This wаs a bill in equity filed by the plaintiffs in error, Win. Peacock, Joseph Peacock, Aaron Peacock, and Daniel Pеacock, nephews of one Joseph Peacock, deceased, against the defendants in error, to test the validity of the will of the said Joseph Peacock, deceased, on account of mental incapacity of the deceased. The respondents, Ira H. Churchill and Haney Peacock, wife of the testator, werе the beneficiaries under the will and Charles Mead was one of the executors named in the will, and Churchill the other.
According to the allegations of the bill, the instrument in writing purporting to be the last will and testament of the said decedent was probated in the County Court April 3,1884, and letters testamentary granted to said Churchill and Mead on that date, and the bill further alleges thаt they assumed the executorship of the estate.
The bill was filed December 2, 1887. To the bill a demurrer was interposed оn the grounds that the said bill was not exhibited in the time required by law, and complainants took leave to, and did amend the bill, setting up as an excuse that the plaintiffs in error had previously filed a similar bill in the Circuit Court setting up the same cause of action, to wit, September 8, 1884, which bill was pending in the said Circuit Court Hay 24, 1887, on which last day it was dismissed on motion of the respondent, for thе non-compliance of complainants with a rule laid on them by the court requiring them to file security for costs, which complainants were unable to comply with. To the amended bill the defendants also filed their demurrer, setting up among other things for cause thereof that the bill showed on its face that the statute of limitations had run against said complainants before the filing of said bill so that in law the same would not lie. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill at the complainants’ costs. To reverse said decree this writ of error is sued out of this court.
The only question for our consideration is, was ihire ground for sustaining the demurrer ? The plaintiffs in error insist that they have a right under Sec. 25, Chap. 83, B. S., concerning general limitations, tо file the bill even after the expiration of the three years in which bills of this nature are by statute required to be filed. This statute yeads as follows : “In any of the actions specified in any of the sections of said act, if judgment shall be given for the рlaintiff and the same be reversed by a writ of error or upon appeal, or if a verdict pass for the plaintiff аnd upon matters alleged in arrest of judgment, the judgment be given against the plaintiff, or if the plaintiff be non-suited, then if the time limited fоr bringing such action shall have expired during the pend-ency of such suit, the plaintiff, his heirs, executors or administrators, as the case shall require, may commence a new action within one year after such judgment reversed or given against the plaintiff.”
It is insisted that this is a mere limitation act, under which this bill is filed, and that the general act applies to it; that the dismissal was аn involuntary non-suit as farascomplainants were concerned, and that being such, they have a right to file this bill within one yeаr from the date of such dismissal. To show that this was an involuntary non-suit the following case is cited: Holmes v. C. & A. R. R. Co.,
In Luther v. Luther,
It will be sеen, then, that the act allowing bills tobe exhibited to contest the validity of wills is in no sense an act of limitations —hence thе statute can not be governed by any provisions of the general limitation law, or in fact by any limitation law. It is'a jurisdictionаl statute and grants only a limited time in which such bills shall be exhibited. It is in fact an enabling statute without which no bill could be filed to test the vаlidity of a will. If the Legislature had designed any exceptions like the one here contended for, it certainly would havе so framed the statute as to provide for them, or have passed some other remedial statute. We must therefоre conclude that the plaintiffs in error had no cause of action under the statute, their rights, if any, having been lost by failing to take advantage of the statute or to pursue its provisions.
The court below held correctly in sustaining the demurrer to the bill and dismissing it. The decree is therefore affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
