81 N.Y.S. 101 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The order should be reversed, with costs, for want of power in the Surrogate’s Court to entertain the motion or to make the order.
The matter of the probate of the alleged will had been removed by appeal to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, was still pending therein, and had never been remitted to the Surrogate’s Court.
Section 2586 provides : “ Where an appeal is taken upon the facts the appellate court has the same power to decide the questions of fact which the surrogate had ; and1 it may, in its discretion, receive further testimony or documentary evidence and appoint a referee.”
Section 2587 provides: “ The appellate court may reverse, affirm or modify the decree or order appealed from, and each intermediate order, specified in the notice of appeal, which it is authorized by law to review, and as to any and all of the parties; and it may, if necessary or proper, grant a new trial or hearing.”
Section 2588 provides: “ Where the reversal or modification of a
Section 2585 provides: “ In the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court the order made upon an appeal from a decree or an order of a Surrogate’s Court must be entered with the clerk of the Appellate Division, and a certified copy thereof annexed to the papers transmitted from the court below upon which the appeal was heard must be transmitted to the court from which the appeal was taken, and the court below shall enter the judgment or order necessary to carry the determination of the Appellate Division into effect.”
Under these provisions, a proceeding for the probate of a will» or the revocation of such probate, by an appeal from the decree in such proceeding, is removed into the Appellate Division. The decree covers the whole question, whether a will shall be adnritted to probate. There can be no separation of the matter, leaving a part in the Surrogate’s Court. The Appellate Division is given power to deal with the whole matter, even to granting a new hearingy which the surrogate here has assumed to grant. The Surrogate’s Court cannot interfere, and assume to act at all in the matter of the probate while it is in the Appellate Division, because the latter court has all the power of the Surrogate’s Court, and when its work is finished and it remits its action and decision to the Surrogate’s Court, the latter court must make the decree or order directed by the Appellate Division — can do nothing else—and that decree or order settles the whole matter. Uothing the surrogate might do, while the matter was before the Appellate Division, could interfere with the decree directed by the Appellate Division to be entered. The only proper construction of these provisions of the
It is suggested that the decision of the Appellate Division had been remitted to the Surrogate’s Court before this motion was made. Its final decision had not been and has not yet been so remitted and cannot be, so as to enable the surrogate to act upon the same until the trial of the issue sent to the jury is completed.
Section 2585 requires the surrogate to enter the order or judgment necessary to carry the determination of the Appellate Division
The result of the views hereinbefore expressed is that the application for a rehearing on questions cannot be made in Surrogate’s Court while the probate proceedings remain undetermined in this court. It can apparently be made here under the sections of the Code quoted. We have no doubt it can be made in the Surrogate’s. Court after the proceeding is finally remitted to that court. We do not pass upon the merits of the application.
The order here appealed from should be reversed, with ten dolíais costs and disbursements, to be paid by the respondent to the appellant King, as administrator, etc. Only one bill of costs is allowed because the question is new.
Adams, P. J., McLennan, Spbino and Hash,. JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, to be paid by the respondent to the appellant King, as administrator, etc.