New York Life Insurance v. Brown

32 Colo. 365
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1904
DocketNos. 4548 and 4786
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 Colo. 365 (New York Life Insurance v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Insurance v. Brown, 32 Colo. 365 (Colo. 1904).

Opinions

Chief Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court.

The executor, heirs and devisees of the testatrix move to dismiss the appeal, and also contend that the case cannot be considered on error for reasons based substantially upon the following grounds: (1) That the plaintiffs in error are not aggrieved by the decree from which they appeal; (2) that no question is involved, nor is the subject-matter of controversy or the judgment rendered such as to give this court jurisdiction on appeal; (3) that the questions which the plaintiffs in error sought to have adjudicated by their several answers and defenses were not within the jurisdiction of the county court to determine in a proceeding by the executor for leave to sell real estate to pay debts,'and that the value of their several alleged property rights severally exceeded the constitutional limit of the court to adjudicate.

The first proposition is clearly untenable. Plaintiffs in error were made parties to the proceeding because, it was alleged, they claimed an interest in the property which the executor sought to have sold for the payment of estate indebtedness. The object in maldng them parties was to cut off their alleged [372]*372interest in such property by virtue of a sale and disposition thereof by the executor for the purpose of raising funds to pay debts against the estate. They sought to interpose a defense which they claimed was sufficient to entitle them to a decree directing that the property in which they claim to be interested should not be subjected to the payment of estate indebtedness, except for the balance remaining unsatisfied after all other property subject to such indebtedness had been exhausted. This relief was denied, and a decree rendered the effect of which is to deny them all rights in the property in which they claim to be interested, and when enforced will divest them of all title thereto. When a judgment purports to determine that parties to the action in which it is rendered have no rights in .the subject-matter of controversy in which they claim an interest, they are aggrieved thereby, in the sense that such an adjudication entitled them to have the judgment rendered reviewed, when reviewable, for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not it is correct.

We shall not attempt to determine whether any question is involved, or the subject-matter of controversy such, or a judgment rendered adverse to plaintiffs in error in an , amount which would vest this court with jurisdiction to entertain the appeal by virtue of the law regulating appeals to this court— sec. 406a, Mills’ Ann. Code. The Civil Code, sec. 388a, provides that if the supreme court does not have jurisdiction to entertain an appeal, but would have, had the action come up on writ of error, the appeal shall be dismissed and the cause redocketed on error. The judgment appealed from is final. The constitution, by sec. 23, art. YI, expressly provides that writs of error shall lie from the supreme court to every final judgment of the county court. This provision is supplemented by the statute — sec. 1091, [373]*3731 Mills ’ Ann. Stats. By virtue of those provisions a decree of the county court for the sale of land of a decedent to pay debts, may be reviewed on error— Sloan v. Strickler, 12 Colo. 179 — and we therefore dismiss the appeal and consider the ease on error, because, under that procedure, the case is reviewable here on such questions as the record presents.

In a certain sense the jurisdiction of the county court to entertain the defenses interposed by plaintiffs in error and adjudicate the questions thereby raised, may be involved, but a decision of the case as argued by counsel for the respective parties depends principally upon the determination of these two propositions: (1) The general scope and authority of the county court in proceedings by an executor to sell real estate to pay debts; and (2), did the defense upon ^which plaintiffs in error severally predicate their right to a decree directing a sale of the several tracts of realty described in the petition in such order as would protect their equities, state facts sufficient to entitle them to this relief? We limit the discussion of the defenses interposed by plaintiffs in-error to this one, because we do not deem it necessary to pass upon the others at this time. In discussing these two propositions we shall not. attempt to determine the many questions argued by counsel, because, by determining the two main questions involved, it will appear they either have no application or are disposed of in the two propositions determined.

In the settlement of estates of deceased persons the county court is vested with original and unlimited jurisdiction — sec. 23, art. VI, constitution; Lusk v. Kershow, 17 Colo. 481; Wyman v. Felker, 18 Colo., 382. One of the functions which the county court is authorized to exercise in the settlement of estates is authority to entertain a proceeding by an executor [374]*374to sell real estate to pay debts. Tbe statutes on tbe subject provide who shall be made parties to such proceeding; that any person interested in the estate as creditor or otherwise and not made defendant, may appear and answer the petition and show cause against the prayer thereof at any time before final judgment; that such proceedings shall conform as nearly as' practicable to the proceedings of courts of chancery in like cases, and that upon the hearings of the issues formed the court shall specify the order in which the real estate shall be sold, with due regard to the rights of all — secs. 4751, 4758, 4760, 4761, 2 Mills’ Ann. Stats.

The only specific limitation on any defendant is, that he shall not be permitted to put in issue the decedent’s title or interests in the lands described in the petition — sec. 4758, supra. Authority conferred upon a court for a particular purpose carries with it, by implication, such incidental powers as are 'requisite to the complete execution of the poiver expressly granted.- — Hyland v. Baxter, 98 N. Y., 610. Logically, then, it must follow that in proceedings to sell real estate to pay debts of a deceased, the constitutional limitation of value does not apply, and the authority of the county court, in order to enable it to fully discharge the functions conferred by law, must extend to the adjudication of all questions in such proceedings except the one limited, involving the rights of those before the court interested in the real estate sought to be sold, whose rights therein will be injuriously affected by a decree of sale. — 1 Woerner’s Law of Administration, §§142, 150, 154; Lowry’s Appeal, 114 Pa. St. 219; Appeal of Miskimins, 114 Pa. St. 530; 2 Woerner’s Law of Administration, § 487; Callahan v. Griswold, 9 Mo. 775; Payne v. Pendleton, 32 Miss. 320; Pearce v. Calhoun, 59 Mo. 271; Titterington v. Hooker, 58 Mo. 593.

[375]*375Plaintiffs in error were not attempting to make an issue on the title of the testatrix. On the contrary, they claimed title from that source. Neither were they attempting to have their rights as against the heirs and devisees determined, except in so far as such determination incidentally involved their rights to a decree which would direct the order in which the real estate should be sold. In short, their defense under consideration was intended to invoke the ■ equitable doctrine of marshaling assets.

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32 Colo. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-brown-colo-1904.