Julius J. Hadley died testate on October 17, 1961; the residuary clause of his will, the application of which is in dispute, is set out in the margin. 1 Esther *626 M. Waterbury died testate on December 1, 1967. The executor of her will (executor) requested that the trustees under Hadley’s will (trustees) pay the medical expenses of her last illness which the executor submitted to the trustees after her death. They refused, and the executor, by writ dated November 26, 1969, brought an action of contract in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston against the trustees seeking to recover those medical expenses in the sum of $4,633.93 and alleging in his declaration the trust relationship under Hadley’s will. The trustees removed the action to the Superior Court and filed a demurrer, which was sustained with leave to amend. No attempt was made to amend the declaration, and judgment was entered for the defendant trustees on February 2, 1970.
The executor thereafter contested the allowance of the trustees’ accounts on the ground that they should have paid those medical expenses. 2 A decree was entered on March 18, 1970, allowing the accounts as submitted by the trustees; the executor filed a timely claim of appeal and a request for a report of material facts. No such report of material facts was ever prepared; the trial judge resigned from the judiciary on September 15, 1971. On August 10, 1972, the executor filed a petition to vacate the decree allowing the accounts. On October 15, 1974, a probate judge vacated that decree; the trustees appealed and requested a report of material facts which the probate judge made and which we will discuss in connection with the trustees’ various contentions.
1. The trustees argue that the executor’s claim to reimbursement has no merit. But the probate judge stated that “[t]he question as to whether the trustees reasonably exercised th[eir] discretion [in refusing to pay those medical bills] was not before me.” And we agree with him “that the facts do present a meritorious case for which the
*627
petitioner was justified in seeking appellate review.” A meritorious case is one “worthy of judicial inquiry.”
Lovell
v.
Lovell,
2. The trustees also argue that the judgment in the executor’s action of contract in the Superior Court (the law action) is a bar to the executor’s claim in the probate
*628
proceedings on the trustees’ accounts. They point to the rule which gave that effect to a judgment where the defendant’s demurrer had been sustained and the plaintiff had been given leave to amend but had refused or neglected to do so.
Elfman
v.
Glaser,
But the judgment in the law action did not have preclusive effect, for the court in that action could not have granted the relief sought by the beneficiary’s executor against the trustees. (Indeed, this seems to have been the main thrust of the trustees’ demurrer, cf.
Hacker
v.
Beck,
3. The trustees invoke the paragraph of G. L. c. 206, § 24, which provides: — “After a final decree has been entered on any accounts hereunder it shall not be impeached except for fraud or manifest error.” That argument overlooks the principle “that a probate decree may be revoked or modified on petition for any reason that would warrant a bill of review in equity____”
Agricultural Natl. Bank
v.
Bernard,
Decree affirmed.
Notes
“All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate is to be held in trust by the ... [trustees] for the following purposes:
“(a) To pay to my Aunt, Esther M. Waterbury, of Boston, Massachusetts, the sum of One hundred and no/100 (100.00) Dollars a month for life, with full power in the Trustees, in the event of an emergency, to use a portion of the principal which, in their discretion, [s]hould be necessary for her comfort and support, consistent with her standard of living for the past five years.
“(b) To pay to Jeanette Libbey Whelan the sum of Fifty and no/100 (50.00) Dollars per month for life, but in the event that the said Jeanette Libbey Whelan remarries, this gift is to terminate.
“(c) Upon the death of Jeanette Libbey Whelan, to pay to Conrad S. Shumway, the sum of Fifty and no/100 (50.00) Dollars per month for life.
“Ninth: Upon the death of the survivor of the above-mentioned trust, said trust is to terminate. Upon termination of said trust, all assets of said estate are to be paid over to Massachusetts General Hospital to establish a fund in honor of my Mother... to be known as the Carrie Morrill Hadley Fund. Said fund is to be used for the benefit of needy widows with children.”
No question has been raised that the executor’s objection to the allowance of the accounts was not a proper method to assert his claim to reimbursement.
As in the Osserman case we treat the judgment in the law action without reference to the new rules of civil procedure.
Neither the trustees nor the executor has referred to the new rules of civil procedure though the order vacating the original decree was entered on October 15, 1974. We find it unnecessary to decide the extent to which, if any, the new rules are made applicable to proceedings for allowance of accounts by virtue of G. L. c. 206, § 4, and Mass.R.Civ.P. 1,
Similarly, we need not determine whether the new rules govern the appealability of that decree. It is appealable apart from the new rules.
Waitt
v.
Harvey,
We have used pre-July 1, 1974, nomenclature throughout without intending any indication as to the applicability of the new rules.
