Burger v. . Burger

19 N.E. 99, 111 N.Y. 523, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 66 Sickels 523, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1045
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 99 (Burger v. . Burger) 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
Burger v. . Burger, 19 N.E. 99, 111 N.Y. 523, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 66 Sickels 523, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1045 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinions

This is an appeal by the executor of the will of John Burger, deceased, from an order of the General Term, reversing on the facts the decision of the surrogate of Monroe county, admitting the will to probate and directing an issue to be tried by a jury as to the mental capacity of the testator when the will was executed. The appellant in limine insists that the General Term had no power to review the finding of the surrogate on the facts, for the reason that there was no sufficient exception in the case. This question involves a consideration of the practice to be pursued on an appeal from the decree of a surrogate in probate cases, in order to enable the General Term to review his decision on the facts. Section 2576 of the Code expressly authorizes an appeal to be taken from the decision of a surrogate "upon questions of law, or upon the facts, or upon both." The contestant in her notice of appeal specified that the appeal was taken both on the law and the facts. The surrogate, after the hearing, made and filed his decision, stating separately his findings of fact and his conclusion of law. He found that the will was duly executed; that at the time the testator was of sound mind, competent to make a will, and fully understood its contents, and was under no restraint; and, as a conclusion of law from these facts, that the will should be admitted to probate. The contestant thereupon excepted in writing to "each and every part of the conclusion of law" found and contained in the decision of the surrogate, and made no other exception to the findings and no requests to find were made by either party.

The exception to the conclusion of law raised simply the question whether, upon the facts found or any supporting facts not specifically found, the conclusion was justified. (Belknap v. Sealey, 14 N.Y. 148; Armstrong v. Du Bois, 90 id. 97.) The conclusion of the surrogate was plainly in accordance with his findings of fact, and the jurisdiction of the General Term to review the facts or to order issues, if it existed, must rest upon some other basis than this exception. The general power of the Supreme Court at General Term to review the decree of a surrogate admitting a will to probate, *Page 526 and to reverse his decree on the facts and order issues to be tried by a jury when in its judgment the decision is contrary to or against the weight of evidence, or the facts are so doubtful that, in the opinion of the General Term, justice will be promoted by a retrial before a jury, is clearly recognized by the Code and is incontestable. (Code, §§ 2576, 2588.) The question is, by what procedure is this power to be invoked and how is the right of a party seeking its exercise regulated? There has always existed in this state in some tribunal a supervisory power over the decisions of a surrogate in probate cases upon the facts. Under the Revised Statutes an appeal was permitted to the circuit judge from a decision of a surrogate admitting or refusing probate of a will, who was authorized to reverse the decision on the law or the facts, and if the reversal was on a question of fact, to direct a feigned issue to be tried by a jury. (2 R.S., 66, §§ 55, 57.) This subject was not affected by the Code of Procedure of 1848, but, by chapter 185, of the laws of that year, the jurisdiction theretofore vested in the circuit judges in probate cases was transferred to the Supreme Court, and was thereafter exercised by the General Term. In the Supreme Court the practice was prescribed by rule 44. It provided that the appeal should be instituted by petition by the party appealing, which should briefly state the general nature of the proceedings and of the sentence, order or decree appealed from, and should specify the fact or facts complained of as erroneous, unless the whole sentence, order or decree was claimed to be so, in which case it was sufficient to so state. It was not, as we understand, necessary under the Revised Statutes, or the practice prescribed by rule 44, after the passage of the act of 1848, that an exception should have have been taken by the appellant from the decision of a surrogate admitting a will to probate as a prerequisite to the jurisdiction of the appellate court to pass upon the facts, and, in case of reversal upon the facts, to direct a feigned issue. Under rule 44, the filing of the petition alleging that the decision of the surrogate was *Page 527 erroneous on the facts, raised the question whether his decision was supported by the facts or by the weight of evidence, and enabled the court to consider whether justice required a new trial before a jury. The review was in the nature of a rehearing in equity; and the court examined the case de novo, and it was held by the chancellor that the appellate court might allow the parties to introduce new allegations, or further proofs, in analogy to the procedure under the civil law. (Gardiner v.Gardiner, 34 N.Y. 164; Clapp v. Fullerton, Id. 195; Devin v. Patchen, 26 id. 441; Scribner v. Williams, 1 Paige, 550.) But it is claimed that the practice has been changed by the Code of Civil Procedure, and that it is now necessary, in order to permit the General Term to review the facts on an appeal from the decision of a surrogate granting probate, that his finding of facts must have been challenged by an exception. This construction is based upon section 2545 of the Code. That section permits an exception to be taken to a ruling of the surrogate on the trial before him of an issue of fact, including a finding or refusal to find upon a question of fact, "in a case where such an exception may be taken to a ruling of the court upon a trial without a jury, upon an issue of fact as prescribed in article 3, of title 1, of chapter 10 of this act," and also to a finding or refusal to find upon a question of fact, made on the settlement of the case. But the questions which may be raised by exception under section 2545 are questions of law. This was stated in the original note to the section, and is rendered plain by reference to the other sections of the Code to which it refers (§§ 992-998). The finding of a material fact without evidence, or a refusal to pass upon a question of fact, or to find a fact which the evidence conclusively establishes, if properly excepted to, raises a question of law for the appellate court, and to such rulings on questions of fact, section 2545 permits an exception. But the section has no relation to findings on controverted facts, or to refusals to find facts not conclusively established, or which are not *Page 528 clearly inferable from the evidence. This construction is in accordance with the uniform construction in analogous cases. (Potter v. Carpenter, 71 N.Y. 74; Stewart v. Morss, 79 id. 629.) In the present case the surrogate found that the will was the sane act of a competent testator. It is not claimed that there was no evidence to support his finding. But it is insisted by the contestant that the preponderance of evidence was against his conclusion. This contention she had the right to present to the General Term, and that court had the power to determine it and to affirm or reverse the determination of the surrogate thereon, and on reversal to order issues.

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52 A.D. 301 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)
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In re Humfreville
6 A.D. 535 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1896)
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32 N.Y.S. 398 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)
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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 99, 111 N.Y. 523, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 66 Sickels 523, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-v-burger-ny-1888.