Kenyon v. Probate Court

24 A. 149, 17 R.I. 652, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 24, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 A. 149 (Kenyon v. Probate Court) 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
Kenyon v. Probate Court, 24 A. 149, 17 R.I. 652, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 55 (R.I. 1892).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

October 26, 1889, the Probate Court of West Greenwich, having jurisdiction of the matter, made and entered an order allowing the account of Willis A. Carr, administrator de bonis non on the estate of John T. Lewis.

December 6, 1889, Mary A. Kenyon filed in the office of the Probate Court a paper writing alleging that she is a judgment creditor of the estate of said John T. Lewis, and claiming an appeal from said order to the Supreme Court then next to be holden in the same county on the second Monday in March, 1890.

On the same day she also filed in said office a bond with surety in the penal sum of $500, conditioned that she should prosecute *653 her said appeal with effect, or in default thereof should pay all intervening costs and damages, and such costs as the Supreme Court should tax against her.

Citation was duly issued, served, and returned, and reasons of appeal were duly filed in the Supreme Court in the same county, and duly entered at the March Term, 1890.

On the first day of that term George T. Brown, attorney for the appellee, indorsed his name as such attorney upon the reasons of appeal, and agreed that the case should be marked “ continued, to be heard in Providence County, March 15, 1890.”

Entries with like consent were made at three subsequent terms to the same effect, and the case was finally set down for hearing in Providence, February 6, 1892, when the appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the claim of appeal and the appeal bond were not filed until more than forty days after the entry of the order appealed from. Upon this motion briefs have been filed by the counsel for the parties, it being admitted, as it appears also by the record, that the allegations of the motion are true.

It is urged, on the one hand, that the indorsement of the name of the appellee’s attorney upon the papers, and the continuance of the case from term to term, was a waiver of the defect in the appeal; on the other, it is maintained that,no formal entry of appearance was made, and that the defect is such that the administrator could not waive it by appearance.

We think that the indorsement of the attorney’s name the first term, with his personal appearance in court for the purpose of consenting to a continuance and a transfer of the case to another county for trial, and this consent repeated at three successive terms of the court, was a waiver of any defect in the proceeding which the party he represented could waive.

In our practice on probate appeals there are no formal pleadings. It is rare that a formal written appearance even is filed. The attorney’s name is simply entered upon the docket or indorsed on the papers. The statute requires that such appeals shall be proceeded with at the first term of the court at which they shall be entered, Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 181, § 4, and it is reasonable to require that an objection to any matter of form, or a claim to any *654 statutory provision made solely for the benefit of the party, should, be taken when the ease first comes up in the Appellate Court. Accordingly, it was held in Clarke v. Mayor & Aldermen of Newport, 5 R. I. 333, that, in an appeal to the Court of Common Pleas in a highway proceeding, an objection to the appeal bond came too late after two continuances in the Appellate Court; and in Sprague v. Luther, 7 R. I. 581, that appearance by the appellee in the Supreme Court, to an appeal from a Court of Probate, is a waiver of the want of a citation to the appellee, or of an irregularity in the service.

The second question involves an examination of the principles upon which the appellate jurisdiction of this court in probate mat- 11 ters is founded,

If the jurisdiction of the Appellate Court depends upon a compliance with the terms of the statute, we have no jurisdiction in this case. If consent of the parties may give it jurisdiction by waiving the terms of the statute, the case is properly before us for consideration on its merits.

Is the claim of appeal within forty days an act essential to initiate the appeal, or is it in the power of parties to the issue to consent that an appeal may be taken at any time ?

It is hardly necessary to say that we are not considering the supervisory jurisdiction of this court over inferior tribunals by certiorari, or upon motion for new trial or its chancery jurisdiction; it is the appellate jurisdiction only which is invoked in this case.

Two things must concur to give a court jurisdiction of a cause: the power constituting the court must have authorized it to try causes of that nature, and the parties interested or the thing in dispute must be before it. The parties either may be brought in by process, or they may come voluntarily; the power to try and determine and to enforce its decision must be given by the constitution or the legislature. In Rhode Island the constitution provides that the several courts shall have such jurisdiction as may from time to time be prescribed by law. Art. 10, § 2. And this may be by general statute, or by special act giving a new jurisdiction to try a particular case. In re Joseph B. Nichols, 8 R. I. 50, 55.

Original jurisdiction in settling the estate of deceased persons is *655 granted to the Courts of. Probate of the several towns, and this is comprehensive and final except upon appeal. Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 179, § 9; cap. 190, § 10.

Appellate jurisdiction in the same matters is given to the Supreme Court on its common law side, but such matters must be brought before it “ from ” some Court of Probate. Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 192, § 25.

The jurisdictions of the two courts which we are considering are exclusive of each other. If no appeal is taken, the decree of the Probate Court of the town is a final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, and as such entitled to due credit in all other tribunals. The issue determined is res adjudicata.

If an appeal is taken, the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court attaches, and that of the Probate Court of the town is suspended.

The jurisdictional fact which empowers the Probate Court of the town to act originally is the domicile of the person whose estate is involved, or the location of his property within the town ; the jurisdictional fact which empowers the Appellate Court to re-try the issue is the taking of an appeal from the decree or order of the Probate Court.

Is the time of taking the appeal essential to its validity, or may this provision be waived, and a decree of a Probate Court be reexamined after the lapse of any period of time, at the will, as in this case, of the administrator and of any one party who shall consider himself aggrieved by it ?

It seems to us that the statute makes the time of the very essence of the act. Cap. 181, § 1, provides that any person aggrieved by any order of a Court of Probate may, unless provision is made to the contrary, appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court, and § 2 proceeds to state the condition upon which such privilege may be availed of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 A. 149, 17 R.I. 652, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenyon-v-probate-court-ri-1892.