153 A. 9 | N.H. | 1931
"Great confusion would follow if, after proof of a will, license to sell in the probate court, assignment to children, and *516
partition, among the devisees, of the residue, it was still competent for anyone who might be dissatisfied, to try an issue devisavit vel non in a suit at common law." Poplin v. Hawke,
A decree admitting a will to probate determines conclusively that such will was not induced by fraud or undue influence. Glover v. Baker,
The decree of a probate court is in the nature of a proceeding in rem (Starkey v. Kingsley,
The plaintiffs do not claim that they were unaware of the probate of the will, or that all jurisdictional formalities were not complied with. Notice to legatees under P. L., c. 298, s. 15, which is not required until after the executor's appointment, is clearly not a jurisdictional requirement. Moreover, there is no suggestion that the plaintiffs were in any way prejudiced by the alleged failure of the executor to give this notice. See Davis v. Smith,
The only fraud alleged, beside that in procuring the execution of the will, comprises that of the executor in failing to give the notice, and that of the executor and the defendant McDonald in connection with the inventory. If the plaintiffs were aggrieved by these acts, their remedy was "an application to the probate court." Reed v. Prescott,
Since proof of damage is essential to the maintenance of an action for conspiracy (Stevens v. Rowe,
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *517