In Re: Estate of Jane Reading Niernsee

2 So. 2d 737, 147 Fla. 388, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1289
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 3, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 So. 2d 737 (In Re: Estate of Jane Reading Niernsee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida 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 Jane Reading Niernsee, 2 So. 2d 737, 147 Fla. 388, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1289 (Fla. 1941).

Opinion

Buford, J.

The appeal brings for review order of the circuit court affirming the order of the county judge as judge of probate re-establishing a lost will and admitting such re-established will to probate.

Appellant poses six questions for our consideration, as follows:

“Question One: Is there sufficient evidence to establish execution, publication and contents of the will re-established and admitted to probate?
“Question Two: Did testatrix have testamentary capacity on January 14, 1935?
“Question Three: Neither the original nor any copy of the alleged will having been produced and it affirmatively appearing that the original, together with all copies thereof, was in testatrix’ actual physical possession, was not such alleged will presumptively destroyed with the intent of revoking the same ?
“Question Four: Testatrix having regained and being possessed of her mental faculties and having testamentary capacity for approximately two years before her death, and knowing as she did know, that if said will was made and it could not be readily found, and having no other will, could the alleged lost instrument be probated as a lost will ?
“Question Five: Where the probative force and legal effect of all the evidence adduced is conclusively against the material allegations of the petition, should the county judge have re-established, on parol evidence, and admitted to probate, an alleged lost will?
“Question Six: The county judge’s court was and *391 is without jurisdiction to hear, try or determine the issues involved in this case.”

We will first dispose of Question Six. Section 11 of Article V of our Constitution, inter alia, provides:

“The circuit court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction in all cases in equity, . . .”

The appellant contends that this provision of the Constitution precludes the Legislature conferring jurisdiction on the probate court to re-establish lost wills, because the re-establishment of lost documents not records of any court is a matter cognizable in equity. Section 38 of the 1933 Probate Act provides as follows:

“Jurisdiction of County Judge. The County Judge shall have jurisdiction of the administration, settlement and distribution of estates of decedents, the probate of wills, the establishment of lost or destroyed wills, the granting of letters-testamentary and of administration, and of all other matters usually pertaining to courts of probate.”

Section 64 of the Act provides:

“Establishment and Probate of Lost and Destroyed Wills. The establishment and probate of a lost or destroyed will shall be in one proceeding. Upon the probate of such a will the county judge shall, as a part of his order admitting same to probate, recite and thereby establish and preserve the full and precise terms and provisions of such will.
“The petition for probate of a lost or destroyed will shall contain a copy of such will or the substance thereof. The testimony of each witness must be reduced to writing, signed by him and filed arid shall *392 be evidence in any contest of the will if the witness has died or removed from the State.
“No probate of any lost or destroyed will shall be granted until citation has issued and been served upon those who but for such will would be entitled to the property thereby bequeathed or devised, nor unless clearly and distinctly proved by the testimony of at least two disinterested witnesses, a correct copy being the equivalent of one witness.”

That the probate court proceeded according to the requirements of the statute is not challenged.

Our conclusion is that the provision of the Constitution, supra, established in the circuit courts exclusive jurisdiction in all cases in equity involved matters which were of exclusive equity jurisdiction under the common law and does not mean that if a matter is such that equity may have jurisdiction to determine the issues the Legislature is thereby precluded from conferring jurisdiction of such matters on a law court when the law court can render adequate and complete relief.

In Pournelle, et al., v. Baxter, et al., 142 Fla. 517, 195 Sou. 163, we said:

“While the Constitution gives to the circuit court exclusive original jurisdiction of all cases in equity, the Constitution also confers upon the county judges jurisdiction to take probate of wills and to discharge the duties usually pertaining to courts of probate.
“Courts of equity have not been given express jurisdiction to take probate of wills or to revoke or to cancel wills or exclusive jurisdiction to establish lost or destroyed wills; and statutes may confer upon *393 county judges as probate judges, jurisdiction of the establishment of lost or destroyed wills as a part of the duties usually pertaining to courts of probate, within the intendments of the Constitution.”

In that case we did not hold that by the force of the statute the probate court would have exclusive jurisdiction to re-establish the lost will; nor is it necessary for us to determine that question at this time. The most that we have to determine now is whether or not the probate court was vested with jurisdiction which it could exercise in this regard.

In 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 649, note, we find:

“The difficulty in the way of suing at law upon a lost bond in the ordinary form was the necessity of making profert. Whitfield v. Fausset, 1 Ves. Sr. 387. Says Lord Hardwicke, in a considered judgment (at p. 393) : Tf a man has lost a bond he is entitled to come into equity, not only for a discovery, but to have a decree for payment — because he cannot declare without making profert, the defendant being entitled to oyer.’ And such was undoubtedly the ancient rule of pleading at law. Leyfield’s Case, 10 Coke 92; Comyn’s Dig. Pl. O. & P; Thoresby v. Sparrow, 1 Wils. 16 s. c. sub. nom. Soresby v. Sparrow, 2 Strange 1186. This rule was relaxed in Read v. Brookman, 3 T. R. 151, in the case of a conveyance of land, on the ground that the conveyance or grant of an interest in land is to be presumed after long adverse possession or enjoyment, and hence it was unnecessary to make profert. And later on it was extended to all sorts of sealed instruments, the court establishing a rule that excuse might be stated and proved for not making profert. *394 But it is entirely settled that if the jurisdiction of this court has once been established over a certain subject or class of cases, it will not be taken away by the fact that courts of law have acquired jurisdiction of the same subject or class of cases, whether that jurisdiction be acquired by relaxation of its own severe rules or by statute. Lord Thurlow, in Atchinson v. Leonard, 3 Bro. Ch. 218 (at p.

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 2d 737, 147 Fla. 388, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-jane-reading-niernsee-fla-1941.