2 Bradf. 325 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1853
John Mason died September 26,1839. An instrument propounded as his last will and testament, was duly admitted to probate by the Surrogate, October 21, 1839; and letters testamentary were issued to the executors. On the 20th day of October, 1840, Joseph Alston and Helen his wife, in the right of the latter as one of the next of ldn, filed allegations against the validity of the will and the competency of the proof thereof. The executors and legatees were cited to appear before the Surrogate, and show cause why the probate should not be revoked. The Surrogate, having heard the proof of the parties, confirmed the probate, on the 20th of June, 1842. Mr. Alston appealed to the Circuit Judge, who affirmed the Surrogate’s decision, on the 23d of November, 1844; and he then appealed from the decision of the Circuit Judge to the Court of Chancery. The case was pending before the Chancellor; and by Article XIV., § 5, of the new constitution, jurisdiction of the appeal as a proceeding then pending in the Court of Chancery, was vested in the present Supreme Court. A decree was pronounced at a general term of the Supreme Court, on the first Monday of June, 1848, declaring that the “ order or decision of the said Surrogate, and also the said decision of the said Circuit Judge, are and that each of them is erroneous in this, to wit, that the said paper-writing purporting to be the last
The issues made up under this order, were tried at a Circuit Court held by his Honor Judge Roosevelt, and a verdict rendered January 13, 1853. The jury found that the instrument was declared by John Mason to be his last will and testament “without knowledge;” that he requested the witnesses to attest it; that execution was not procured by fraud,"circumvention, undue influence, force, or coercion; but that it was not “ the last will and testament of the said John Mason;” that at the time of execution he was not “ of sound mind and memory, and in all respects capable of making a will;” and that the instrument was not “ freely and voluntarily executed or made as his last will and testament by the said John Mason.”
James Mason having procured a copy of the verdict, and a certificate by the County Clerk, that it was “ the final determination” of the issues “ by said jury,” filed the same in this court on the 14th of January, 1853 ; and he now moves the Surrogate to revoke the probate of the will of John Mason, and to grant him letters of administration as in case of intestacy.
The section of the statute authorising appeals to the Circuit Judge on the original probate of a will, was declared to be applicable to allegations against a probate already granted. That section (2 R. S., p. 66, § 55) authorises an appeal by the next of Mn, from a decree of original probate; but, as already seen, next of kin are not parties respondents to allegations filed after probate. Could they appeal as next of kin, when they were not parties in that character ? James Mason never filed allegations against the will; nor did he appeal from the decision ■ of the Surrogate, confirming the probate. Could he on the allegations filed by another person, he heard against the will before the Surrogate, or before the appellate court ?
2. Have these allegations been finally determined ? The statute directs that when on appeal from the Surrogate to the Circuit Judge, the latter shall “ reverse” the decision of the Surrogate, “ v/pon a question of fact’’ (2 R. S., p. 66, § 57), he “shall direct a feigned issue to be made up to try the questions arising upon the ápplication to prove such will, and shall direct the same to be tried at the next circuit court to be held in the county where the Surrogate’s decision was made.” This is the only provision made for a feigned issue; and whether an issue shall be directed or not, is not a matter of discretion with the Circuit Judge, but he is imperatively required to order an issue whenever he reverses the decision below, on a question of fact. The single - condition on which the award of an issue depends, is the reversal on a question of fact. If he reverses on a question of law, or if he affirm, then no jury is directed, but an appeal lies to the Chancellor. How, in the present case, the Circuit Judge did not reverse the decision of the Surrogate; but he affirmed it, and an appeal was taken to «the Chancellor. The exigency on which the statute made the feigned issue to depend, never occurred; and the stage of the case in which that exigency might have occurred, passed away. There can be no doubt, then, that this issue is not the issue directed by statute when the Circuit Judge reverses the decision of the Surrogate on a question of fact.
3. The appeal pending before the Chancellor was transferred, by the new constitution, to the Supreme Court, to be disposed of in the same course of procedure as would have been proper had it remained with the Chancellor. The tribunal was changed; but the principles applicable to the disposition of the case were not. They remained the same. On hearing the case, the Supreme Court reversed the decisions of the Surrogate and the Circuit Judge, and awarded a feigned issue. James Mason, claiming that the reversal was a final decree, which made it the duty of the Surrogate to revoke the probate, and that the award of an issue was void, applied on these grounds for a revocation of the probate. Judge Ingraham, acting as Surrogate, denied the application, holding that the decision of the Supreme Court was not a final determination of the case on the merits. I entirely concur in that conclusion (ante, jp. 181). That the Supreme Court never designed the simple reversal of the decree below to be a final decision as to the validity of the will, is apparent from the fact that an issue was ordered. The mere reversal, standing alone, and certified by the Court to the Surrogate, might be final; but a reversal followed by an award of a feigned issue contemplates other proceedings before determining on the validity of the will. The award