Carr v. Railton

18 A.2d 646, 66 R.I. 225
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 646 (Carr v. Railton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr v. Railton, 18 A.2d 646, 66 R.I. 225 (R.I. 1941).

Opinions

*227 Moss, J.

This is a probate appeal from a decree of the probate court of the city of Pawtucket, entered on November 30, 1938, in the matter of the estate of George Albert Carr, late of Blackpool, England, who died there, testate, on November 20, 1935. His will was duly admitted to probate by the English court having jurisdiction, and his first cousin Mary Agnes Almond was duly appointed by that court as sole executrix of his will.

The appellants are the sole heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, according to the laws both of this country and of England. The first appellee is the administratrix, with the above will annexed, of his estate in Rhode Island, duly appointed as such administratrix by the above-named court of probate, upon the petition of Mary Agnes Almond, executrix as above stated. The assets of this estate in Rhode Island consisted of two savings bank accounts. The other appellees are Mary Agnes Almond and her two sisters, Clara Almond and Hannah Almond,, all of Blackpool, England, these three being the sole surviving legatees under the above will.

*228 The appellants, describing themselves as such heirs and next of kin of the decedent, filed in the probate court of Pawtucket, in the matter of this estate, a petition in which they set forth in full the disposing part of the will above mentioned, as follows: “I give and bequeath unto William Henry Bond of 21 Rhyl Street Fleetwood the sum of twenty pounds. All the remainder of my personal effects including all money on deposit in Banks in England to be devided equally between my three cousins

8 Watsons Road (Hannah Almond
Blackpool (Mary Agnes Almond
Lancashire (Clara Almond ”

They stated also in this petition that the testator “left money on deposits in America in the City of Pawtucket, State of Rhode Island, as follows: “describing two accounts, one for $12,496.91 in the Industrial Trust Company, Slater Branch, and the other for $4086.40 in Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, Pawtucket Branch.

They further stated in this petition that the following questions arose: (1) What is the proper construction of the legacies set forth in the will? (2) Are the legacies or either of them as set forth in the will sufficient to indicate an intent on the part of the testator to devise the funds in America to the legatees named therein? (3) Is the testator intestate as to the monies on deposit in America? (4) Who are the next of kin of George Albert Carr?

There is no dispute as to the proper answer to the last question and it will not be discussed. The others really constitute one question, which is whether, under the proper construction of the concluding legacy in the will, the testator bequeathed the bank accounts in Pawtucket.

The appellees filed in the probate court motions that the above petition of the appellants be dismissed on certain grounds, of which the ones now insisted upon were substantially that the probate court had no jurisdiction to construe *229 the will, by determining whether or not the testator died intestate as to any part of his estate; that the petitioners were barred by laches, two years having elapsed since the will was recorded in this probate court before any question was raised as to its construction, and most of the assets here having meantime been sent by Bertha C. Railton to the executrix in England; and that the petitioners were estopped to file the petition, because on May 21, 1937 they had filed claims against the estate as creditors and about six months later had filed in the superior court of this state a bill in equity against the aforesaid Bertha C. Railton, both individually and as administratrix, to impress a trust upon the funds now in question.

By a decree of the probate court, which was entered on November 30, 1938, and in which no reasons were stated, these motions were granted .and the petition of the next of kin of the testator was denied and dismissed “without prejudice”. This is the decree which was mentioned at the beginning of this opinion and from which the next of kin of the testator took an appeal to the superior court.

When the case reached that court, the appellees filed there a motion that the appellants’ claim of appeal be dismissed, on the grounds that no notice of it had been served upon the appellees; that the superior court had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter; and that the appellants had no interest in the will or the estate of the decedent and therefore were not parties aggrieved. After a hearing in the superior court this motion was denied. No exception to this decision was taken by the appellees.

Thereupon the appellees entered their general appearances in the superior court and thus waived the first of the above grounds. A little later they filed a new motion to dismiss the claim of appeal, the grounds which were stated therein for such dismissal, and which are still relied upon, being substantially the same grounds as those which are above stated *230 as the appellees’ grounds for their motion in the probate court to dismiss the appellants’ petition.

This motion to dismiss the appeal was heard before a justice of the superior court and was denied by him on the ground that a similar motion had previously been denied by another justice of that court, as above stated. An exception was taken by the appellees to this decision.

The case was later tried on its merits before a third justice of the superior court and a jury. A similar motion to dismiss was made in behalf of the appellees and denied, and an exception was taken to that ruling. At the conclusion of the presentation of evidence on both sicles, it was agreed by the attorneys for the respective parties that the jury should be discharged and that the case be decided by the trial justice after the arguments had been concluded.

The case was then fully argued by the counsel, and many legal authorities were cited for each side. The trial justice then, from the bench, decided that he had jurisdiction of the case, and also, in substance and effect, decided that the testator intended his English property to go to his English cousins and his American property to go to his American relatives; and the trial justice further decided that the testator died intestate as to his money in America.

To the first and third of these decisions the appellees took exceptions. They also took an exception to the decision of the trial justice in sustaining the appeal of the appellants from the decree of the probate court. The case is now before us on the appellees’ bill of exceptions, in which six exceptions are set forth.

The first of these is to the decision by the second justice of the superior court in denying a motion by the appellees to dismiss, on the ground of want of jurisdiction by the court over the subject-matter, the appeal taken'by the appellants from the above-mentioned decree of the probate court en *231 tered on November 30, 1938.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 646, 66 R.I. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-railton-ri-1941.