This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff seeks to recover for services and goods furnished by him, as an undertaker, for the funeral of the defendant’s testate. The writ is dated October 14, 1939. The defendant appeared specially and filed an answer in abatement setting up that, as executor of the will of the deceased, he filed a petition in the Probate Court prior to the commencement of this action, “to wit, upon September 30, 1939,” under the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 2 “as amended,” against the present plaintiff, seeking to have that court determine the validity of the debt for which the plaintiff brings this action; that service of said petition was made
The only question presented for determination is the correctness of the ruling of the judge, which is set forth above.
G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 2, as amended by St. 1933, c. 221, § 3, provides as follows: “If an executor or administrator does not within six months after the approval of his bond have notice of demands against the estate of the deceased sufficient to warrant him to represent such estate to be insolvent, he may, after the expiration of said six months, pay the debts due from the estate and shall not be personally liable to any creditor in consequence of such payments made before notice of such creditor’s demand; and if such executor or administrator is in doubt as to the validity of any debt which, if valid, he would have a right to pay under this section, he may, with the approval of the probate court, after notice to all persons interested, pay such debt or so much thereof as the court may authorize.”
The defendant states the issue for determination to be whether one having a claim for payment of funeral expenses for a deceased person may, after the Probate Court had jurisdiction over him with respect to that claim, oust it of that jurisdiction, though he does not wish a trial by jury,
It would serve no useful purpose to recite in detail the various arguments of the parties, some in the alternative, with relation to the status of claims for funeral expenses, and concerning whether under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 2, jury issues may be framed in the Probate Court. It is settled that an action for funeral expenses, except as a claim therefor is preferred (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 198, § 1), differs in no essential from an action for a debt due from the deceased, and that the estate of the deceased is just as liable for the necessary charges of the funeral as for necessaries supplied in the lifetime. Breen v. Burns, 280 Mass. 222, 225, and cases cited. In that case it was held that such an action was by a creditor of the deceased within the meaning of G. L. c. 197, § 9. We are of opinion that similarly the funeral expenses of a deceased person are a “debt” within the meaning of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 2, and that upon the petition of an executor or administrator the Probate Court has jurisdiction to determine the validity of such a “debt” in proper case. We also think that the plain implication of what is said in Old Colony Trust Co. v. Segal, 280 Mass. 212, 214, is that, on petitions for the determination of the validity of debts under § 2, the Probate Court could not properly frame issues for jury trial thereof.
It is true, as urged by the defendant, that in the case just cited action had been begun in the Superior Court by alleged creditors of the estate of a deceased person and trial by jury claimed before the executors brought the petition under § 2 to determine the validity of the same claims, and that the familiar principle was invoked that “Where different courts of the same sovereign power have concurrent jurisdiction of the same causes, the one whose jurisdiction is first duly invoked has authority paramount over other courts,” and that therefore, since the causes involved had
We are of opinion that this contention cannot be sustained under the interpretation of § 2 set forth in the case just before referred to. In that case the purposes and main design of § 2 are fully discussed, and in substance it is said that this section does not deprive other courts of jurisdiction; that it provides alternative procedure; that it does not extinguish preexisting remedies open to parties; that it would be contrary to sound canons of statutory construction so to interpret this section as to deprive parties of the right to bring actions at law with the concomitant privilege of claiming trial by jury, and to compel all persons having claims against the estate of a deceased person to resort to Probate Courts alone for adjusting demands. It is also further said that “Thus interpreted, the statute is not rendered useless, but has a considerable field for its operation. It enables executors and administrators, if all parties desire, to proceed at once for the determination of the validity of claims against their estate.” In the light of this interpretation of § 2 we think th&t the alternative proceeding therein provided for may not be said to have been duly invoked unless the creditor consents to the exercise of jurisdiction by the Probate Court under that section.
It follows that the plaintiff in this case was not required to respond to the proceeding under § 2, that he was free to take action under other existing remedies, and that the pendency of the petition under § 2 was not a bar to the bringing of the present action. In French v. Bray, 263 Mass. 121, 122, it is to be observed that both parties to the petition submitted to the jurisdiction of the Probate Court without question.
Order dismissing report affirmed.