301 Mass. 442 | Mass. | 1938
This is an appeal by the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company from a decree for distribution, entered February 28, 1938, whereby Charles L. Hibbard, receiver of the property of William L. Adam, an absentee, was ordered to distribute the assets in his hands as such receiver to himself as executor of the will of said Adam. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 200, § 12.
The principal contention upon which the appellant relies as showing that its interests have been prejudiced by error entering into the decree, although stated by it in different ways, may, we think, be fairly summarized as follows: that the decree ordering the receiver to distribute the assets of Adam in his hands to himself as executor of Adam’s will does not protect the appellant unless Adam was in fact dead when the executor was appointed; that the appointment of an executor of the will of a live person would be a nullity; that the decree allowing the will and appointing the executor is not in itself conclusive of the fact of death, but that death is a jurisdictional fact or condition precedent to a valid appointment of an executor; that the appointment of Hibbard as executor of Adam was therefore open to collateral attack on Hibbard’s petition as receiver for distribution to such an extent that at the hearing on that petition the death of Adam became an issue; and that there was error in dealing with the issue in that the findings of the material facts reported by the judge do not support his conclusion that “Adam came to his death by drowning in the Housatonic River on the night of April 9, 1933,” and do not justify any conclusion that Adam was dead when Hibbard was appointed his executor. This contention has its origin in various decisions holding that the jurisdiction of the Probate Court to enter upon the administration of an estate is open to collateral attack in other proceedings on the ground that the supposed decedent was in fact alive. Jochumsen v. Suffolk Savings Bank, 3 Allen, 87. Whitwell v. Bartlett, 211 Mass. 238. Gordon v. Shea, 300 Mass. 95, 99. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 192, § 3.
We think it unnecessary to determine whether or not the subsidiary findings justify the judge’s conclusion as to Adam’s death, as we are of the opinion that the appellant has not shown that it has been harmed even if there was error in the findings underlying the decree of distribution
The appellant further contends that the decree is erroneous in that before it was entered no guardian ad litem was appointed by the court to represent either the absentee, who might possibly be alive although his will had been proved and an executor appointed, or persons unborn or unascertained who might become the heirs and distributees of the absentee and entitled to his property, if he was not already dead, at the expiration of fourteen years “after the date of [his] disappearance or absconding,” as provided in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 200, § 13. See also § 12.
We pass over any question as to whether a guardian ad litem can properly be appointed to represent the interest of an absentee and assume that the absentee or his heirs or distributees to be ascertained as of the expiration of the fourteen years might still have had rights or potential rights in his property open to consideration in the matter of distribution, if the absentee was not in truth dead when the executor was appointed. Nevertheless we are of the opinion that failure to appoint a guardian ad litem in a case like this is not error in the decree of which this appellant can complain. Numerous provisions are scattered through the statutes relative to the appointment of guardians ad litem by various courts in different proceedings. Some
Decree affirmed.