58 Me. 225 | Me. | 1870
This is a probate appeal case presenting a question of jurisdiction. It is contended that the probate court of the county of Androscoggin did not have jurisdiction, because, as the contestants say, the deceased did not at the time of her death reside in that county. But is this objection now open to them ? We think not. The jurisdiction assumed by a judge of probate, so far as it depends upon the residence of any person, cannot be contested except on appeal in the original case, unless there is fraud, or want of jurisdiction apparent upon the face of the record. R. S. of 1857, c. 63, § 6.
Administration was granted upon this estate in 1858, upon a representation that the deceased was of Turner, in the county of Androscoggin; which fact, the record says, was “ made fully to appear.” Any one aggrieved by this action of the probate court had a right to appeal therefrom at any time within thirty days; and if prevented from so doing by accident or mistake, or defect of notice, or other cause, without fault on his part, the supreme court had power to allow such appeal to be entered any time within a year. (R. S., 1857, c. 63, §§ 19, 21.) No such appeal was taken or claimed. The settlement of the estate was allowed to proceed for over six years, and until the administrator’s fourth and final
We are aware that the law was at one time held otherwise in Massachusetts, as the cases cited by the learned counsel for the contestants show. But the law is now changed in that State as well as this. In fact, the statute, of which ours is a transcript, was first enacted in Massachusetts, and upon recommendation of the commissioners appointed to make the revision of their statutes, which went into effect in 1886. We have the printed report of the commissioners now before us. Referring to the law as it then stood, they say that if an administrator or a guardian is appointed by a judge of probate, who has not jurisdiction of the case, the whole proceedings are considered void, and titles to real estate, as well as all other titles, acquired under such proceeding, are entirely defeated; that if the jurisdiction depends on any question of fact which is provable by parol evidence, such as the place of residence of any deceased person, the evidence to prove that fact would not appear of record in the probate court, and years afterwards it might be impossible to produce the same evidence; or any other, to establish the same fact; that however strong the evidence of the party who denies the jurisdiction may be, it cannot be known that the evidence on the other side was not originally stronger; that as creditors, heirs, legatees, and others interested in the estate, have a right to appear at the inception of the proceedings, and contest the jurisdiction, if they omit to do so, they cannot justly complain of the decision. Mass. R. S. of 1836, c. 83, § 12; Rep. of Com., part 3, pp. 24, 30; Maine R. S. of 1841, c. 105, § 22; R. S. of 1857, c. 63, § 6.
We cannot doubt the wisdom of this change; for questions of domicile are among the most vexatious and difficult that courts of
But there is another question to be considered. The contestants claim that if the residence of the deceased is to be regarded as conclusively settled so far as to give the probate court jurisdiction of the case, it may nevertheless be controverted for the purpose of controlling the distribution of the estate.
Our conclusion is, that this cannot be done. The jurisdiction assumed by the probate court was original and not ancillary. It was assumed upon a representation (then satisfactorily proved), that the deceased at the time of her death was a citizen of this State. The record so states. No appeal having been taken, and no suggestion of fraud being made, we think the question of domicile must be regarded as conclusively settled for all purposes connected with the administration of the estate. To hold otherwise would subject the settlement of the estate to all the inconveniences which it was plainly the object of the statute to avoid. The record as now made up states in substance that deceased, at the time of her death, was %, citizen of Maine. If the record should now be made to say that she was at that time a citizen of Ohio, it would not only be self-contradictory, but self-destructive; for the want of jurisdiction would then be apparent upon the face of the record, and the protective power of the statute would cease to operate. The statute does not apply to cases where the want of jurisdiction is apparent upon the face of the record. The moment, therefore, that the record should be made to say that the deceased, at the time of her death, was a citizen of Ohio, and not a citizen of Maine, that moment the jurisdiction assumed in this case would be shown to be erroneous, and all the proceedings under it would become void, ah initio, and the settlement of the estate subjected to all the inconveniences which it was the object of the statute to obviate.
Decree of the judge of prolate reversed; a decree to le entered that distribution le made according to the laws of Maine, and the case remanded to the pyrolate court for further proceedings.