318 Mass. 346 | Mass. | 1945
This cause is here on the appeal of the plaintiffs from a final decree entered in the Superior Court dismissing the bill, after the sustaining of demurrers of the several defendants. There were no appeals from the interlocutory decrees sustaining the demurrers, but since the final decree was affected by the interlocutory decrees, the
The bill rests upon the assertion that the plaintiffs were the issue of a deceased child óf Mary E. M. Grassie, their grandmother, who died January 21, 1934, and that she omitted to provide for them in her will by accident or mistake, so that they became entitled to the same share of her estate which they would have taken if she had died intestate. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 191, § 20. The bill seems to have been conceived upon the theory that by reason of the reference to said § 20 contained in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 6 (relating to equity jurisdiction in Probate Courts), the Superior Court acquired a special jurisdiction of some kind over cases of failure to provide for issue in wills. But § 6 creates no new equity jurisdiction in the Superior Court. The jurisdiction of the Superior Court in relation to this subject matter is not derived from § 6, but flows from the concurrent jurisdiction which that court enjoys with the Supreme Judicial Court of all matters embraced within the scope of general equity jurisprudence, including such equity cases as involve the application of c. 191, § 20. This is apparent from an examination of the decisions dealing with § 6. Bennett v. Kimball, 175 Mass. 199. Abbott v. Gaskins, 181 Mass. 501. Mitchell v. Weaver, 242 Mass. 331, 336-337. Geen v. Old Colony Trust Co. 294 Mass. 601, 602-603. Jones v. Jones, 297 Mass. 198, 203. Lord v. Cummings, 303 Mass. 457, 459. It follows that whether the bill is demurrable must be determined according to the general principles of equity law and without reference to § 6. Bennett v. Kimball, 175 Mass. 199, 200.
After alleging the failure of their grandmother “unintentionally and by mistake” to provide for the plaintiffs, the bill goes on to allege that Thomas L. Grassie, who was her surviving husband and the executor of her will and who has himself since deceased, filed his final account, which was allowed on February 24, 1937; that in his account he “failed to include” a certain mortgage, a part of which had been paid to him during his lifetime as executor of the
The bill states no cause of action in equity. It is unnecessary to catalogue all its faults in detail. In so far as it seeks to deal with personal property of the estate of the grandmother it appears that her executor is dead, and that no representative of her estate is before the court, and it does not appear who, aside from the plaintiffs, is interested in that estate. Moreover it does appear that the final account of the executor of the grandmother’s will was allowed in the lifetime of the executor. A decree allowing a
If it be true that the plaintiffs’ grandmother, Mary E. M. Grassie, omitted to provide for the plaintiffs in her will by accident or mistake, and that they therefore acquired an interest in property formerly owned by her, they must clearly set forth the elements of an equitable cause of action or they must proceed by some method other than a bill in equity. The demurrers were rightly sustained.
An appeal from the order for final decree is not properly before us. Graustein v. Dolan, 282 Mass. 579, 583.
Appeal from order for decree dismissed.
Final decree affirmed with costs of this appeal.