122 F. 609 | 9th Cir. | 1903
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
On the presentation of the appeal before this court, it is contended that the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons: (1) The claim presented to the administrator was not properly verified; (2) the heirs of the decedent were not made parties; (3) the claim presented to the District Court was different from that presented to the administrator; (4) the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter; (5) the court erred in denying the appellant a jury trial.
The first three grounds on which the judgment is now attacked are not included in the assignments of error. The assignments of error, it is true, charge that the court erred in overruling the motion of the administrator to strike out the petition, in overruling his demurrer thereto, in overruling his motion for a judgment on the pleadings, and in overruling his written objections to the introduction of any testimony; but that is all that is said in the assignments concerning those motions and the demurrer. There is no specification of the grounds of the motions or of the demurrer, and those grounds cannot be ascertained without searching the record. This the court will not do where the objections are, as they are in this case, purely technical, such as that the claim before the administrator was not duly verified, or that it differed from the claim presented to the court, or that the heirs have not been made parties to the proceeding. Grape Creek Coal Co. v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 12 C.C.A. 350, 63 F. 891; Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Mulligan, 14 C.C.A. 547, 67 F. 569.
It is contended that the court had no jurisdiction of said estate for the purpose of hearing or determining the claim,
Section 790 provides: “The executor or administrator of a deceased person who was a member of a copartnership, shall include in the inventory of such person’s estate in a separate schedule the whole property of such partnership.” Act June 6, 1900, c. 786 (31 Stat. 457).
Section 791 provides: “After the inventory is taken the partnership property shall be in the custody and control of the executor or administrator for the purpose of administration, unless the surviving partner shall, within five days from the filing of the inventory, or such further time as the commissioner may allow, apply for the administration thereof, and give the undertaking therefor hereinafter prescribed.” Act June 6, 1900, c. 786 (31 Stat. 457).
Section 792 provides that if the surviving partner become such administrator he shall be denominated an administrator of the partnership, “and his powers and duties extend to the settlement of the partnership business generally.” Section 794 provides: “In case the surviving partner is not appointed administrator of the partnership, the administration thereof devolves upon the executor or
The language of section 823, above quoted, is identical with that of section 1134 of the Code of Civil Procedure of Oregon, the laws of which state had been extended over Alaska, and were in force in that territory up to the time of the adoption of the Code of Alaska. In Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 1154, Oregon is placed in the rank of the few states in which “the jurisdiction of the probate courts over everything pertaining to the regular administration and settlement of decedent’s estates is virtually exclusive.” In a note to the same section (page 115) it is said that in Oregon “the absence of decisions upon the general question indicates that the statutory system of probate jurisdiction is exclusive, and that there is practically no equitable jurisdiction.” In Winkle v. Winkle, 8 Or. 193, it was held that, where there was an antenuptial agreement made by the deceased, the rights of the parties claiming under it cannot be determined in equity, but should be presented'and proved in the regular course of the administration pending in the probate court, and determined by that court in the final settlement. The court said that the statute had conferred on the probate court “exclusive jurisdiction in all matters pertaining to the transfer of the title to personal property of deceased persons. A court of equity has no jurisdiction over it.”
Missouri and Maine are states in which, as in Oregon, the jurisdiction of probate courts over claims against estates is practically exclusive. In Ensworth v. Curd, Adm’r, 68 Mo. 382, a suit in equity had been instituted in the circuit court by a petition which alleged that Jhe plaintiff and the administrator’s intestate were, in the lifetime of the latter, engaged as partners in the purchase and sale of real estate, and the plaintiff prayed for an adjustment of their accounts, and that certain real property to which the intestate had taken a deed in his own name, and of which he died seised, be declared partnership property, and subjected to the payment of any balance found due the plaintiff on the
It is contended that the appellant was entitled to a jury trial for the reason that section 1134 of the Oregon Civil Code, from which section 823 of the Code of Alaska was taken, had been so construed by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Oregon as to authorize a trial by jury. That court, in construing the provisions of section 1134, held that, on an appeal to the circuit court from a judgment of a probate court allowing or rejecting a claim, the case should be tried in the circuit court before a jury. In so ruling it gave force to that portion of the section which declares that the order of allowance made by the probate court shall have the force and effect of a judgment, and the court held that since the case came to the circuit court on appeal from a “judgment” it was to be there dealt with as any other judgment which might be reviewed by that court on appeal. But it never was held in Oregon that on a hearing before the probate court to establish a claim after it had been rejected by the administrator a jury trial could
We find no error for which the judgment of the District Court should be reversed. It is accordingly affirmed.