Chadwick v. Stilphen

74 A. 50, 105 Me. 242, 1909 Me. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 A. 50 (Chadwick v. Stilphen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chadwick v. Stilphen, 74 A. 50, 105 Me. 242, 1909 Me. LEXIS 87 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is' a writ of entry brought by the plaintiff, as executor of the will of Nathaniel K. Chadwick late of Catskill in the State of New York, for the purpose of obtaining possession of the premises therein described situated in the county of Kennebec and State of Maine, in order to foreclose a mortgage thereof given by the defendant to the plaintiff’s testator.

Nathaniel K. Chadwick died in May, 1906. By his will he appointed his wife Celia S. Chadwick and his son George H. Chadwick, the plaintiff in this action co-executors of the will. They accepted the trust and received letters testamentary issued to them as co-executors by the surrogate’s court of New York, November 10, 1908, but neither gave bond, the will providing that no bond should be required.

In May, 1907, the plaintiff George H. Chadwick, filed in the probate court of Kennebec county an authenticated copy of the will and of the record of the probate thereof in the surrogate’s court of New York, and of the letters testamentary issued by that court to Celia S. Chadwick and George H. Chadwick, as co-executors. At the same time the plaintiff filed a petition signed by himself alone representing that the testator at the time of his decease left estate in the county of Kennebec and State of Maine upon which the will might operate and asking that the will be allowed in this State and that letters testamentary be issued to him. After due notice and hearing upon this petition it was ordered that the will be allowed in this State, and that a copy of it and of the probate thereof be recorded and filed and that letters testamentary be issued to the petitioner, George H. Chadwick. In accordance with this decree letters testamentary were issued to George H. Chadwick alone as executor, and not jointly with Celia S. Chadwick, the co-executor named in the will.' No appeal was taken from this decree of the [245]*245probate court of Kennebec county in this State, and July 20, 1907, the plaintiff commenced this action.

The defendant seasonably filed a plea in abatement to the writ, because Celia S. Chadwick who was named in the will and appointed by the court in New York as co-executor with the plaintiff, was not joined in the plaintiff’s writ and declaration in this case, nor in the probate proceedings in the county of Kennebec in this State.

To this plea the plaintiff filed a demurrer which was joined by the defendant. The presiding Justice overruled the demurrer, sustained the plea in abatement and ordered that the writ and declaration be quashed. The case comes to the Law Court on exceptions to this ruling.

In approaching the consideration of the question presented for the decision of the court in this case it is proper to be reminded that courts of probate are wholly creatures of the legislature, and are tribunals of special and limited jurisdiction. Taber v. Douglass, 101 Maine, 363; Snow v. Russell, 93 Maine, 362; Smith v. Howard, 86 Maine, 203.

The provisions of our statute specially involved in this inquiry are as follow, viz : Section 7 of chapter 65 provides that

"Each judge may take the probate of wills and grant letters testamentary or of administration on the estates of all deceased persons who at the time of their death. . . . not being residents of the state, died leaving estate to be administered in his county.”

The statutes relating to foreign wills are found in chapter 66 and section 13 provides that "Any will executed in another state or country, according to the laws thereof, may be presented for probate in this- state, in the county where the testator resided at the time of his death, and may be proved and allowed and the estate of the testator settled as in case of wills executed in this state.”

Section 16 reads as follows: "After allowing and recording any will as aforesaid, the judge of probate may grant letters testamentary, or of administration with the will annexed thereon, and proceed in the settlement of the estate found in this state, in the manner provided by its laws with respect to the estates of persons who were inhabitants of any other state or country. . . . The [246]*246provisions of section 10 of this chapter apply to such proceedings.” Sections 8 and 10 of the same chapter prescribe the duties of the judge of probate in granting letters of administration and in requiring a bond of the executor, as follows :

Section 8. "When a will is proved and allowed, the'judge of probate may issue letters testamentary thereon to the executor named therein, if he is legally competent, accepts the trust and gives bond to discharge the same when required, but if he refuses to accept on being duly cited for that purpose or if he neglects for twenty days after probate of the will so to give bond, the judge may grant such letters to the other executors, if there are any capable and willing to accept the trust.”

Section 10 reads as follows: "Letters testamentary may issue, and all acts required by law or otherwise under the provisions of the will may be done and performed by the executor without giving bond, or by his giving one in a specified sum, when the will so provides ; but when it appears necessary or proper the judge may require him to give bond as in other cases.”

These provisions of our statutes authorizing the granting of ancillary administration on the estate of non-residents who die leaving property to be administered in this State, were obviously enacted in recognition of the familiar principle of the common law that the authority of an executor over the estate of a deceased person is "confined to the sovereignty by virtue of whose laws he is appointed.” Brown v. Smith, 101 Maine, 545.

It has been seen that section 16 declares that after allowing any foreign will and granting letters testamentary, the judge of probate shall "proceed in the settlement of the estate found in this State, in the manner provided by its laws with respect to the estates of persons who were inhabitants of any other state or country,” and makes applicable to such proceedings the provisions of section 10 relating to wills executed in this State, which authorize the judge of probate to require an executor to give'bond "when it appears necessary,” even when the will provides that no bond shall be required. When therefore section 16 is construed in connection with sections 10 and 13, it becomes obvious that a foreign will may be proved [247]*247and allowed and the estate of the testator settled as in the case of a will executed in this State, and that the question raised in the case at bar is the same as if the testator had been a resident of Kennebec county and the will had originally been presented for probate there.

In accordance with the obvious scope and purpose of these statutory provisions, it is a well settled rule in this State that the power of an executor to act in the settlement of the estate of a testator is not derived solely from his nomination in the will. His authority is not complete until there has been a compliance with all of the prerequisites named in section 8 of the statute above quoted. The will must be proved and allowed; the executor named therein must be legally competent in the opinion of the judge of probate; the executor must accept the trust and give bond to discharge the same when required, and must receive letters of administration from the judge of probate.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A. 50, 105 Me. 242, 1909 Me. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-v-stilphen-me-1909.