Kimball

49 A.2d 70, 142 Me. 182, 1946 Me. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 8, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 70 (Kimball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball, 49 A.2d 70, 142 Me. 182, 1946 Me. LEXIS 30 (Me. 1946).

Opinion

Murchie, J.

In these two cases a single bill of exceptions relates to separate decrees of the Superior Court (the Supreme Court of Probate) entered on the same day in processes instituted in different forums with the common objective of avoiding the effect of an earlier decree therein (hereinafter referred to as the “surcharge decree”) disallowing items in the Sixth Account of the Trustee under the fourth clause of the will of Horace Williams (hereafter referred to as the “Trustee”). One of them dismissed his petition to the Superior Court, dated August 21,1945, for the annulment of the surcharge decree. It had been entered October 19, 1944, on an appeal from the decree of the Probate Court allowing the account, and operated to surcharge the Trustee for investment losses amounting to $12,555.98. An appeal therefrom to this Court was dismissed on jurisdictional grounds. Edwards, Appellant (In re Williams’ Estate), 141 Me., 219, 41 A., 2d, 825. The other dismissed his appeal from a decree of the Probate Court disallowing his Seventh and Final Account, dated July 22, 1943 (hereafter referred to as the “Seventh Account”) .

Both processes are grounded on the claim that the surcharge decree was “null and void and of no effect” because the Supreme Court of Probate exceeded its statutory authority “in referring the issues involved” in the appeal to referees “and in blindly adopting” their decision “without itself hearing and deciding the case.” These are the allegations of the Reasons of Appeal in the appeal case and corresponding allegations are made in the Petition for Annulment, which declares also that while the case was pending before the referees the parties signed an agreement waiving exceptions to any question of jurisdiction or otherwise, stipulating that whatever decision the referees might render would:

“be incorporated into a decree ... by the Supreme Court of Probate”

[184]*184and undertaking that all parties would:

“co-operate in the settlement of the Sixth Account in accordance with said decree.”

There is nothing to indicate that such allegations were made in the Seventh Account but the decree entered thereon in the Probate Court shows that the facts alleged were proved at the hearing on it. In disallowing the account the Judge of Probate declared that regardless of its merits the claim presupposed an authority and jurisdiction of the Probate Court “to review the proceedings and pass upon the Decrees of the Supreme Court of Probate,” which it did not possess.

The detail of the Sixth Account does not appear in the record, but the issue raised by the appeal which carried it to the Supreme Court of Probate is plainly set forth. That issue was the propriety of the allowance of investment losses. The account was dated April 18, 1939, and covered the period from January 1, 1935 to August 14,1938. It asked the allowance of $49,506.77 on 15 investments involving a cost of $58,220.85. The cost and sale prices of the investments, except for 3 items that were not sold but proved to be worthless, are shown. The losses on 12 purchases ranged from a minimum of just under fifty per cent of the cost to a maximum of more than ninety-nine per cent. In the other 3 instances the loss was total. The overall average loss was slightly more than eighty-five per cent.

The account was allowed in May 1941. The appeal was entered in the Supreme Court of Probate at the October Term in that year. No action was taken on it until the October Term 1943, when it was referred to 3 referees. The referees filed a report at the October Term 1944. No action was taken on it. Three court days later, at the same term, the challenged decree was entered, sustaining the appeal, surcharging the Trustee and remanding the case to the Probate Court for further proceedings. There can be no doubt on the record that it was rendered on the basis of the report of the referees and an accompanying opinion setting [185]*185forth the reasons and reasoning underlying it, after consideration thereof and consultation with counsel.

The Trustee asserts his claim in reliance on the principle that probate appeals are not referable. Chaplin, Appellant, 131 Me., 187, 160 A., 27. In that case, as in the present ones, a decree entered in the Probate Court was carried'to the Supreme Court of Probate by appeal and the parties agreed to submit it to reference. Thereafter counsel entered a stipulation waiving the illegality of the reference, but the appellant seasonably filed objections to the acceptance of the referee’s report when it was filed. This was in accordance with the Rules of Court and the report having been accepted, notwithstanding the objections, and exception taken and prosecuted, this Court was obligated perforce to sustain it. As was stated in that opinion:

“Probate appeals are of statutory origin, and must be conducted strictly according" to the statute.”

The situation here is different. The report of the referees was given no force as such. The agreement of the parties was not a waiver of the illegality of the reference but of the right to take exceptions to a decree which would decide the cause in accordance with the judgment of the referees, in apparent compliance with the statute, and included an undertaking to have that judgment control the settlement of the Sixth Account (which would in turn control the closing of the trust).

The issues presented by the bill of exceptions are whether the Supreme Court of Probate transcended its authority in deciding the appeal without a hearing involving testimony and in accepting the judgment of unauthorized referees, in accordance with the formal agreement of the parties, and, if so, whether the surcharge can be avoided by either process invoked by the Trustee.

That a petition for annulment addressed to the Supreme Court of Probate is not a proper remedy, assuming an error, is apparent. That Court has no original jurisdiction. R. S. 1944, Chap. 140, Sec. 32, provides that the:

[186]*186“superior court is the supreme court of probate, and has appellate jurisdiction in all matters determinable by the several judges of probate.”

It has an appellate jurisdiction and nothing more. This has been noted in decisions over a long period of years. Small et al. v. Small, 4 Me., 220, 16 Am. Dec., 253; Moore v. Smith, 5 Me., 490; Patten et ux. v. Tallman, 27 Me., 17; Cousins v. Advent Church of the City of Biddeford, 93 Me., 292, 45 A., 43; Tripp et al. v. Clapp et al., 126 Me., 534, 140 A., 199. Even in the appellate field its authority is confined to cases within the jurisdiction of courts of probate, Veazie Bank v. Young, 53 Me., 555, and to those brought forward by one entitled to prosecute an appeal, Deering et al. v. Adams, 34 Me., 41. An additional limitation is declared in Merrill Trust Company v. Hartford, 104 Me., 566, 72 A., 745, 129 Am. St. Rep., 415, where the decision was that it could not consider questions not raised by allegations in the Reasons of Appeal. The principle that courts of probate have an original jurisdiction in probate matters that is exclusive accords with the rule prevailing in Massachusetts. Pope v. Pope, 4 Pick., 129; Waters v. Stickney, 12 Allen, 1, 90 Am. Dec., 122; Gale et al. v. Nickerson et al., 144 Mass., 415, 11 N. E., 714;

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 70, 142 Me. 182, 1946 Me. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-me-1946.