This is an appeal from an interlocutory judgment sustaining the demurrer-interposed by the plaintiff to the first defense set forth in the amended answer of the defendant. The action was brought to determine the validity of the probate of a will of Mary Snelling, deceased, under section 2653a of the Code of Civil Procedure. For a first defense the defendants set up in their answer that the action was not commenced within the time prescribed by the section of the Code to which reference has been made; second, that the section has no application to personal property; third, that the section is not applicable to this action, because the testator died before its passage. The plaintiff demurred to that defense on the ground that it was insufficient in law upon its face. The issue of law was tried at special term, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, sustaining the demurrer, and from that judgment the defendants appealed.
The case is under the control of the first part of section 2653a, which reads as follows:
“Any person interested in a will or codicil admitted to probate in this state as provided by the Code of Civil Procedure, may cause the validity of the probate thereof to be determined in an action in the supreme court for the county in which said proof was had.” '
The section requires that the action should be commenced within two years after the will has been admitted to probate. In this case the will was first admitted to probate July 27,1891; but before two years from that date, and on January 17, 1893, the probate was reversed by the court of appeals. 32 N. E. 1006. Before two years had expired after the first probate of the will, the plaintiff was prevented from bringing this action by the judgment of the courts. By that judgment the original status was restored, and the parties were placed in the same condition as they were before the first probate of the will. They had the same rights before the surrogate, and the same right to attack the will, under section 2653a of the
Judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.