Buel's Appeal From Probate

22 A. 488, 60 Conn. 63, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 A. 488 (Buel's Appeal From Probate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buel's Appeal From Probate, 22 A. 488, 60 Conn. 63, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 10 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

*64 TORRANCE, J.

This case comes before us upon a reservation. The appeal was taken from two orders or decrees of the court of probate for the district of Waterbury, made in the settlement of the estate of Philo Brown, deceased. The administrator with the will annexed made a return to the probate court, showing the existence of certain unpaid claims against the estate, and also made application for an order to sell all the remaining personal and real estate thereof. The probate court ordered the acceptance of the return, and granted an order in accordance with the prayer of the application.

The appellant, who is a daughter of the deceased, claiming an interest in the real estate ordered to be sold, appealed to the Superior Court from both of the orders. The only questions, however, made upon the appeal or reserved for the advice of this court, relate to the order of sale of the real estate.

One of the questions arising upon the finding of facts made by the Superior Court in the case, is, whether the appellant has any such interest in the real estate ordered to be sold as entitled her to take an appeal. The administrator with the will annexed claims that under the will of Philo Brown the appellant has no interest whatever in said real estate. On the other hand, the appellant claims that either as heir-at-law of her father, or under his will, she has such an interest as entitles her to take the appeal.

In the view we take of the case it will be unnecessary to decide this question, and in the discussion of the other questions involved we will, for the purposes of the argument merely, assume that she has such an interest:

The statute under which this order of sale was made, gives the court of probate, upon the application of the executor or administrator of any deceased person whose estate is in settlement in such court, power in its discretion to “ order the sale of the whole or a part of any real estate or an undivided interest therein, in such manner and upon such notice as it shall judge reasonable ; ” and to divide or distribute the surplus, if any, after paying the debts, ■ “ in the *65 same manner as such real estate would have been divided or distributed if the same had not been sold.” Gen. Statutes, § 600. Did this section authorize the court of probate in its discretion to make the order in question here upon the facts disclosed by the record ? We think it did.

As early as 1782 such courts were, by an act of the legislature, empowered to sell so much of the real estate of a deceased person as should be sufficient to pay the debts and charges, in cases where the debts and charges allowed exceeded the value of the personal estate. Prior to that time, as appears by the orders for such purpose- scattered through the colonial records, such a power had been exercised by the legislature from a very early period. The power thus confided by statute to the courts of probate was, down to a comparatively recent period, very strictly limited and guarded. Prior to 1788 such power was limited to the cases mentioned in the statute, and only so much of the real estate could be sold as would, with the available personal estate, be sufficient to pay the debts and charges. In 1788 an act was passed giving to the judge of the probate court, when the debts and charges could not be fully paid out of the personal estate “ without prejudice to the widow or heirs, by depriving them of their necessary stock and implements of farming, or other business of upholding life,” power to order “ payment of such part of the debts and charges as he shall judge reasonable, by disposing of the land or real estate for that purpose in such way and manner as he shall judge to be most equitable and beneficial for the widow and heirs or devisees of such estate, any law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.” Revision of 1808, page 270, chap. 8, sec. I. This provision was continued upon the statute book in substantially the same form down to the revision of 1866, in which it appears as section 48, page 412.

In 1862 an act was passed providing that if the appraised value of the real estate in the inventory of any estate should exceed the amount of the debts and charges specified in any order of sale, the administrator or executor might apply in writing to the court of probate, describing the real estate *66 proposed to be sold under the' order, alleging that'the real estate could not be beneficially divided, and if the court, after a_ hearing, found the allegation true, it might order the sale of the whole or a part, or an undivided interest, of such real estate, and divide or distribute the surplus proceeds of the sale, if any, as the real estate would have been divided or distributed if it had not been sold. Public Acts of 1862, chap. 45.

In 1864 the court of probate was empowered, in order to pay debts and charges or legacies, to order the sale of real estate instead of personal, if, on application therefor and hearing, “ it shall appear to said court to be most for the benefit of said estate that said real estate should be sold instead of personal estate.” Public Acts of 1864, chap. 83.

In the revision of 1875 the act of .1788 does not appear, doubtless for the reason that the cases therein provided for were covered by the act of 1864. The other provisions referred to appear in the revision of 1875, p. 894, as sections 36, 37 and 38 respectively. Section 36 furnished the general rule ; sections 37 and 38 provided for exceptional cases.

The first exception was where the sale of real estate rather than personal might be ordered, and this was confined to cases where the court, upon application and hearing, found that such a course would “ be most for the benefit of those interested in the estate.” In such cases the court could order to be sold only so much of the real estate as might be necessary to pay the debts, legacies and charges.

The second exception provided for cases where so much of the real estate had been ordered sold as was necessary to pay debts, and the court on written application of the executor or administrator found that such real estate could not be beneficially divided. In such cases the whole or a part of, or an undivided interest in, the real estate might be ordered sold, and the surplus proceeds of the sale, if any, divided or distributed as the land would have been if it had not been sold. The act of 1884 (chap. 17), extended the provisions of section 38 (Revision of 1875, p. 394), to “ any real es *67 tate proposed to be sold,” without reference to any previous order of sale made by the probate court.

Thus the law stood when the act of 1885 (Public Acts of 1885, chap. 110, sec. 166), was passed, which appears in the revision of 1888 as section 600, and is hereinbefore referred to. In that section the various provisions with reference to the sale of real estate of deceased persons, heretofore considered, were consolidated, and in making such consolidation the power of the court of probate to order such sales has, we think, been enlarged rather than restricted.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A. 488, 60 Conn. 63, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buels-appeal-from-probate-conn-1891.