105 N.E. 546 | NY | 1914
The record presents primarily the question whether or not the Surrogate's Court had jurisdiction to determine the validity of the claim of the respondents.
The executors rejected the claim on March 1, 1911. Subsequently claimants and the executors entered into a writing, dated April 25, 1911, which, after reciting the rejection of the claim, proceeded: "It is hereby agreed and consented, by and between the parties that the said action may and shall be submitted to the Surrogate of the County of Delaware for hearing and determination by him upon the judicial settlement of the accounts of said Executors." On September 18, 1911, the claimants filed the writing of April 25, 1911. In the proceeding for the judicial settlement of the accounts of the executors evidence was received in regard to the claim and it was allowed by the decision and decree of the surrogate as stated. Exceptions by the executors raise the question to be determined by us.
A surrogate can exercise only such jurisdiction as has been specially conferred by statute, together with those incidental powers which may be requisite to effectually carry out the jurisdiction actually granted. (Matter of Underhill,
Obviously, the jurisdiction of a surrogate to hear and determine a disputed claim, granted exclusively by that section, is dependent upon the filing by the respective *332
parties within six months after the dispute or rejection of the claim, with the surrogate, of their written consent as prescribed. A joint consent, such in effect as was made in the present case, filed within the six months by any party would fulfill the requirements of the statute. Individual consents may be made and filed, but the jurisdiction of the surrogate to act upon the consents is not complete or exercisable unless they are of all the parties and are all filed within the stated six months. In Clark v. Scovill (
In the case at bar the written consent of the respective parties was not filed within the period of six months from March 1, 1911, the date of the rejection of the claim of the respondents, which expired September 1, 1911. The surrogate, therefore, did not have jurisdiction to hear and determine the claim.
The order and the decree, in so far as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs to the appellant, and the matter remitted to the Surrogate's Court to proceed in accordance with this opinion.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE, CUDDEBACK and HOGAN, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.