This is an appeal from an order dismissing a petition in equity after a demurrer thereto had been sustained.
The petition, brought on the equity side of the Probate Court, on the supposed authority of G. L. c. 215, § 6, as amended, St. 1929, c. 342, § 1, in substance alleges that Charles E. Russell died in Lynn, in the county of Essex, on October 22, 1909, leaving a son, Charles E. Russell, Jr., and a widow, Etta E. Russell. His will was admitted to probate in Essex County and on December 30, 1909, the said Etta E. Russell was appointed executrix and duly qualified as such by furnishing bond without sureties. After a bequest to his son, the will gave to Etta E. Russell the income of the residue for life and as much of the principal as would be necessary to support her in a comfortable manner. All the estate remaining at her death was given to Charles E. Russell, Jr. A waiver of the will was duly filed on December 27, 1910, in the Probate Court. Ancillary administration was granted in Rockingham County, New Hampshire. No waiver of the will was ever filed in New Hampshire. The executrix filed her inventory in Essex County and in Rockingham County, but no account was filed by her in either county.
Etta E. Russell died in Lynn, in said Essex County, on August 5, 1930, and her son by a former marriage was appointed administrator of her estate by a decree of the Probate Court for Essex County, dated September 19, 1930, and, against the opposition of the petitioner, qualified as such by furnishing a bond without surety. Said administrator is now claiming for her estate an undivided one-third part of all the real and personal property left by Charles E. Russell at the time of his death, and which came to her under the waiver of the will.
The petition further alleges that Etta E. Russell never gave any notice of any kind to the petitioner that she had filed said waiver and claim, and that he never had any knowledge or notice from any source that the same had been filed, until after her death; that she carefully concealed from the petitioner the fact that she had filed said waiver and claim; and that the petitioner, having faith and confidence in her honesty and integrity, was led to believe that said will of his father remained in full force and effect and that his stepmother was claiming, taking and receiving the legacy therein given to her.
The petitioner, as remainderman, seeks to have it established that Etta E. Russell became estopped by virtue of her acts, conduct, concealment and misrepresentations, express or implied, from availing herself of the benefits and rights which otherwise would have accrued to her under her waiver of the provisions of said will and accompanying claim dated January 28, 1910; that the respondent, as her administrator and only heir at law and next of kin, is bound thereby; that title in and to all of the remaining assets of said estate of Charles E. Russell and the right of possession thereof are in- the petitioner as remainder-
The petitioner asserts in his brief that the petition does not seek to settle the account of said executrix, that it merely seeks to ascertain and determine the necessary facts to support the petitioner’s claim of estoppel and election; and contends that before it can be determined whether said Etta E. Russell had become estopped and had also elected to take her legacy under the terms of the will, as claimed, it must also appear to what extent she had profited through her acts and conduct and to what extent the petitioner had been damaged thereby. As above indicated the petitioner admits that the account of Etta E. Russell as executrix must be settled on the probate side of the court. Foster v. Bailey, 157 Mass. 160. Green v. Gaskill, 175 Mass. 265. Storer v. Coggan, 260 Mass. 515. Under G. L. c. 215, § 6, as amended by St. 1929, c. 342, § 1, the Probate Court is without jurisdiction in equity to require an executor or administrator to account for the income and management of real estate of a deceased person. Nor under its said equity jurisdiction has it authority to examine and settle the accounts of tenants in common. Fiske v. Quint, 274 Mass. 169.
The petitioner does not contend that the widow upon the filing of a waiver in the registry of probate within one year after the probate of the will of her husband, under the provisions of R. L. c. 135, § 16, did not take the same portion of the property of the deceased, real and personal, that she would have taken if Charles E. Russell had died intestate. The right given to a husband or wife, as the case may require, to waive the provisions of a will is an absolute, personal privilege in no wise dependent upon the assent or consent of persons affected by it. Consequently, the enjoyment of the privilege and the
The right of the petitioner, in so far as he seeks to restrain the respondent Ernest E. Shapleigh as the next of kin and sole heir from asserting and claiming any right, title and interest in and to the estate of Charles E. Russell by virtue of the waiver and claim of Etta E. Russell, rests entirely upon the allegation that Etta E. Russell is es-topped to claim the benefits of the exercised privilege because by her acts, conduct, concealment and misrepresentations, express or implied, the petitioner was ignorant until her death of the fact that she had waived the provisions in her husband’s will about twenty years before. The right sought by way of injunctive relief in no direct way concerns the administration of the estate of which Etta E. Russell was executrix, and is only incidental to a determination of the settlement of the executrix’s account. Under the frame of the bill the Probate Court under G. L. c. 215, § 6, as amended by St. 1929, c. 342, § 1, was without jurisdiction in equity to grant the relief sought by the petition.
Order dismissing petition affirmed.