Anderson v. . Anderson

19 N.E. 427, 112 N.Y. 104, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 344, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 804
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 427 (Anderson v. . Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. . Anderson, 19 N.E. 427, 112 N.Y. 104, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 344, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 804 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

This action is brought to establish by a judgment of the Supreme Court the will of the late John Anderson. The case comes here on an appeal from an order of the General Term reversing an order of the Special Term granting an injunction restraining defendants from the prosecution of any action based upon the invalidity of the alleged will. Ordinarily no appeal lies to this court from an order dissolving an injunction, but the General Term has incorporated in its order a statement that the order of the Special Term granting the injunction is reversed on the ground that the action cannot be maintained, and hence a question of law is raised which is reviewable here. (Allen v. Meyer, 73 N. Y. 1; Talman v. Syracuse, etc., R. R. Co., 92 N. Y. 353.)

The will which is here sought to be established devises the absolute title in fee-simple to the larger part of the estate of the testator to the plaintiff, and he or his vendees are in possession; and the question to be decided is whether a devisee of the legal estate, being in possession of the property devised can maintain an action to establish the will against the heir-at-law.

It is claimed that such an action could be maintained in England, and that the Court of Chancery in this state could have taken cognizance thereof; and that such jurisdiction was transferred to the Supreme Court under the present Constitu *107 tian as an inherent, equitable jurisdiction of that court. It is also claimed that it exists by virtue of chapter 316 of the Laws of 1879, or if that has been repealed, that it still exists by virtue of sections 1866 and 1867 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

We think that the jurisdiction claimed does not exist in this state.

The question has been decided in England in a manner favorable to the views of the learned counsel for the plaintiff. It was so decided in the case of Boyse v. Rossborough (1 Kays Ch. 71; S. C., on appeal in chancery, 3 De G-ex, ]\£. & G. 817; and in the House of Lords, 6 H. L. 1, in 1857). The affirmance in the House of Lords was upon the admission of the counsel that such an action would lie. By the several opinions of the learned judges it appears that they were unable to determine the origin of the jurisdiction with any certainty, but the claim that it was to be limited to cases in which trusts were created by the will was not thought by them to be satisfactory. They, said there was no special equity against the •heir which arose by reason of the existence of the trusts, because the only question in which he was interested was the question of will or no will, which existed just the same whether trusts were or were not created by the instrument. It is true that the question in which the heir is interested is whether there is or is not a will, and still the jurisdiction of chancery to establish the will might depend upon its general jurisdiction over trusts and that jurisdiction might depend upon the question whether there was a valid will or not, and thus by reason of its jurisdiction over trusts it could exercise the incidental jurisdiction of establishing the instrument in which they were created, as properly executed by a competent testator.

However that may be, the case cited does decide that such an action could be maintained in England. In a note to the report of the case in 3 De Gex, Macnaghten & Gordon, 817, it is stated that, by reason of the passage of the act of 20 and 21 Yic-' toria (Chap. 27, § 12), providing for the probate of a will of *108 real estate in a court of probate, the practice of establishing it in chancery is of comparatively rare occurrence. The English rule is stated in Pomeroy’s work on Equity Jurisprudence (3 Pom'. Eq. Juris. § 1158); and in a note it is said that the sole ground of the jurisdiction was a condition in England which does not exist in a single American state, and no longer exists in England, because of the passage of the act of 20 and 21 Victoria {supra), establishing courts of probate for wills of real estate. In this country jurisdiction is granted to courts of probate to pass upon the question of the due execution of wills of both real and personal property; and unless special and exceptional cases are shown to exist for the interposition of a court of equity, bills for the mere purpose of establishing a will in equity in the case of a devisee of a legal estate, who is in possession under the will, ought not.to be maintained.

Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence (2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1441), gives the English rule on the subject, but cites no American case to sustain it. Actions have been permitted both in England and in this state to be brought in equity by an heir-at-law against a devisee, where the heir sought to set aside the will, and where there was an outstanding term granted by the testator in his lifetime, by reason of the existence of which an action of ejectment could not be maintained by the heir. In such cases the heir has been permitted to come into a court of equity and ask for an injunction against the devisee, enjoining him from setting up, in an action of ejectment to be brought by the heir against him, the existence of the outstanding term as a defense to the action; and in such cases it has been held that the court was not bound to proceed only to the extent of granting the injunction, but that it might also grant an issue to be tried at law as to the validity of the will, or it might simply grant the injunction and leave the heir-at-law to his action of ejectment. This doctrine is very fully stated in the English case above cited of Boyse v. Roseborough, in the report in Kay. It is also thus decided in the case of Brady v. McCosker *109 (1 N. Y. 214). I have been unable to find any reported case in this state holding that the Supreme Court has any such inherent jurisdiction as is claimed by the learned counsel for the plaintiff.

The case of Van Alst v. Hunter (5 Johns. Ch. 148), was the case of an action by the heirs-at-law against the defendants, as devisees, to set aside the will as made by an incompetent testator. The defendants had taken possession of the real estate under the will. Why an action of ejectment was not brought by the heirs-at-law is not stated in the case, if or was the question of jurisdiction once raised, or the subject adverted to in any manner whatever. The chancellor had granted a feigned issue upon the question of competency of the testator, which had been once tried at law, and the verdict was in favor of the will, and the judge trying the case certified his satisfaction therewith. Counsel for the heirs-at-law moved for a new trial, as matter of course, and contended that in such a case, where the result of the verdict was to disinherit the heir, that a new trial by the English rule was invariably granted. The only question decided by the chancellor was that there was no such inexorable rule for the granting of a new trial as matter of right; that it remained discretionary with the chancellor, and in that particular case he exercised it by refusing to grant a new trial. Clarke v. Sawyer (2 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 427, 112 N.Y. 104, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 344, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-ny-1889.