Devin v. . Patchin

26 N.Y. 441
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 26 N.Y. 441 (Devin v. . Patchin) 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
Devin v. . Patchin, 26 N.Y. 441 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 443 Upon the merits, this case presents but the single question, whether the respondent was the wife of Henry C. Patchin at the time of his decease; and this depends upon the narrower question, whether said Patchin was the man, calling himself David Sparks, between whom and the respondent, the banns of matrimony were solemnized by the Rev. Wm. H. Norris, pastor of the Forsyth street M.E. church, at his dwelling house in the city of New York, in the evening of the 12th of November, 1855. The fact of such marriage of the respondent having taken place is undisputed; and after a careful examination of the testimony, I am of opinion that no serious doubt can be entertained, that the marriage was between the respondent and Henry C. Patchin. [The learned judge here proceeded to examine the evidence at large and proceeded:] *Page 444

For these reasons I am of opinion that the evidence relied upon by the appellant is wholly insufficient to overcome the positive proof of the marriage of Patchin, or to account for the apparent non-existence of any other man than him to answer to the name of David Sparks, the bridegroom of the wedding established by that proof. The Supreme Court, therefore, very properly reversed the surrogate's decree.

A further question arises upon the order of the court directing an issue to be made and tried at the circuit, to determine the question of the marriage. It is insisted, on the part of the appellant, that the Supreme Court was not authorized to award such issue, the case not being within the statute directing an issue on the reversal of a surrogate's decree. (3 R.S., 5th ed., p. 151, § 73.)

Prior to the adoption of the Revised Statutes of 1830 it was held that the Court of Chancery had power to award feigned issues, in such cases, on the ground that the practice on appeals from the decrees of surrogates' courts was according to the course of the civil law, by which new allegations and new proofs were allowed to be introduced, in the discretion of the court, in any stage of the proceedings. (Vanderheyden v. Reid, 1 Hopk., 408; Van Wyck v. Alley, id., 552.) The same course was pursued under the Revised Statutes (1 Paige, 550; 8 id., 479), and the correctness of that practice has been, to some extent, recognized, since the reorganization of the courts, under the Constitution of 1846, and since the adoption of the Code of Procedure. (2 Bradf., 6; 9 Abb., 393.) But in the case ofCaujolle v. Ferrié (23 N.Y., 90), which was an appeal from the case in 9 Abb., 393, I am informed that this Court rejected the additional testimony taken after the appeal to the Supreme Court, holding that the decree of the surrogate could only be reviewed on the evidence produced before him. This position is stated only in the dissenting opinion in that case (p. 119), but the other members of the court are said to have concurred in that part of the opinion. That case was quite similar to the present, and must control it as to the point under consideration. If no further testimony could be received, it was improper *Page 445 to award an issue which could not be tried without further testimony. Even if the power to award the issue existed, it was not proper to subject the parties to the delay and expense of such trial, in the present case, though probably this court would not attempt to control the discretion of the court below in the exercise of such power. (2 Comst., 269; 11 Wend., 234.)

The judgment of the Supreme Court, so far as it reverses the decree of the surrogate, should be affirmed; the award of an issue to try the question whether the respondent is the widow of Henry Clay Patchin, deceased, should be reversed; and it should be declared that she is such widow, and is entitled to letters of administration upon his estate.

BALCOM, J. No statute has been cited by the respondent's counsel that authorized the Supreme Court to direct that the question be tried by a jury at a circuit court, whether Mary Grace Patchin, or Melvin, was the lawful wife and is the widow of Henry C. Patchin, deceased, and I have not been able to find any that confers such authority. The only cases in which the Supreme Court is authorized by statute to direct that an issue be made up and tried by a jury at a circuit court, on appeals from the decisions of surrogates, are those by which wills have been admitted to probate or refused to be admitted to record or probate. (2 R.S., p. 609, § 98; 3 id., 5th ed., p. 906, § 21; Laws of 1848, p. 295.)

Prior to the Revised Statutes the Court of Chancery proceeded on appeals from the decrees of surrogates according to the course of the civil law, and might hear new testimony and call to its aid the verdict of a jury, upon disputed questions of fact. (VanDerheyden v. Reid, 1 Hopk. Ch. R., 408; Scribner v.Williams, 1 Paige, 550.) And without noticing the change in the proceedings in surrogates' courts and on appeals therefrom, effected by the Revised Statutes, the chancellor entertained a motion in Case v. Towle (8 Paige, 479), to permit the appellant, in an appeal from a surrogate's decision, to produce further proof, but denied the application for leave to do so. And it appears that the Supreme Court in Caujolle v. *Page 446 Ferrié (9 Abb., 393), held, on an appeal from the decree of the surrogate, by which Ferrie was adjudged to be the legitimate son of the decedent, and entitled to letters of administration, that the appellate court might receive newly discovered evidence in addition to the evidence which was before the surrogate. But when the case was decided by this court, that question was not passed upon. DENIO, J., however, remarked (23 N.Y., 119,) as follows: "I have not thought it proper to consider the evidence upon this point, contained in the additional testimony produced by the appellant to the Supreme Court, while this case was pending there upon appeal, being of opinion that it can only be reviewed upon the proofs which were before the surrogate."

The case of The New Orleans Gas Light and Banking Company v.Dudley (8 Paige, 452), is cited by the respondent's counsel to show that the Supreme Court properly directed that the question of fact in this case be tried at a circuit court. But the decision of the chancellor in that case is no authority for that made by the Supreme Court in this. That case was brought before the chancellor by an appeal from the decision of a vice-chancellor, and he dismissed the appeal, so far as it relates to Mrs. Dudley, but with liberty to her to apply to the vice-chancellor for an issue to try the question of usury set up in her answer. He acted in that case strictly as an appellate judge, and did not retain the case and direct an issue to be made up for trial at a circuit court as the Supreme Court did in this.

I am not aware that the question was ever raised before the chancellor, whether the provisions of the Revised Statutes respecting appeals from the decrees of surrogates, had so far changed the proceedings in such cases as to make his court strictly one of review on such appeals, and divest it of all authority to try such cases de novo. But so far as my knowledge extends, the chancellor was supposed to possess only a strictly appellate jurisdiction in such cases, subsequent to the Revised Statutes, except where a different authority was conferred upon him by the legislature.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devin-v-patchin-ny-1863.