133 A. 762 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1926
The petition of Frederick Schultz alleges that Alexander H. Schultz, his brother, late of Madison, Morris county, died February 28th, 1926; that he executed his last will and testament February 26th, 1924, of which a true copy was annexed, and in and by which he appointed the petitioner executor; that though diligent search and inquiry have been made for the original, it cannot be found and is apparently lost or destroyed without knowledge of the testator. The petition prays that this court may establish that the said Alexander H. Schultz did in his lifetime duly execute a last will and testament in the manner and form therein (and in said copy set forth), which has been lost, and that the same may be admitted to probate as the last will and testament of the said Alexander H. Schultz, deceased; and motion is now made that citation issue to the heirs-at-law and next of kin of the alleged testator, who are named and whose residences are set out in the petition.
The question at once occurs, has this court jurisdiction in the premises?
NOTE. — The chancellor has directed that the opinion in this case, inadvertently omitted from the equity reports at the time it was filed in 1926, be now printed among the prerogative opinions in this volume of reports. — Rep. *15
In re Cassidy's Will,
In 3 Alexander's Com. on Wills p. 2011, it is laid down that in the absence of statute some decisions hold the probate of lost or destroyed wills to be of equitable cognizance and relief must be sought in the court of chancery. The weight of authority, however, appears to be that the grant of general probate jurisdiction includes authority over such probate. And in 40Cyc. 1237, it is stated that a lost will may be established in the court having probate jurisdiction.
In Buchanan v. Matlock,
Jurisdiction of our court of chancery to establish and set up a lost or spoliated will has been asserted and frequently applied. And in none of these cases was the question of jurisdiction raised or suggested. See Bailey v. Stiles,
By the commission and explanatory instructions given to Lord Cornbury, the first royal governor, all the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the province relating to the probate of wills was reserved to the governor. For over one hundred and forty years the governor or ordinary had been the only judge of probate known to the constitution of New Jersey. In re Walker,
Thus it appears that the ordinary and judge of the prerogative court of this state has, and always has had, jurisdiction to establish lost wills. The jurisdiction of the court of chancery is concurrent with that of the prerogative court, which, in turn, is concurrent with that of the orphans courts, which latter rests upon statute passed prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1844, and is, therefore, valid, as it did not, when enacted in 1784, invade any constitutional power or authority of any other court. The court of errors and appeals being the only one which in express terms was made indestructible by legislation under the constitution of 1776. Traphagen v. Township of West Hoboken,
This court having jurisdiction in the premises mentioned in the petition, citations will be issued to the heirs-at-law and next of kin of the decedent, warning them of the application for the probate of the last will and testament of Alexander H. Schultz, deceased, which is alleged to have been lost or destroyed.