained by fraud. The answer of the respondent Stover asserted the validity of the will and claimed the property devised to her thereby. When the issues came on for trial in the Supreme Court, before Mr. Justice KELLOGG and a jury, the surrogate‘s decree above mentioned being offered in evidence by plaintiff and being objected to, a stipulation of the parties was entered into; whereby all the issues, except that touching the validity of the will, were to be tried by the court without a jury and, if it should thereupon be decided that the validity of the will had not been determined conclusively, that that issue should be tried at some subsequent term of the court by a jury. The jury then being discharged, the surrogate‘s decree was received in evidence and decision was reserved as to its effect. Thereafter, Mr. Justice KELLOGG filed his decision; which found the facts as to the relationship of the parties and as to the proceedings for and upon the probate of the will; also, that Mrs. Stover, “claiming to be a legatee under the said alleged will and testament, duly appeared and was a party to the proceeding, etc.;” and that the decree of the surrogate had adjudged the will to be void. As conclusions of law, he held that the decree was not conclusive as to the parties claiming under the will; that the will
The General Term affirmed the judgment, and, upon this appeal, the appellants have insisted, in substance, that as the Surrogate‘s Court had jurisdiction to determine all questions relating to the factum of the will, and as Mrs. Stover had voluntarily appeared in that proceeding, where the merits were fully litigated, she had waived her right to a trial by jury and that, as between the parties, the surrogate‘s decree was conclusive proof of the invalidity of the will. The appellants do claim, also, that the decree was prima facie evidence of the invalidity of the will and should have been received upon the trial as evidence of that character, in aid of the plaintiff‘s case. It is difficult to see how this court, in its review of the determination made below of the issues between the parties, can disregard the record and look beyond its statement of the proceedings upon the trial, without assuming a scope of jurisdiction not intended, nor understood, to be exercised by it. We cannot say, notwithstanding the insistence of counsel, in the absence of a statement to that effect, that the surrogate‘s decree was offered as prima facie evidence, if not
By section
The jurisdiction of the surrogate is only such as is conferred by the statute and though a scheme for the determination of the factum of wills of real property, as well as those
The learned counsel for the appellants have not been able to sustain their position by the authority of any decided case; but rely upon these two propositions. The Surrogate‘s Court had authority to determine all questions relating to the factum of the will in question — an authority which had expanded, from the narrow limitations existing with respect
It may be observed that the result of a proceeding in the Surrogate‘s Court denying probate to a will disposing of real estate, etc., is of importance to the devisee; for whereas, if the will is admitted to probate, the decree is presumptive evidence and he may read in evidence the testimony taken in the proceeding in which it was made, with full force and effect, in a subsequent action; the failure of probate leaves the devisee under the burden of establishing the will, in respect of its execution and of its validity. Notwithstanding the extension of the limits of the surrogate‘s jurisdiction, we perceive no sufficient reason for departing from the former rule, which allowed those claiming under a will to set it up and to establish their title by common-law evidence, in an action where the title to the real estate devised is involved, notwithstanding a failure to have the will probated. (Harris v. Harris, supra.) Conceding the full jurisdiction of the surrogate to determine the questions relating to the factum of a will, disposing of the testator‘s real property, we cannot hold it to be, or to have been intended by the Code to be, an exclusive jurisdiction.
Nor can we hold that there was any waiver of the constitutional right to a trial by jury of the title to the land devised. While that, as a personal right, is capable of being waived, the case must be one where the right exists as an absolute one and that was not this case. It was a matter of discretion with the surrogate to direct a trial by jury of the issues of fact. (
We have considered the question broadly, notwithstanding that we are indisposed to regard the appearance of Mrs. Stover in the Surrogate‘s Court as other than in her capacity as
The questions presented by this appeal are not without difficulty and the counsel for the appellants have argued them upon their briefs with much skill; but we are not convinced that there has been any error in their determination and our consideration of the case leads us to the conclusion that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
BARTLETT, J., dissents on the following grounds:
- The Surrogate‘s Court having jurisdiction to determine the factum of a will of real property, its decree against the validity of such a will is presumptive evidence of its invalidity and should have been admitted at the trial as having that effect.
- The proceedings before Judges KELLOGG and GAYNOR, in the light of the stipulation, are practically one trial, and the respondents are in no position to aver surprise as to appellants’ claim that the decree was at least competent as presumptive evidence of the invalidity of the will.
All concur, with GRAY, J., for affirmance; except BARTLETT, J., who dissents on grounds stated in memorandum.
Judgment affirmed.
