In the matter of the paper-writings purporting to be the last will & testament & codicil thereto of Chadwick

85 A. 266, 80 N.J. Eq. 471, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 85 A. 266 (In the matter of the paper-writings purporting to be the last will & testament & codicil thereto of Chadwick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the matter of the paper-writings purporting to be the last will & testament & codicil thereto of Chadwick, 85 A. 266, 80 N.J. Eq. 471, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 351 (N.J. 1912).

Opinion

The -opinion of the court was delivered hv

Bergen, J.

The substantial question on this appeal is whether the surrogates of our several counties, or the prerogative court, have jurisdiction to grant original probate of a will of a non-resident testator domiciled in a sister state at the time of his death.

While the precise question raised by the record relates to the power of a surrogate to admit srjch will to probate, the jurisdiction of the prerogative court in a like case is so connected with the principles of law involved, that it was of necessity argued and should be disposed of in limitation of further litigation of substantially the same matter, for if it should be decided that the surrogate is without jurisdiction, leaving undecided the other question, the proponents could present this will to the ordinary or surrogate-general and thus relitigate a question as to which they have had their day in court, because the real question argued [472]*472and to be disposed of is the effect of a testator’s domicile upon the jurisdictional right of a foreign court to grant original probate of his will.

The facts arc within a narrow compass, and for the purposes of this ease all that need be recited is that Julia H. Chadwick died leaving a last will; that her domicile was East Hampton, in the State of New York; that the executors who offered the will for probate resided in the State of New Jersey, having in their possession in the county of Hudson personal property belonging to testatrix; that two of the executors named, the third having renounced, caused the will and codicil to he admitted to probate by the surrogate of the county of Hudson, from which the1 daughter of testatrix appealed to the orphans court of Hudson county where the order of the surrogate was sustained. The decree was reviewed on appeal to the prerogative court where it was decided, upon the advice of the vice-ordinaiy, that the surrogate was without jurisdiction and from that decree the proponents have appealed to this court.

The real purpose of the probate is to ascertain whether the deceased left a will, and if so, the appointment and qualification of the person -who may he» entitled to manage the estate and execute the testamentary directions, which is, generally speaking, the province of the courts of the domicile of the testator, and before that right he exercised by the courts of this state, it should at least appear that the law authorizes it, for it may he fairly assumed tiiat such a course of procedure was not within the expectation of the testator who ordinarily prepares and executes his will according to the law of his domicile, where he may fairly presume it will be admitted to probate, and where all disputes concerning its due execution will be heard.

Again, the heirs and next of kin are not presumed to know in which of many jurisdictions the testator has left property, and if personal property in airy location is sufficient to give jurisdiction to probate, they would in most cases be deprived of the opportunity to dispute the due execution of the will, or to raise any legal objection to its probate, for a caveat filed at the domicile would have no,effect in a foreign jurisdiction.

[473]*473We think that upon general principles the cine administration of justice demands that last wills should be first probated at the domicile of á testator, and that this rule should prevail in this state, unless the law expressly confers on the ordinary or surrogates probate jurisdiction over wills of non-residents. In disposing of this matter we will first consider the statutory authority of a surrogate relating to the probate of last wills and testaments.

It majr be conceded that prior to the constitution of 1844 the-surrogates of the different counties of the state were .but deputies of the ordinary or surrogate-general, but even then their power and authority was limited by statutes to the county for which they were appointed. This the ordinary held, in the'matter of Abraham Courseris Will, decided in 1843 (4 N. J. Eq. (3 Gr. Ch.) 408), permitted a surrogate to probate foreign wills, and that the limitation of povyer had relation to the locality within which he might exercise his power, although operating upon a subject-matter arising out of his eountj^, and therefore the surrogate might admit a foreign will to probate, and if he should do so for one executor, the ordinary might also grant probate for another, upon his separate application. The learned ordinary did not express any opinion as to what the situation would be if he took a different view from the surrogate and refused probate to the second applicant, the surrogate,- his subordinate, having already allowed it for the other.

The reasoning leading to the result declared is so illogical that we c-aunot concede its soundness, for if the statute limiting the power of the surrogate to the county for which he was appointed was not a limitation to matters arising in his county, but gave general jurisdiction over such matters arising anywhere in the state, of in the Fnited States, provided he was within the confines of his own county when he acted, he would have power to probate every will of every decedent without regard to domicile in or out of the state, and once having taken jurisdiction, the ordinary, being thereby deprived of all power except to review on appeal, the office of the surrogate might become of greater magnitude than that of the ordinary. This situation cannot be reached except by pursuing an inaccurate line of reasoning-, inconsistent [474]*474with the purpose of the statute limiting his power to the county for which he ivas appointed.

Rut in 1844 the surrogate was made a constitutional officer and the method of his selection provided for, which was thereafter to be election by popular vote. This divorced him fijpm his former status as deputy and made him am independent officer, whose duties were fixed by the legislature in the revision of 1840, which, among other things, provided that there should be but one surrogate elected in each county “and the power and authority of the surrogate shall he limited to the county in which he is or shall be elected.” Rev. 1846 p. 827, and this act has never been repealed. Comp. HLat. p. 5056. We have no doubt rhat this statute was intended to, and does, limit the jurisdiction of the surrogate to matters arising in his particular county, and does not grant a general jurisdiction to admit to probate the wills of non-residents of state or county. As to wills of residents of this state his jurisdiction is now by statute expressly limited to cases where the testator resides in his county at the time- of death, section 14 of the act relating to orphans court. P. L. 1898 p. 715.

Certainly, since, the constitution of 1844, the surrogate has no implied or derivative powers and can only exercise those granted hy the legislature, and it has not conferred on surrogates the power to probate wills of non-residents. Therefore, without íegard to the question of the primary right of the courts of the locality of the domicile of a non-resident testator to probate his will, our statute does not cnrooiver a surrogate to assume jurisdiction in such cases, and therefore the power does not exist, and-the action of the surrogate in this proceeding was without lawful warrant.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 266, 80 N.J. Eq. 471, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-paper-writings-purporting-to-be-the-last-will-nj-1912.