100 N.Y. 206 | NY | 1885
Reference to the principles determined In re Tilden (
We can find no authority for the order made by the General Term. That court has thereby assumed to vacate several decrees duly made by a surrogate in a proceeding regularly pending before him and as to which he had duly acquired jurisdiction over the parties and subject-matter, upon a mere allegation in a collateral proceeding that some of his determinations were erroneous as matter of law. This has been done several years after the decrees were entered and without any proof, or even a suggestion in the petition therefor, that any such fraud or clerical error had been committed, or the existence of evidence newly discovered, or any other cause rendering such an order proper under section 2481 of the Code of Civil Procedure. To authorize one court in collateral proceedings to set aside the judgment or decree of another, regularly entered, something more is required than proof of the existence of an erroneous determination of such court upon the questions litigated therein. The due enjoyment of property rights, and the repose of titles, which that enjoyment requires, renders it necessary that the adjudications of legal tribunals, upon which rights to a large extent rest, should not be lightly disturbed or arbitrarily set aside and vacated after long lapse of time, for errors which should have been discovered and remedied at the time of their perpetration. Some excuse must be shown by a party why he has not availed himself of the right of review provided by the statute, and the character of such excuse is described in section 2481. That section very clearly defines the nature and characteristics of the proof necessary to authorize a proceeding thereunder, and by its expression of the circumstances under which such an application can be made, very clearly implies that it cannot be successfully maintained upon other grounds. The provisions of the Code of *211 Civil Procedure regulating the methods by which a review of the errors occurring upon a trial before a surrogate can be secured, and providing for a loss of the right of review unless such methods are regularly pursued, also furnishes the strongest implication that such errors are not remediable by any other proceeding. It was held in In re Tilden (supra), that an adjudication made in a proceeding to which a minor, regularly represented in accordance with the practice of the court, was a party, had the same effect as a similar adjudication between adults, and that the relief which he had from an erroneous or irregular adjudication was the same as that of an adult except in respect to the period of time within which an application for relief from an irregular judgment must be made. (Code of Civ. Pro., § 2742. See, also, Freem. on Judgm., § 151; Dan. Ch. Pr. [5th Ed.] p. 151; In re Brick's Estate, 15 Abb. Pr. 12;Phillips v. Dusenberry, 8 Hun, 348.) It was also there held, that in a proceeding wherein the surrogate had jurisdiction a minor had no relief, under section 2481 of the Code of Civil Procedure, from an erroneous or irregular decree, except upon the ground of fraud, clerical mistake, newly-discovered evidence or other like cause, and that such relief must be applied for within the period prescribed by section 1291 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The application of these rules to the case in hand seems to us to require the reversal of the order of the court below.
The suggestion made by that court that an alleged distinction, made by the Code of Civil Procedure between intermediate, and final accountings, of a testamentary trustee in respect to the effect of adjudications made in the respective proceedings, have no application to decrees made and proceedings instituted before that Code took effect. Even if the views there suggested were correct it was quite unnecessary to vacate the decrees for that reason, as they would not constitute a bar to any subsequent investigation of the trustees' accounts, inasmuch as the surrogate would not have acquired jurisdiction to render the decrees complained of.
It is also proper to say, with reference to the claim made by *212 the court below, that every court of record has an inherent power over its own records to modify, amend and vacate them independent of the special authority conferred by statute; that if such power exists it belongs exclusively to the court whose records are in question, and cannot be exercised for it by an appellate tribunal. The General Term has authority over the proceedings of the Surrogates' Courts only in the cases provided by the statute, and this case is not, as we have seen, brought within the provisions of section 2481, giving the appellate court jurisdiction of the case upon appeal.
We think, therefore, that the order of the General Term should be reversed, and that of the surrogate affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly.