Eckilson v. Greene

1 A.2d 117, 61 R.I. 394, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 29, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 A.2d 117 (Eckilson v. Greene) 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
Eckilson v. Greene, 1 A.2d 117, 61 R.I. 394, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 86 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*395 Moss, J.

This matter was begun by a petition filed August 27, 1937 in the probate court of the city of Cranston to dismiss the administration proceedings on the estate of Margaret C. Greene, who died intestate November 15, 1936. The petitioners were four children of a deceased daughter of the intestate and as such were among her next of kin. In the administration proceedings Clifford Greene, a son of the intestate, was appointed administrator. The record before us does not show when the decree appointing him was made,, and the parties, in their respective briefs, do not agree as to the date.

The ground of the petition to dismiss was that the intestate at the time of her death was an inhabitant in and a resident of the city of Warwick in this state; and that, therefore, the probate court of Cranston had no jurisdiction over the administration of her estate. If the facts were as stated *396 in the petition, the court had no authority, under the law to-assume such jurisdiction. General laws 1923, chap. 358, sec. 3. The appellee, however, contends that when the petition to dismiss was filed, it was too late to raise, on the ground stated, the question of the jurisdiction of the court over the estate.

On November 22, 1937 the following decree was entered in that court on the petition: “This petition is denied and dismissed for want of jurisdiction.” The present appellants, Florence M. Eckilson and Mabel C. Greenhalgh, two of the petitioners, duly took an appeal to the superior court from that decree and filed the necessary papers to perfect their appeal. There the appellee, Clifford Greene, filed a motion that the appeal be dismissed, no ground for the dismissal being stated. The docket-entry in that court shows only that on March 14,1938, there was a hearing on the appellee’s motion to dismiss and that the motion was granted. The papers in the case throw no light on the reason for the decision. The appellants filed an exception to the decision and the case is now before us on a bill of exceptions by the appellants, setting forth only this exception.

The record is very meager and does not show whether an appeal was taken from the decree of the probate court appointing the appellee as administrator or whether the appellants’ petition to dismiss the proceedings for want of jurisdiction in that court was filed after the expiration of the time for the taking of an appeal from that decree. But all the parties, in the briefs filed in this court, seem clearly to agree that no such appeal was taken and that the appellants’ petition was filed after the expiration of the time for the taking of such an appeal. We shall assume, therefore, that such are the facts.

It does not appear from the record before us whether any evidence was submitted to the probate court for or against the appellants’ petition. But, since, in the probate court’s decree from which the appellants appealed, the appellants’ petition was denied “for want of jurisdiction”, we must *397 assume that that court did not decide whether, at the time of her death, the intestate was an inhabitant and resident of the city of Cranston or the city of Warwick. It is admitted by the parties that she was not then an inhabitant or resident outside of this state.

It seems also to be clear, from the record before us and the briefs for both sides, that no evidence was submitted to the superior court at the hearing in that court on the appellee’s motion to dismiss the appellants’ appeal. Therefore and because, as above stated, the record before us does not show that the justice of the superior court who heard that motion gave any reason for sustaining it, we assume that the appeal was dismissed on one or more of the grounds upon which the appellee, expressly or by implication, has endeavored before us to sustain the ruling of the superior court.

All these grounds urged before us raise questions of law only. One of these grounds, which may have influenced the action of the probate court in denying and dismissing the appellants’ petition “for want of jurisdiction”, is that after assuming jurisdiction over the estate of a deceased person by appointing an administrator, a probate court has no power to dismiss the proceedings for want of jurisdiction. In our opinion this ground is contrary to-a clear implication from the language of the last-sentence of general laws 1923, chap. 358, sec. 1, dealing with probate courts, as follows: “The jurisdiction assumed in any case by the court, so far as it depends on the place of residence of a person, shall not be contested in any suit or proceedings except in the original case, or on appeal therein or when the want of jurisdiction appears on the record.”

The appellee also contends that even if the probate court had power to dismiss the proceedings for want of jurisdiction, if the intestate was an inhabitant and resident of another city or a town in this state and a petition that it should do so was filed before the period of time for taking an appeal *398 from the decree appointing an administrator had elapsed and before such an appeal had been taken, it had no such-power if the petition to dismiss was filed after the lapse of such period.

We are of the opinion that the decisive question on this appeal is the one raised by this last-stated contention of the appellee. That question is whether, when the petition was filed in the probate court, to dismiss the proceedings, it was too late to raise the issue that, because the intestate decedent was, at the time of her decease, an inhabitant in and a resident of the city of Warwick, the court of probate of Cranston had no jurisdiction to appoint an administrator of her estate. We are of the opinion also that we have sufficient facts before us, as above stated, to enable us to decide that question.

The action of the probate court of Cranston, in making the appointment, though it was apparently on an uncontested application, involved either expressly or by clear implication a finding that the decedent, at the time of her decease was an inhabitant in and a resident of that city. The appellants, if they had acted within forty days after the entry of the decree, could have claimed an appeal therefrom and could have based their appeal on the ground that that finding was erroneous. They could then, by following the proper statutory procedure, have had the question decided de novo in the superior court. In our opinion that is a clear implication from the language above quoted from G. L. 1923, chap. 358, sec. 1.

Or, if they had acted in time, they presumably could have taken advantage of C- L. 1923, chap. 358, sec. 6, which provides in substance that any probate court, before an appeal is taken from any order or decree made by it on an uncontested application, or before the time for taking such appeal has expired, if no appeal is taken, may modify or revoke such order or decree. But they did not act in time to take advantage of that provision; nor did they take an appeal *399 from the decision in question by taking advantage of the statutory provision regulating appeals. '

The question before us is, then, whether they could later

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Bluebook (online)
1 A.2d 117, 61 R.I. 394, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckilson-v-greene-ri-1938.