6 N.M. 239 | N.M. | 1891
This is an application for a rehearing of this case, which was argued and decided at the January term, 1890. Upon the hearing of the cause, counsel for appellant contended that the court below had not jurisdiction to hear and determine tbe cause, for the reason that section 562, Compiled Laws, 1884, vested in the probate court exclusive original jurisdiction to determine all matters of controversy involved in the cause; and this court decided that, if said section 562 was susceptible of the construction claimed for it, said section was in conflict with section 1868 of our organic law, which provides that “the supreme court and the district courts, respectively, of every territory shall possess chancery as well as common law jurisdiction.” The appellant insists that this court erred in its former opinion, and asks to have the cause reheard upon this and other grounds stated in the petition for a rehearing.
It is contended by the appellants in their motion that the organic act confers an exclusive probate jurisdiction on the probate court, which the legislature is authorized to define. The federal supreme court, in the case referred to, does not so construe it. Justice Milleb, in the opinion, says: “Of the probate courts it is only said that a part of the judicial power of the territory shall be vested in them. What part? The answer to this must be sought in the general nature and jurisdiction of such courts as they are known in the history of the English law and in jurisprudence of this country.” But it is claimed that, if the organic act had not conferred such exclusive jurisdiction, this legislature could rightfully do so without conflict with the act of congress. This proposition is correct, provided they have not attempted to confer upon it powers not authorized by the organic act, as it is construed by the supreme court, as before referred to. The organic act provides that the district courts shall have and exercise the same jurisdiction under the constitution and the laws of the United States as is vested in the circuit and district courts of the United States. And the supreme court, in construing the act for the territory of Washington, where the same terms are used, held that the jurisdiction thus conferred is the same as that exercised by the circuit and district courts of the United States in all branches. The City of Panama, 101 U. S. 453. And the equity jurisdiction conferred on the federal courts is held by that court to be the same “that the high court of chancery in England possesses, and is subject to neither limitation nor restraint by state legislation.” The court is bound to exercise the jurisdiction if the bill, according to the received principles of equity, states a case for equity relief. “The absence of' a complete and adequate remedy at law is the only test of equity jurisdiction, and the application of this principle to a particular case must depend on the character of the case as disclosed by the pleadings. It is not enough that there is a remedy at law. It must be plain and adequate, or, in other words, as practical and efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration as the remedy in equity.” “It is very evident that an action at common law on the bond of the administrator' would not give the complainant a practical and efficient remedy for the wrongs which she has suffered. A proceeding at law is not flexible enough to reach the fraudulent conduct of the administrator, which is the groundwork of this bill, or to furnish proper relief against it. It is, however, well settled that a court of chancery, ás an incident to its power to enforce trusts and make those holding a fiduciary relation account, has jurisdiction to compel executors and administrators to account and distribute the assets in their hands. The bill under review has this object, and nothing more.
“It is true, the bill seeks to open the settlement with the probate court as fraudulent, and to cancel the receipts and transfers from the complainant to the administrator because obtained by false representations, but the determination of these questions is necessary to arrive at the proper value of the estate.” Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425. This ease is fully sustained by various other decisions of the supreme court of the United States. It covers every point involved in the question of jurisdiction of the court to entertain the bill and give the relief demanded; and we find that the same rule of equity jurisdiction is fully recognized and exercised under state authority in a number of the states, especially where probate jurisdiction is not exercised by one of the higher courts. Mr. Pomeroy, in the third volume, section 1152, of his admirable work upon Equity Jurisprudence, has carefully reviewed this question, and has collected the decisions of the several states and grouped them into three classes: ££In the states of the first class the original equitable jurisdiction over administrations remains unabridged by the statutes concurrent with that possessed by the probate courts. These states are Alabama, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee. In the states of the second class the jurisdiction of the probate courts over everything pertaining to the regular administration and settlement of decedents’ estates is virtually exclusive. These states are Connecticut, Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. In the states of the third class the equitable jurisdiction is not concurrent, but is simply auxiliary or ancillary and corrective. The probate court takes cognizance originally of all administration, and has powers sufficient for all ordinary purposes. Equity interposes only in special or extraordinary cases, which have either been omitted from the statutory grant of probate jurisdicti6n, or for which its methods and reliefs are imperfect and inadequate, or where its proceedings have miscarried and require correction. This class includes Arkansas, Missouri, New York, Ohio, California, G-eorgia, Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin.” An examination of the authorities cited by Mr. Pomeroy shows that, even in some of the states of the second class, where the jurisdiction of the probate court is exclusive, as well as in all the states of the first and third classes, equity has jurisdiction of matters and relief incidental to the regular course of administration which are distinctively of equitable cognizance, and for which the methods and remedies of the probate court are imperfect or inadequate.
It is claimed in the motion for a rehearing that the court was mistaken in holding that fraud had been practiced upon the appellee, or that she had been unduly influenced to execute a receipt in full for all claims against the estate of her late husband, and that the judgment below should have been reversed for that reason. This is a pure question of fact which the master found from the evidence, and, as a general rule, the appellate court .will not reverse upon a question of fact which the court below has found from conflicting evidence where the record shows substantial evidence sustaining the conclusion. There is evidence tending to show that the appellee was an ignorant woman; that her fears had been aroused that if she did not agree to the settlement proposed she might lose the place upon which she was living. And, taking all the evidence together, we are not prepared to say that the findings of the facts upon which the decree was based was not correct.