Tibbatts v. Berry

49 Ky. 473, 10 B. Mon. 473, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 25, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 473 (Tibbatts v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tibbatts v. Berry, 49 Ky. 473, 10 B. Mon. 473, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 135 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court

The County Court of Campbell county having at its November term 1848, rejected the will of Gen. James Taylor, a writ of error was, on the 22d day of March following, sued out from the Campbell Circuit Court by G. W. Berry and R. T. Thornton, as trustees named in [474]*474said will, and on the 12th day of June following, a writ of error was sued out from the same Court in the name of Ward and wife, and Foote and wife, and John E. Harris, both for the reversal of the same order of said County Court rejecting the will. But John E. Harris having died before any of the proceedings in Court, this last writ stands in the name of the other parties. Upon each writ a summons issued against James Taylor, jr. and H. T. Harris and wife, J. W. Tibbatts and wife and G. T. Williamson and wife, being the four heir's of the decedent and the husbands of the female heirs. The summons on the second writ also included the widow of the decedent, and Berry and Thonrton, trustees, who were plaintiffs in the first writ. The summons in each case was executed on all the persons named therein except Williamson and Wife, who resided in Cincinnati, but who having had due notice of the proceeding, appeared in each case and entered themselves as defendants, and they and Tibbatts and wife, who were also entered as defendants, seem to have been the only contestants of the will in the Circuit Court. A trial was had in each ease, and in each case a judgment was rendered, reversing the order of the County Court, and establishing the will, with the proper orders for its being recorded in the Circuit and County.Courts, and a judgment for costs against the defendants in error. And Tibbatts and wife and Williamson and wife having appealed fi’om each of these judgments, the two cases though tried separately in the Circuit Court, have been heard and submitted together in this Court, not as one case, but as two cases presenting substantially the same questions, except as to the question whether the respective plaintiffs in the two writs of error from the Circuit Court to the County Court, had such interest as authorized them to prosecute such writs.

The probate of a will before a court of competent jurisdiction, is binding upon all persons, whilst it remains in force — subject only to reversal by appeal, writ of error, or bill in chancery under the statute of 1797.

[474]*474The two cases on Wells’ Will, (5 Litt.273, and 4 Mon. 152,) and the case on Singleton’s Will, (8 B. Mon. 340,) and other cases recognize and establish the principle that under our system for probate of wills, and indeed, as necessarily flowing from it, the probate or rejection [475]*475of a will by the proper tribunal having the case regularly before it, is like a sentence, in rem, conclusive, while it remains in force, in the same and in all other Courts, and between all persons, whether formal parties to the record or not; and that the proceeding for the probate of wills is in the nature of a proceeding in rem, presenting the question of will or no will, not as a mere question of property which can be effectually decided only between the parties to the record and their privies, but as an abstract question, the decision of which by a competent tribunal, having the question properly before it, is while it stands binding upon all the world. By whom and in what manner this question may be presented, is a matter regulated by law. And as a will may be proposed for probate in the County Court by any person interested in its establishment and may be contested there by any one having an opposite interest, and may without contest and on ex parte proof be there established or rejected with conclusive effect except so far as the sentence is subject to reversal; and as any person interested against such sentence, whether a party to the original record or hot is authorized by the act of 1842, (3 Slat. Law, 586,) to prosecute a writ of error from the Circuit Court, whereby the question of probate, that is the question of will or no will, is brought fully within the jurisdiction of that Court, which is authorized to try the case not merely upon the record of the County Court, but upon original evidence, as if it were a Court of original jurisdiction, it seems to follow that if the writ of error be prosecuted by a competent party, and a final decision of the question of will or no wfill be had, it must have the same effect as if all parties interested on the same side had united in the writ, and that if proper parties for contesting the reversal be also before the Court, its sentence, like that of the County Court, must be conclusive upon all while it remains in force, and subject only to an appeal or wi’it of error, and to the remedy for contesting the validity of a will by bill in chancery under the 11th section of the act of 1797.

The Circuit Court is not to reverse because all persons interested in the will were not before the County Court — but that Court should have all the parties interested in maintaining the 'will, before the Court. A writ of error may be prosecuted by an interested party to the Circuit Court, which brings up tlie whole question of will or no will, & precludes a second writ by another parly interested on the same mide.

The third section of the act of 1842, supra, expressly provides that the judgment of the inferior Court shall not be reversed here because all the persons interested in the will were not made parties to the controversy in that Court. The object of the writ of error being to reverse the decision of the County Court, and to bring before the Circuit Court the question of will or no will, it is doubtless the duty of that Court to take care that the parties interested in maintaining the judgment shall have an opportunity of doing so, and that the contest proposed by the writ of error shall not be a merely pretended controversy. But the provision just referred to, shows that it is not necessary that all persons interested in the question should be actual parties. And even if the provision should be confined to those persons who are interested in sustaining the will, it corroborates the position above stated as to the sufficiency of the writ of error prosecuted by any party interested in maintaining the will, and as to the conclusiveness of the sentence, if such writ be prosecuted by a competent party. Whether any other persons who may be interested in supporting the will, should be summoned upon the writ of error prosecuted by one or more, having such interest, may be a matter within the discretion of the Circuit Court. But if the actual plaintiffs have an interest, and are thus competent to prosecute the writ and present the question, and if the parties appearing to be interested against the will are before the Court, the proceeding would seem to be perfect in point of form, and such as to authorize a decision conclusive upon all persons whether parties to the record or not.

As one writ of error by a competent party brings up to the Circuit Court the whole case, and presents the question entire and not divisible on the ground of parties or their interests, and authorizes a decision which shall be binding upon all interests, it must be considered as if it were prosecuted for and by all parties interested on the same side as the actual plaintiffs, and as, therefore, precluding any subsequent writ by any other of these parties, as completely as it precludes one by the [477]*477actual plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 473, 10 B. Mon. 473, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tibbatts-v-berry-kyctapp-1850.