In Re Estate of Hildreth

28 A.2d 633, 113 Vt. 26, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 A.2d 633 (In Re Estate of Hildreth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Hildreth, 28 A.2d 633, 113 Vt. 26, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 163 (Vt. 1942).

Opinion

SturtevaNt, J.

The petitioner, Helen H. Smith, brings this case here on exceptions saved to a pro forma ruling of the probate court for the District of Marlboro.

The record shows the following facts material to the questions presented.

Harry H. Hildreth died intestate August 2, 1940. The petitioner is his only daughter and as such is his heir. On December 6,

1940, on application of Holland J. Wilson, one Solon A. Richmond was appointed administrator and eleven days later Carl J. Strand and Harold Muzzy were appointed commissioners of claims on the decedent’s estate. Holland J. Wilson and his wife, Lelia, each presented claims against the estate in the sums of $3,000 and $10,-000 respectively. These were allowed $2,000 to the former and $3,000 to the latter as appears by the commissioners’ report returned to and accepted by the probate court August 15, 1941.

The petitioner did not have actual knowledge of the presenting or allowance of the Wilson claims until about September 15,

1941, which was after the time for taking an appeal therefrom had expired.

It is alleged in the petition that Muzzy was incompetent and not qualified to sit as a commissioner to determine the merits of the Wilson claims and among the reasons stated therefor are the following. Muzzy appeared and testified as a witness before the commission of which he was a member and he gave no consideration to the question as to the decedent’s liability on the claims because he understood that his only duty was to determine the amount of damages sustained by the claimants as contended by them.

The petitioner prays that for the reasons alleged in the petition the probate court find:

1. That the report of the commissioners allowing the claims is in error.
2. That Muzzy be removed as a commissioner on the estate and that the court appoint another or others in his place.
3. That the probate court order the report of the commissioners allowing these claims recommitted to commissioners for further hearing.

*28 The petition was served on the administrator and on the claimants on January 30, 1942. At that time the estate had not been fully settled.

The petitionees filed their answers to this petition and the claimant Holland J. Wilson incorporated in his answer a copy of a bill in chancery which he instituted after the petition had been served on him. That bill was brought against Solon Richmond, Helen H. Smith and the Merchants Mutual Insurance Company, a foreign corporation maintaining an office at Brattleboro and licensed to do business in this state.

Wilson alleges in his bill that the judgment based upon his wife’s claim has been assigned to him. Each of the claims is predicated upon the alleged negligence of Harry H. Hildreth in the operation of an automobile formerly owned and operated by him. The bill also states that the liability of the estate on these claims is covered by an insurance policy issued by the Merchants Mutual Insurance Company and that there are no assets in the estate.

The probate court, without a hearing on the merits, made a pro forma order dismissing the petition. The question before us is presented by the petitioner’s exception to that action of the probate court.

The power of the probate court, on direct application for that purpose, for cause shown, before the final settlement of an estate, to revise, vacate and alter its decrees, where no intervening rights have ensued, is well settled. This follows from its plenary jurisdiction of the subject matters committed to it. In re Hayes’ Estate, 90 Vt 286, 289, 98 A 45, and cas. cit.

However, such jurisdiction, in the absence of special statutory authority, does not empower that court to recommit a claim to commissioners for further consideration when the life of the commission has expired and all power to extend it has gone. In re Hayes’ Estate, 90 Vt at 289, 98 A 45, and cas. cit.

In the opinion in the Hayes estate case this Court stated at page 289:

“We mention that No. 96 of the Acts of 1915, the most recent enactment of probate law, provides for a recommittal to commissioners, at any time before the settlement of an estate, for the correction of clerical errors. But we are not dealing with clerical errors, and if this'statute had been in effect at all times ma *29 terial in this case, the disposition thereof would be unaffected.”

That opinion was handed down at the January term, 1916. In the 1917 revision of laws, No. 96 of the Acts of 1915 was amended into its present form by omitting the word “clerical” before the word “errors”. That act as amended is now P. L. 2843 and so far as here material is as follows:

“The probate court may order the report of commissioners recommitted for hearing at any time before final distribution and settlement of a deceased person’s estate, when it appears by petition in writing, verified by oath, of a party in interest that an error has been made in such report.”

By this amendment the legislature provided for a rehearing of a claim previously allowed by commissioners. In the Matter of the Estate of Delligan, 110 Vt 294, 305, 6 A2d 1.

Every man is entitled by law, not only to a fair trial of his case, but to one as free as may be from suspicion of partiality or undue influence. Cady, Admr. v. Lang, 95 Vt 287, 294, 115 A 140; State v. Bissell, 106 Vt 80, 95, 170 A 102.

A person can not be a witness and a judge in the same cause. State v. Bissell, 106 Vt 80, 95, 170 A 102, and cas. cit.

From the foregoing it follows that under the allegations made in the petition Muzzy was not qualified to act as commissioner on the claims and that there has not been a fair and impartial hearing on them before a qualified tribunal as required by law. Therefore the report of the commissioners accepted by the probate court contains error within the meaning of P. L. 2843 if the allegations of the petition are made out.

However, the petitionees contend that the pro forma ruling of the probate court was correct for the following reasons:

“I. On the record before the probate court, since the estate had no assets, the petitioner, Helen H. Smith, as an heir, had no interest under P. L. 2843 to maintain the petition.
“II. The ruling was a proper exercise of the probate court’s discretion and for the purpose of allowing an appeal to the county court.
*30 “III. The dismissal was proper as a matter of law.
“IV. The chancery proceedings will determine the whole controversy.”

We consider these questions in the order stated.

I. Under our practice all estates are settled as insolvent estates. Probate Court, etc. v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Braxton v. Johnson
514 So. 2d 1232 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1987)
Cline v. Franklin Pork, Inc.
313 N.W.2d 667 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1981)
State v. Kelly
312 A.2d 906 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1973)
Ricci v. Bove's Estate
78 A.2d 13 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1951)
State v. Nagel
202 P.2d 640 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 A.2d 633, 113 Vt. 26, 1942 Vt. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hildreth-vt-1942.