16 Tenn. 186 | Tenn. | 1835
delivered the opinion of the court.
The decision below raises the question, whether the verdict and judgment had, in the court of pleas and quar-tér sessions, is conclusive upon all parties, or only conclusive upon such as appeared in court and caused the issue to be made up.
The probate of a will, or the granting letters of administration, is a proceeding in the nature of a proceeding in rem, operating on the subject matter and binding generally; the probate is evidence of title, without reference to parties, who do not, and cannot regularly exist in such cases. Hence the rule is, that the sentence or decree of a court of ordinary and probate, provided it be final in the court in which it is pronounced, is evidence against all the world, unless it can be impeached on the ground of fraud and collusion. 1 Stark. Ev. 241: 11
We are called upon, perhaps for the first time, to give a construction to the act of 1789, ch. 23;- providing for the probate of wills and the mode of contesting their validity. The preamble informs us, “that great irregularities had crept into practice, and complaints- had been made, of precipitate and injurious decisions, in admitting of wills to record and granting administrations; for remedy whereof, it was enacted, that wills shall be proved in the county where the testator had his usual residence at the time of his death; that the will should be proved by at least one of the subscribing witnesses, and if contested, by all the living witnesses, if to be found, and by such other persons as might he produced to support such will. And where the validity of any last will or testament, whether written or nuncupative, shall be contested, the same shall be invariably tried by a jury, on an issue made up imder the direction of the court for that purpose?”
The act does not speak of parties, plaintiffs and defendants — no such idea was in the minds of the legislature; it was made the duty of the court of probate, to ascertain whether the will had been duly executed, without reference to individuals interested in- the result of admitting the will to record, the court was bound to act upon the subject matter, and to settle the title to the property, late of the testator, left without an owner. The. •interests of society admitted of no delay,-if anyone or more.
Judgment affirmed .