118 Me. 109 | Me. | 1919
Appeal to the Supreme Court of Probate from allowance of will of Barney F. Rawley by the Probate Court of Knox County. The only specified reason of appeal is undue influence.
To these rulings the contestant excepted and filed his bill of exceptions.
. After hearing the Judge made his decree affirming that of the Judge of Probate. To this decree the contestant excepted and filed a second bill of exceptions.
Both bills of exceptions were allowed, but to the first the presiding Justice appended this clause: “The foregoing exceptions are, therefore, allowed, if, in the opinion of the law court, the same are allowable and the appellant entitled to have them allowed.”
Allowance oe Exceptions.
These exceptions were properly allowed.
The rulings were not findings of fact and not discretionary. They were rulings of law. If erroneous and prejudicial, exceptions afford a proper and perhaps the only appropriate remedy.
The rulings were an opinion and direction in a civil proceeding of “the court held by one justice.” The contestant being aggrieved seasonably presented exceptions as authorized by R. S., Chap. 82, Sec. 55.
It may be urged, however, that the rulings which are the subject of the contestants first bill of exceptions are not and cannot be prejudicial, inasmuch as a jury verdict in a probate appeal is advisory only and the opinion of the presiding Justice cannot be supposed to be affected by the course of procedure.
To so hold in a case where we have not the evidence before us would be in effect to say that a judge in making his decree cannot under any circumstances be influenced by a jury verdict.
The Right to Open and Close.
The right of opening and closing is a legal right, not a mere matter of judicial discretion. Unless clearly shown to be non-prejudicial, exceptions lie to its erroneous denial. Johnson v. Josephs, 75 Maine, 547. Reed v. Reed, 115 Maine, 441.
The right to open and close belongs- to the party against whom judgment would be rendered if no evidence were introduced on either side. Reed v. Reed, supra, and cases cited.
The appellant presents an able and ingenious argument and brief in support of his contention. We hold, however, that the position of the appellee is correct.
The contestants argument, condensed and summarized, is:
1 — —That he has the burden of proof on the only issue, i. e., the only point “affirmed on one side and denied on the other” (Bouvier).
But admitting this to be true still the appellee has the right to open and close if, in the first instance to secure affirmance of decree, he has to prove “anything” (Johnson v. Josephs, supra) though not in issue according to the above definition. Dorr v. Tremont Savings Bank, 128 Mass., 359.
2 — That the probate decree is not vacated by, but continues in force- after the appeal. “Further proceedings in pursuance of the matter appealed from cease.” R. S., Chap. 67, Sec. 35. But the decree, the contestant says, remains in force, not indeed justifying “further proceedings” such as appointment of executor, but in respect to findings not challenged by reasons of appeal, making a prima facie case for affirmation. Thus the contestant argues. But the status of a probate decree after appeal is not defined by the statute. It is left tp judicial interpretation- and courts generally, including our own, hold that an appeal vacates the decree. Gilman v. Gilman, 53 Maine, 188; Tarbox v. Fisher, 50 Maine, 237; Milliken v. Morey, 85 Maine, 342; Williams v. Robinson, 42 Vt., 658; Crowningshield v. Crowningshield, 68 Mass., 528; Boynton v. Dyer, 18 Pick., 4.
3 — That the appellant is confined to his reasons of appeal. Burpee v. Burpee, 109 Maine, 383, and cases cited. That this being true due .execution and legal capacity .not being specified in the reasons of appeal are impliedly admitted and need not be proved.
Our reasoning relates to will cases. The law of wills is sui generis. It may well be that in other probate appeals findings not specified in the reasons of appeal are to be treated as admitted. Patrick v. Cowles, 45 N. H., 553. In most other cases courts order any judgment or make any decree within the scope of the pleadings that the parties agree upon; but no court would even by consent of all parties allow a will on-its face invalid.
“Such transactions (agreements between parties in respect to wills) in fact, stand upon the footing of general dispositions by the rightful owners of property, and cannot operate to entitle to probate what was not, in the legal sense, a will.” Schouler on Executors, Section 72.
In ordinary cases the court does not take the initiative, but “it is said that the Judge may ex-officio, or at the instance of anyone, cite the executor to prove the will.” Stebbins v. Lothrop, 4 Pick., 42. See R. S., Chap. 68, Sec. 4.
Generally in litigation the parties before the court are alone interested. Not so in the case of wills. The rights of creditors of heirs and legatees, the interests of persons unborn or unascertained and the purpose of the testator are all to be guarded by the court.
“There is a distinction between an ordinary suit at law and a proceeding in the probate of a will. In the former the courts act upon the concessions of the parties of record, they being the only parties in interest; in the latter there are usually other persons interested who will be concluded by the result besides the proponent and contestant and their rights are not to be conceded away by the parties of record. If the contestant takes issue upon a single point only he does not thereby admit the other facts necessary to be established and thus relieve the proponent from his obligation to prove them. This he cannot do by his pleadings or otherwise.” Williams v. Robinson, 42 Vt., 658.
There are other illustrations that might be cited showing the radical difference between proceedings involving the probate of á will and other litigation, including other probate appeals.
The appellant relies with confidence upon the case of Patten v. Cilley, 46 Fed., 892.
In other words, the case holds that the Probate Court may not, but the Supreme Court of Probate may, base a decree allowing or disallowing a will, upon admissions. The reason given, or suggested, is that in the preliminary stages “all interested parties may not be present,” while on appeal the only interested parties are the appellants and appellees and they are present. We think this reasoning is not sound. In a case involving the validity of a will the interested parties are the same on appeal as in the preliminary stages. If in the Probate Court whose decrees are subject to appeal as a matter of right parties interested need to be protected by the court's inquisition from improper and possibly collusive admissions, a fortiori they need such protection in a court whose decrees may be final.
While not destroying the force of Patten v. Cilley as a precedent, it is significant to note that the case was subsequently remanded to the State Court “distinctly upon the ground that the Federal Court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter involved.” In re Cilley, 58 Fed., 977.
The decree of the Judge of Probate in the case at bar was vacated by the appeal. The omission to challenge in the reasons of appeal due execution and legal capacity does not relieve the proponent of the will from the primary burden of proving such execution and capacity. Having tills primary burden the appellee had the right to open and close.
Exceptions overruled.