212 Mass. 335 | Mass. | 1912
This is an appeal from a decree of the Probate Court of Suffolk County allowing an instrument dated April 17, 1905, as the last will and testament of one Mary E. Phelps. The case was heard by a single justice
1. The appellants are sisters and a half-sister of the testatrix. Another sister, Mrs. Adams, and her children are the principal beneficiaries under the will. The record shows an appearance by Lyman W. Griswold, an attorney at law, in behalf of Mrs. Adams in favor of the petition, and he was present during a part of the hearing before the single justice. Mrs. Adams was called as a witness by the appellants and they claimed the right to cross-examine her as an adverse party. The single justice ruled that they were not entitled as of right to cross-examine her, and the appellants excepted. This is the first exception. Although “The decree of the corn* admitting the will to probate is in the nature of a judgment in rem, which establishes the will against all the world,” Bonnemort v. Gill, 167 Mass. 338, 340, the executor and contestants are so far adverse parties that, as was assumed in Moore v. Stoddard, 206 Mass. 395, the executor has a right to file interrogatories under R. L. c. 162, § 41, which the contestants can be required to answer. In the present case, however, Mrs. Adams was not a party to the proceedings. The only parties were the executor on one side and the contestants or appellants on the other. While, if a proper case was made out, it was within the discretion of the single justice to have allowed her to appear and be heard in support of the will (Old Colony Trust Co. v. Bailey, 202 Mass. 283, 290, 291), no such rule or order was passed, and she was not therefore in any proper sense a party to the proceedings. The appearance of an attorney in her behalf in favor of the petition for allowance of the will did not without anything more constitute her a party to the proceedings so as to entitle the contestants to cross-examine her as an adverse party. This exception must therefore be overruled.
2, The contestants asked the single justice to rule that “Upon all the evidence the petition should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction” on the ground that the petitioner had no standing in court as executor. The ruling was rightly refused. By the act of incorporation the petitioner was authorized “to establish and maintain a safe deposit, loan and trust company in the city of Boston; with all the powers and privileges and subject to all the duties, liabilities and restrictions set forth in all general laws
3. The contestants also asked the single justice to rule that the evidence did not warrant a finding that the will was legally executed in the presence of three competent witnesses, by a person having testamentary capacity. The ruling thus asked for presented a question of fact which it was for the justice to pass upon. His findings in relation thereto will not be set aside unless plainly wrong. Wight v. Shaw, 202 Mass. 541. He found that the testatrix was of testamentary capacity and that “the will was duly executed in the presence of three competent witnesses, who saw the testatrix sign, and who affixed their signatures as witnesses in her presence and in the presence of each other.” So far as the evidence is reported it shows that these findings were plainly right. This exception also must be overruled.
It follows that the entry must be: Exceptions overruled.
So ordered.
Braley, J.