Shirley v. Healds

34 N.H. 407 | N.H. | 1857

Fowler, J.

By the provisions of the statute of this State, any person aggrieved by any decree, order, appointment, grant or denial of any judge of probate, which may conclude his interest, and which is not strictly interlocutory, may appeal therefrom to the Superior Court of Judicature next to be holden in the county. Such appeal must be claimed within sixty days from the time of making such decision, and not after, in writing signed by the party appealing, or his attorney, setting forth his interest therein, and the reasons of his appeal. Revised Statutes, chap. 170, secs. 1, 2.

It is apparent, from the language of this enactment, that in order to entitle any person to prosecute an appeal from the decree of a judge of probate, he must not only have an interest in the subject matter of the decree, which is concluded thereby, if the same be unreversed ; but in the petition claiming the appeal, the nature and extent of that interest must be so clearly and distinctly set forth as to be readily seen and understood.

It is objected in the present case, that the appellant neither has any such interest as entitles him to prosecute the appeal before us, nor has set forth any such interest in his petition. If sustained, either objection must be fatal to this proceeding, for, under the requirements of the statute, it is wholly immaterial in the effect upon the appeal, whether the appellant has sufficient interest or not, if none be set forth.

The only interest claimed or specified in the petition consists *411in the fact that the appellant was named as executor in the instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Daniel M. Shirley, the probate of which was denied by the decree appealed from, and the simple question is, whether that fact gave the appellant such an interest in the will or property of the deceased under it — such an interest in the subject matter of the decree appealed from — as entitled him to claim and prosecute this appeal.

Every person whose rights are involved or in any way affected injuriously by the decree of a judge of probate, may be considered as so aggrieved thereby as to entitle him to appeal therefrom. Bryant v. Allen, 6 N. H. 116.

The personal estate of a testator, and all contingent as well as absolute interests therein, upon his decease, vest in his executor, including his bonds, contracts and choses in action, as well as his goods and chattels, and are holden by him as trustee for the creditors, legatees, and whoever else is interested in the estate under the will. Dawes v. Boylston, 9 Mass. 337; Clapp v. Stoughton, 10 Pick. 463.

At the instant of the testator’s death the legal interest in all the personal property vests in the executor, and it can be divested only by operation of law, or some act of his own. Johns v. Johns, 1 M’Cord 132; Seabrook v. Williams, 3 M’Cord 371.

The property in the goods is vested in the executor before probate. Comyn’s Dig., Executor, B, 9; Bacon's Abr., Ex’rs, E, 14; Toller’s Ex’rs 46; Lofft 81. He derives his title to the personal estate, not from the probate but from the will. Webster & al. v. Spencer, 3 Barn. & Ald. 363.

The probate of the will doth not give executors any interest or title, either to the things in action or possession, for they have their whole title and interest by the will, and not by the probate. Hensloe’s Case, 9 Coke 38, a, and authorities.

An executor, before probate of the will, may release a debt due to the deceased, because he has the absolute interest of the debt in him, although he cannot have an action to recover it before probate. Sensloe's Case, 9 Coke 39, a; Coke Litt. 292, b; *4125 Coke 28, a. So he may maintain trespass, trover, &c., for goods taken out of his possession before probate of the will. Comyn’s Dig., Ex’rs, B, 9.

Before probate of the will, not only is the person named as executor seized of all the personal estate of the deceased, as trustee of the legatees and others, but he is the representative of the whole estate disposed of by the will. He is not only the sole trustee for all persons having an interest under the will, but he is the only legal representative of the estate of the deceased. As such, it is his duty to cause the will to be proved, and he is aggrieved in his rights and in his property by any decree which divests him of his title in the estate of the deceased under the will. Wiggin, Adm'r, v. Swett, 6 Metcalf 197, 198. In this case it was decided, that an administrator de bonis non had such an interest in the estate as entitled him to appeal from a decree allowing the account of a former executor or administrator.

The statute makes it the duty of the person named as executor of any will to cause the same to be proved, and he is to present the same for probate within thirty days after the decease of the testator, or after he has knowledge that he is so named, unless he shall, within that period, file in the probate office a written refusal of the trust. Severe pecuniary penalties are imposed for any neglect of duty. Revised Statutes, ch. 157, secs. 3, 4. It would be quite remarkable if a person were made liable to punishment for not doing what he had not sufficient interest to give him a legal right to do.

That the executor holds the personal property or estate under the will as a mere trustee for the legatees and creditors, is no reason why he is disqualified to prosecute an appeal from a decree disallowing and setting aside the will; for it has frequently been decided that a naked trustee, without any beneficial interest whatever, may prosecute such an appeal. Indeed, it may be regarded as well settled, that a party has a right to appeal whose rights and interests are necessarily affected by the decree, whether the rights affected are those which he has in a personal or representative capacity. Smith v. Bradstreet, 16 Pick. 264; Smith v. Sherman, 4 Cushing 411.

*413la the case of Northampton & al. v. Smith & als., 11 Metcalf 390, the testator bequeathed a sum of money to trustees, to be kept at interest until it had accumulated to a certain amount, and then to be paid over to the town of Northampton in trust for certain specified objects. The payment to Northampton was not to take place until the expiration of full sixty years from the decease of the testator. From a decree of the judge of probate respecting the will containing this bequest, the town of Northampton claimed and took an appeal. In overruling a motion to dismiss this appeal, on the ground that the town had no interest in the will, and was not an aggrieved party within the meaning of the law entitled to an appeal, the court say: Without considering at present the case of other towns named in the will, we find, on looking into the will, a large pecuniary bequest, payable at a future and distant day, directly to the inhabitants of Northampton in their corporate capacity. This, it is true, is in trust, to establish certain agricultural institutions; but as the legal estate must vest in the town, and as they have perpetual succession as a corporation, we think the corporation has now such an interest in the will as warranted them in an appeal from a decree declining to admit it to probate.”

It would be extremely difficult to conceive on what principle the legatees in trust under a will could be held to have an interest which would give them a right to appeal, where the legal title in the property bequeathed was not to vest in them until after the expiration of sixty years, and yet the persons named as executors, in whom the legal title to that property vested upon the death of the testator, and whom the law' constitutes the trustees and representatives of those legatees and their interests, not be held to possess a like interest.

Upon the whole, then, we entertain no doubt that a person named as executor in any will is not only bound to present the same for probate, unless he refuse the trust, but, as the trustee of the legatees and creditors, having the legal title of all the personal estate of the deceased under the will, and the legal representative of the whole estate, he possesses rights and inter*414ests to be affected by any decree disallowing, rejecting or refusing the probate of such will, which clearly entitle him to appeal therefrom. And the statement of the fact that the appellant is so named as executor, in a petition for appeal, is a sufficient setting forth of those rights and interests, to meet the requirements of the statute. For where the existence of a particular fact or state of facts is necessarily accompanied by certain legal rights and interests, a setting forth of the fact or state of facts is a sufficient averment of those rights and interests.

The motion to dismiss the appeal must therefore be denied.

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