77 S.E. 955 | N.C. | 1913
This is an action by W. P. Lloyd to set aside the will of Thomas F. Lloyd, who died in 1911, leaving a will which was duly probated. He was survived by a widow and several brothers, among them the caveator, W. P. Lloyd. The widow of the testator, Caroline Lloyd, within the time prescribed by law, dissented from the will. The executors brought action in September, 1911, in which (558) the complaint alleged that Thomas F. Lloyd had left a will which had been duly admitted to probate and recorded, annexing a copy thereof as a part of the complaint; that the executors had duly qualified, that the widow had dissented, and asking that her dower should be allotted and for a construction of the will. The complaint also set out the realty and other property of the decedent and asked that the property be sold and for such orders and decrees as might be necessary. In that proceeding all the heirs at law and devisees were made parties defendant, except those that were named as plaintiffs. The plaintiff in this action accepted service of the summons therein. A decree was entered in said action construing the will, directing the allotment of dower, the sale of realty, confirming the sale and directing disposition of proceeds in accordance with the prayers of the complaint.
The proceedings and judgment in the above action are pleaded as an estoppel against this proceeding to caveat the will. This plea was sustained, and the caveator, W. P. Lloyd, appealed. His Honor properly held, "The said W. Pinckney Lloyd was estopped by the judgment and decree rendered in said action defining his rights as heir at law and next of in of the said Thomas F. Lloyd, and as he raised no question as to the validity and execution of the will of said Thomas F. Lloyd, filed as a part of the complaint in that action, he cannot now be heard to do so. And it is therefore ordered and adjudged that the caveat filed by him be dismissed at his cost." *454
W. P. Lloyd, the plaintiff in this proceeding, was a party to the former action, in which the will was set out in full, its validity averred, and in which it was asked that the will be construed, the realty sold, dower allotted, and the executor instructed as to the disposition of the estate. He made no objection or exception, though he accepted service of the summons therein. All the parties were before the court, the validity of the will was averred, and he could have made it an issue by his denial of such averment. But he did not choose to do so, and is now estopped by the judgment and decrees in that action. It may be that W. P. Lloyd, a defendant in that action and the plaintiff in (559) this, could have treated that action as a proceeding to prove the will in solemn form. But however that may be, he could certainly have denied the first paragraph of the complaint, which alleged the validity of the will, and have asked that the other allegations of the complaint be not passed upon until the caveat which he had filed, or would file, was adjudicated. He chose to do none of these things, and cannot now be heard to raise a contest as to the validity of the will, which he admitted by his failure to take any action.
Among the cases which sustain the judgment of the court in this matter are fisher v. Boyce,
Another case in point is Corprew v. Corprew,
In Allen v. Allen,
The case of In re Thomas,
The point now attempted to be raised in this proceeding as to the validity of the will was necessarily passed upon, or admitted, in the former action, and hence the judgment therein is an estoppel. Gay v.Stancill,
"The judgment by default is as conclusive an adjudication between the parties as to whatever is essential to support the judgment as (561) one rendered after answer and contest. The essence of estoppel by judgment is that there has been a judicial determination of a fact, and the question always is, `Has there been such a determination?' and not upon what evidence or by what means it was reached. Bigelow on Estoppel says: `Judgment by default, like judgment on contest, is *456
conclusive of what it actually professes to decide, as determined from the pleadings; in other words, that facts are not open to further controversy if they are necessarily at variance with the judgment on the pleadings.'"Mining Co. v. Mining Co.,
In Wagon Co. v. Byrd,
The plaintiff "having been silent when he should have been (562) heard, cannot now be heard when he should keep silent."
While it is true that a caveat is not barred by the statute of limitations till after the lapse of seven years, this does not prevent the application of an estoppel. Indeed, the statute 1907, ch. 862 (Pell's Revisal, 3135), is not an enabling act, but creates a bar from lapse of time when there was none before. In re Beauchamp,
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
Cited: Poplin v. Hatley,