McDonnell v. Jordan

178 U.S. 229, 20 S. Ct. 886, 44 L. Ed. 1048, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1670
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 21, 1900
Docket253
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 U.S. 229 (McDonnell v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonnell v. Jordan, 178 U.S. 229, 20 S. Ct. 886, 44 L. Ed. 1048, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1670 (1900).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The question of jurisdiction was certified before the adjournment of the term of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District and Northern Division of Alabama, at which term the judgment was entered, and we decline, under the circumstances disclosed, to discuss what the effect might have been if the certificate had shown on its face that it was in fact signed in the Southern Division of the District within which the presiding judge had jurisdiction.

Petitions for removal and motions to remand are matters of record proper. Ordinarily papers filed in support thereof are .not so unless made párt thereof by bill of exceptions, though sometimes this is otherwise. England v. Gebhardt, 112 U. S. 502; Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S. 410; Railroad Company v. Koontz, 104 U. S. 5.

We are not concerned here with the proofs as to prejudice or local influence.

By section 4272 of the Civil Code of Alabama, it is provided that: “ Upon the death of a testator, any executor, devisee, or legatee named in the will, or any person'interested in the estate, may have the will proved before the proper Probate Court.” As Mrs. Fennell was an inhabitant of Madison County at the time of her death, the Probate Court of that county was the proper Probate Court, § 4273; and as Walter E. Jordan and Llewellyn Jordan were named executors, and Llewellyn Jordan was the sole devisee and legatee, either of them could propound the will for probate. By section 4284 it was provided that: “ Whenever *235 an application is made to prove a will in this State, at least ten days’ notice must be given to the widow and next of kin, or to either of them, residing and being within the State, before such application is heard.” In this case Mrs. McDonnell was the next of kin and sole heir at law, and was duly notified.

Section 4287 provides that: “ A will, before the probate thereof, may be contested by any person interested therein, or by any person who, if the testator had died intestate, would have been an heir or distributee of his estate, by filing in the court where it is offered for probate allegations in writing that the will was not duly executed, or of the unsoundness of mind of the testator, or of any other valid objection thereto; and thereupon an issue must be made up, under the direction of the court, between the person making tbé application, as plaintiff, and the person contesting the validity of the will, as defendant; and such issue must, On application of either party, be tried by a jury.”

Section 4298 reads that: “ Any person interested in any will, who has not contested the same under the provisions of this article, may, at any time within eighteen months after the admission of such will to probate in this State, contest the validity‘of the same by bill in chancery, in the district in which such will was probated, or in a district in which a material defendant resides.”

Mrs. McDonnell filed her allegations in writing contesting the will on the grounds that it was not signed by the subscribing witnesses in the presence of the alleged testatrix; nor by testatrix in the presence of the subscribing witnesses; nor was the alleged will signed by the witnesses at the request of the testatrix; nor by the subscribing witnesses in the presence of each other and in the presence of the testatrix; that the testatrix at the time the alleged will was signed and executed was of unsound mind and memory and not mentally capable of making a will; that the execution of the will was procured by fraud and undue influence of Llewellyn Jordan; and that the paper propounded was not the last will and testament of Mrs. Fennell; and she demanded a jury trial. The cause was duly set down for trial as between W. E. Jordan, proponent, and *236 Ada F. McDonnell, contestant, and was subsequently tried, the trial continuing some days, and on April 15,1897, the jury being unable to agree upon a verdict, was discharged.

After this mistrial Walter E. Jordan applied to the Probate Court to allow him to make Llewellyn J ordan a party defendant to his petition that the will be admitted to probate. As Llewellyn Jordan was a,co-executor, and the sole devisee and legatee, the Probate Court, on the third of August, declined to grant the application. If Llewellyn Jordan had applied to be formally admitted as co-proponent, it must be assumed that he ■would have been permitted to become such of record, but he made no such application. Then, on August J, the paper purporting to be an “ answer ” of Llewellyn Jordan was filed by the clerk, without leave, or knowledge of the court, and on the same day was struck from the files as improvidently placed thereon. The succeeding day, August 5, Walter E. Jordan renounced the executorship, and asked that letters issue to his co-executor, Llewellyn J ordan. August 12 the order of removal was entered by the Circuit Court.

The contention of plaintiff in error is that the proceeding in the Probate Court of Madison County was simply a proceeding to establish and probate the will and as such was not a “ suit of a civil nature, at law or in equity,” and therefore not removable that if the proceeding were otherwise removable, Llewellyn Jordan was not a defendant and could not remove; and that the application for removal came too late.

The decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama recognize that an application for the probate of a will is a proceeding in rem, but it is held that it becomes a suit inter partes where there is a contest, that is, “ a suit between the party alleging the existence of the will and the contestant.” And that the result of the statutory provisions is to afford two modes of contest, in the Probate Court before the will has been proved, or in the Chancery Court after probate by the institution of a suit by those who were not parties to a contest in the Probate Court. Knox v. Paull, 95 Ala. 505, and cases cited.

Undoubtedly the courts of the United States possess no jurisdiction over an ex pa/rte application for the probate of a will, *237 that is, for the proof thereof in common form, which is purely a proceeding in rem; but it is insisted by defendant in error that, by the institution of a contest, a case of controversy inter partes arises, which may be removed to the Circuit Court just as such a contest may be under the state statute removed' by change of venue from the Probate Court, where the will is propounded, to the Probate Court of another county, and that the judgment of the Federal court in such a case must be recognized by the Probate Court of original jurisdiction, just as by statute the judgment of another Probate Court to which the proceeding has been remitted is certified to that court that the will may be probated or rejected as that judgment is for or against the validity. Code 1896, §4296.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 U.S. 229, 20 S. Ct. 886, 44 L. Ed. 1048, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonnell-v-jordan-scotus-1900.