The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a petition ánd was originally filed in the probate court, praying that a certain order of reference of that court might be revoked and annulled on the alleged ground that the reference is collusive as between the claimant and the administrator on the estate of Jeffrey Barnes, and designed to cut off the rights of the children of William Penn Barnes, who are interested in the estate of the petitionees, intestate. The main question is whether the probate court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the petition. The proceeding sought to be revoked is founded on section 39 of chapter 48 of the General Statutes, which provides that when there shall be any disputed claim existing between an executor or administrator in behalf of the estate he represents, or a guardian in behalf of his ward and any other person, such disputed claim may, with the consent of the parties in writing, be referred to referees, under an order of the probate court, and the award of. the referees, made in writing and returned to and accepted by the probate court, shall be final between the parties. No question is made but that the claim referred, and the parties to the reference are within the express provisions of the statute. It is obvious that suGh claim cannot be referred without the consent of the parties in writing ; nor does the right to a reference in such case depend upon their will or 'consent merely, but in order to authorize such mode of trial it must, upon the written consent of the parties, be ordered by the probate court.
It is urged by the petitionees that, as the act of reference was the concurrent act,.of the parties and court, the consent of the parties is necessary to justify its revocation. But it is apparent that under such a rule the rights of persons interested in the settlement of estates might depend upon the consent of a person who had unlawfully or by chance obtained the advantage, and not upon the jurisdiction, power and judgment of the probate court.
Probate courts iu this state have the exclusive jurisdiction of the settlement of estates, to the same extent, that jurisdiction of matters of contract, or tort, inter vivos, is given to the common law courts. We are not called upon to say what decision the probate court ought to have made upou the merits of the petitiou in this case, nor is it important to consider whether the decision of that court was upon the merits of the petition or upou a question of jurisdiction. The decision of the probate court in this case, denying the relief sought by the petition, was a final dispi si-tion of the matter before that court, and was, in that respect a denial from which an appeal might he taken." Adams v. Adams, 21 Vt. 162. The statute regulating appeals from the probate court, declares that any person interested in any order, sentence, decree or denial of that court, who considers himself injured thereby, may appeal therefrom to the county court. It was not necessary in order to the right of appeal, for the petitioner (o have been a party to the reference ; all the statute required to give him the right of appeal was an interest in the order, sen-.
The judgment of the county court dismissing the appeal is reversed and the case is remanded to the county court for further proceedings.