Brown v. Anderson

13 Ga. 171
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1853
DocketNo. 17
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 13 Ga. 171 (Brown v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Anderson, 13 Ga. 171 (Ga. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

We are to determine whether the Circuit Judge administered the law when he overruled the demurrer to the plea filed by the defendants in the Court below. The defendants pleaded in bar, a judgment of the Superior Court of Upson County, upon appeal by consent from the Court of Ordinary, setting aside the will of Mrs. Bunkley, upon an'issue of devisavit vel non. The case originated before the Ordinary upon a citation to_ the executor, on the part of Terrel Barksdale and Stephen Harvey, parties interested in the estate of Mrs. Bunkley, calling upon him to show cause why the 'will should not be propounded for probate in solemn form. At the same time; they filed a caveat to the will, upon various grounds. The executor answered upon the order of the Ordinary, the rule calling upon him to show cause why the will should not be proven in solemn form, traversing the caveat, and pleading in bar of the right of the applicants to have the will'proven in solemn form, that it had already been proven in solemn form and passed to record. The question made on this plea in bar went to the Superior Court upon appeal. The judgment of the Superior [176]*176Court on that question, which was involved in the judgment setting aside the will, being, as stated, pleaded in bar. of this bill, and the plea being demurred to, it is insisted that the demurrer ought to have been sustained, because:

1st. The Ordinary had no jurisdiction of the cause, because the parties were estopped from having the will proven, on the ground that it had already been once proven in solemn form, and if the Ordinary had no jurisdiction, the Superior Court could acquire none by appeal, and therefore, its judgment was void. We are, therefore, first to inquire whether there was a previous probate of Mrs. Bunkley’s will, per testes. As to this point, how stand the facts ? By authority of the Act of 1810, the will was presented to two of the Justices of the Inferior Court, Messrs. Bethel and Beall, by the executor, Anderson, in vacation, and proven by the written oaths of the subscribing witnesses. No notice to the parties in interest, whatever, was given. The Act of 1810, whilst it allows probate in vacation, requires the will to be passed to record at a regular term of the Court of Ordinary. Cobb’s N. D. 284. At the next term after the probate, to wit: at May Term, 1850, the will was ordered to record upon tho written testimony of the witnesses, taken before Bethel and Beall, and the executor qualified. Whether they were present or not does not appear ; it is certain, however, that they were not examined. Notice of his intention to apply at this term for the record of tho will was given by the executor to the legatees. Was there, under these facts, a probate of this will in solemn form ? We are very clear that there was not.

[1.] A will is proven in common form when the executor presents it before the Judge, and in the absence of, and without citing the parties interested, produces witnesses to prove the same. In some Courts the will may be proven in this form by the oath of tho executor without more. Such probate, and it seems to me, with good reason, seems to be discouraged in the States of our Union, very generally. Jarman on Wills, 215. 1 Williams’ Executors, 205. Swinb. PI. 6, §14, p. 2. [177]*177Godolph. pt. 1 ch. 20, §4. 2 Black. Com. 508. 1 Greenleaf’s Evid. §518.

[2.] In England, to prove a will in solemn form, it is necessary that all such persons as have an interest in the estate of the deceased (as the widow and next of kin) should be cited to appear and witness the probation and approbation of the will; that it should be exhibited to the Court in their presence; that the witnesses should be sworn and examined secretly and severally, and that the adverse party have the privilege of cross-examination. There it seems that the examination is by commission, ordered by the Court, and the depositions are taken dowm in writing, which are afterwards published, and if the Judge finds the proof sufficient; he pronounces a decree in favor of the will. 1 Williams’ Executors, 208, 209. Swinb. Pl. 6, §14, p. 3. Grodolph. pt. -1, c. 20, §4. Jarman on Wills, 217.

Exactly the same formalities are not required with us, but it is necessary with us that all parties' in interest be cited to witness proceedings; that the will be produced in open Court; that the witnesses be there examined, and that all parties in interest have the privilege of cross-examination. The probate in form of law, may be at the instance of the executor, or it may be at the instance of the parties in interest. The probate of a will in solemn form is conclusive; the executor cannot be compelled to prove it again, and although all the witnesses afterwards be dead, the will still retains its full force. Not so when proven in common form ; for in that case, the executor may be compelled by any party interested, to prove it per testes. The time within which this must be done, does not appear í o be certainly fixed; it is, howmver, by weight of authority, thirty you rs in England. 1 Williams’ Executors, 209. Swinb. pt. 6, §14, p. 4. Godolph. pt. 1, ch. 20, §4. Newde vs. Weeks, 2 Phillim. 331, note.

[3.] According to the law then, neither the proof of this will as it was had in vacation, nor the proceedings before the Court at May Term following, nor both together, amounted to a probate in solemn form. The proof in vacation was not [178]*178in solemn form, because nobody was cited there to witness the proceedings. The absence of notice is conclusive as to that. The legatees were notified that the executor intended to apply at the May Term of the Court, for.an order to admit the will to record; but it does not appear that the next of kin were notified ; whether all the next of kin, or any of them are legatees, we have no means of knowing. But farther, there was no proof of the will in solemn form at that term of the Court. It was admitted to record on the written oaths of the witnesses previously taken. They were not examined — it does not even appear that they were present. Of course the parties notified had no opportunity to cross-examine them, and that fact is conclusive against the probate being in solemn form. Nor, taking the whole as the transaction of probate, (which, I think, is the correct view of the matter,) was there a solemn probation of the will, because at no time, had the parties the opportunity of cross-examination.' In the first instance, they were not notified, and in the second, (if all were notified, of which we are not at all certain,) the witnesses wore not produced and sworn. So the Ordinary was not precluded by a previous probate in solemn form, from entertaining the application for a probate upon which the appeal arose, and the Court did not err in overruling the demurrer to the plea, so far as this question is concerned.

[4.] The ground in support of the demurrer upon which counsel relied with confidence, and upon which they put forth much of their acknowledged strength, is that the judgment of the Superior Court, setting aside the will, is void for the want of jurisdiction, because there was no decision of the Court of Ordinary upon which an appeal could be taken, either by consent or otherwise.

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