79 N.C. 569 | N.C. | 1878
Blake v. Respass,
After the plaintiffs have established their debts in the proper Court, if the lunatic is in debt to them, it remains for their consideration whether they can then obtain the relief they are now demanding. Inre Latham,
As the Court of Probate had no jurisdiction to provide for the payment of the debt contracted prior to the lunacy, but the Superior Court only, the appeal of the plaintiffs from the order of the Court striking that claim from the complaint, can not be sustained. If the defendant had appealed from the refusal of the Judge to dismiss the action for defect of jurisdiction in the Probate Court, we would have felt disposed to sustain the appeal as the case is now presented to us. As it is however we will not dismiss but affirm the judgment of the Court, remanding the case as to the claim of $224.65, to be proceeded in as the plaintiffs may be advised in the Probate Court. They may see their advantage in dismissing the present proceeding and resorting to their *427 action in the Superior Court, where all the relief can be obtained to which the merits of their case may entitle them, for by Laws 1876-'77, ch. 241, sec. 6, in addition to the jurisdiction over lunatics and their estates inherent in the Courts of Equity, concurrent jurisdiction with the Courts of Probate is conferred upon the Superior Courts.
Affirmed.
Cited: Adams v. Thomas,