Crawford v. Lees

93 A. 201, 84 N.J. Eq. 324, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 93 A. 201 (Crawford v. Lees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Lees, 93 A. 201, 84 N.J. Eq. 324, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107 (N.J. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Leaming, V. C.

By the amended answer and cross-bill which defendant now seeks to file, this court is asked to disregard the official probate of a will, and to treat the will as a nullity, and refuse to construe its provisions, and to require the persons who have been appointed executors of the will to account to an heir for his share of the personal estate of the deceased which has come to their hands. If the averments of tire proposed amended pleadings are clearly inadequate to afford any part of the relief sought, it is obvious that the application to amend should be denied, for no benefits can be received through an impotent pleading.

It is manifest that the accounting which defendant seeks through his proposed amended pleading cannot be entertained. Should the probate of the will be set aside or disregarded an heir, as such,' does not thereby become entitled to an accounting [327]*327for a share of the personal property of the deceased which has come to the hands of others. Such an accounting must be in behalf of an administrator. But, disregarding that infirmity of the proposed pleading, the inquiry is presented whether the averments of the proposed pleading are adequate to enable this court to disregard the probate of the will in this proceeding.

It has been repeatedly held in this state that a surrogate, in-admitting a will to probate, holds a court and exercises judicial-functions in the field prescribed, by statute, and that his decree or order of probate is to be reviewed by appeal and is not subject to collateral attack except for fraud or want of jurisdiction. The proposed amended pleading is a collateral attack upon the judgment of that court, and bases the attack upon the claim that the surrogate was without jurisdiction because of doubts which it is alleged arose on the face of the will which his order admitted to probate; no fraud is charged.

The statutory authority of the surrogate to admit wills to probate is as follows:

“The surrogates of the several counties of this state shall take depositions to wills and admit the same to probate, and grant letters testamentary thereon; but in case doubts arise on the face of the will, or a caveat is put in against proving a will, or a dispute arises respecting the existence of a will, the surrogate shall not act in the premises, but shall issue citations to all persons concerned to appear in the orphans court of the same county, which court shall hear and determine the matters in controversy.” P. L. 1898 p. 718; 3 Comp. Stat. p. 3816 § 13.

No adjudicated case in this state has at any time definitely determined the meaning of the expression “in case doubts arise on the face of the will.” In Myer's Case, 69 N. J. Eq. 793, 796, the suggestion is made by our court of errors and appeals that it may relate to erasures and interlineations. But, for present purposes, it may be assumed that the averments of the proposed answer and cross-bill disclose with sufficient definiteness that when the will here in question was presented to the surrogate for probate there appeared on the face of the will interlineations or erasures or mutilations which an accurate adjudication would have determined to be suggestive of such doubts as the statute confenrplates.

[328]*328It will be observed that the statute imposes upon the surrogate two alternative duties: If no doubts arise on the face of the will he is required to take the necessary depositions and admit the will to probate if the depositions of the witnesses are by him found sufficient. If doubts do arise on the face of the will he is required to issue citations. The duty is thus specifically imposed upon the surrogate to determine whether doubts arise on the'face of the will, for he cannot perform either of the alternative duties required of him without first determining whether doubts so arise; if he determines that such doubts exist, he is required to issue citations; if he determines that doubts do not so' exist, he is required to proceed to probate. The determination of‘the existence or non-existence of such doubts is clearly a function necessary to the exercise of his jurisdiction, and in similar instances it has been regarded as necessarily forming a part of his jurisdiction. Stanley v. Safe Deposit Co., 87 Md. 450; In re Shoenberger’s Estate, 139 Pa. St. 132. In granting probate of the will here in question the surrogate necessarily determined that no doubts arose on the face of the will. For any error in that determination the statute has provided a remedy by appeal, and the question here presented is whether such error Can be made the ground of collateral impeachment of the probate in this cause.

Nothing can be said to be more firmly engrafted in our jurisprudence than the principle that in the absence of fraud of the parties a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction cannot be collaterally impeached if the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the controversy and the parties. White v. Crow, 110 U. S. 183. Jurisdiction, in the sense thus used, has been defined by our federal supreme court to be “the power to hear and determine a cause.” In the exercise of the power to hoar and -determine a cause which has been properly instituted, a court is necessarily called upon to determine matters on which its jurisdiction to proceed and award final judgment depends. It has accordingly been uniformly held that in the application of the principle first stated to cases in which the jurisdiction of a court of general jurisdiction embraces cases of the class to which the case belongs and the collateral attack is based upon a [329]*329claim of want of jurisdiction by reason of an alleged error of the court in determining a question upon which its jurisdiction was dependent, the determination of the court touching matters upon which its jurisdiction was thus dependent is conclusive as against such collateral impeachment, whether or not the court has fallen into error in such determination. The case of Plume v. Howard Saving Institution, 46 N. J. Law 211, was a case of that nature. In that case an administrator to whom letters had been granted by the orphans court had brought suit for the recovery of money deposited in bank by plaintiff’s intestate. The defence was a collateral attack on the order of the orphans court appointing plaintiff as administrator and was based on a claim of want of jurisdiction of the orphans court to appoint plaintiff as administrator by reason of want of proof before the orphans court of the death of plaintiff’s intestate (the only evidence of death having arisen from a legal presumption of death by reason of long absence), and also other alleged errors of the orphans court touching its own jurisdiction. The supreme court of this state held that the proceeding before the orphans court having-been one of a class over which that court had jurisdiction, no inquiry could be made by another court, except on appeal, whether the orphans court had fallen into error in determining facts upon which its own jurisdiction depended. At p. 229 the opinion proceeds: “Consequently, when the orphans court of the county of Essex, having the matter by the requisite proceedings before it, awarded letters of administration in the present case, it will be intended, by force of the rule of law just stated, that it decided all facts requisite to validate its action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 201, 84 N.J. Eq. 324, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-lees-njch-1915.