Citation Numbers: 28 A. 544, 63 Conn. 332, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 51
Judges: Andrews, Baldwin, Carpenter, Cos, FeNN, Haven, Hew, Pairfield, Penn, Torrance
Filed Date: 9/9/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The original complaint in this action alleged, in substance, that the defendant was the former wife of Seymour D. Hall, the plaintiff's testator, and was divorced from him on her complaint; that afterwards, in the lifetime of the testator, she accepted a note for 1550, signed by the plaintiff personally; and in consideration thereof made a contract with the testator, for the benefit of his estate, in writing but not under seal or acknowledged, by which she granted, quit-claimed and released all right of dower and one third interest, which she might have had thereafter, in or to the real property of the testator, so that she should not thereafter have any claim on his property; that after the death of the testator she demanded and received payment of the note, and was then requested by the plaintiff to execute and deliver to him, as executor of the testator's estate, a deed releasing the estate from any claim on her part for dower, but that she refused to do so, and claimed the right of dower in the real estate belonging to the estate, and that she presented to the court of probate for the district of Wallingford, in which district the estate of the testator was and still is in process of settlement, a petition to have dower assigned to her; and notwithstanding the opposition of the plaintiff, the court of probate passed an order for the assignment of dower, as prayed for in said petition, and for the appointment of distributors to set out dower to her in the real estate of the deceased, which is described. It was further alleged that "it will be necessary to sell all or a large portion of said real estate in order to pay the debts of said Seymour D. Hall and the expenses of settlement." It was also alleged that such acts constituted a cloud upon the title of the real estate; made it difficult or impossible to sell the same at a fair valuation; decreased its value to the estate, and caused loss, trouble and expense to the plaintiff, as executor, in defending the same; and that the defendant intended to make a sale and conveyance of her pretended right to a bonâ fide purchaser, and thus cause further trouble and expense. And the plaintiff thereupon claimed an injunction against such conveyance, against further claim of title *Page 335 to dower, and further action, suit or proceeding in any court to obtain the same; also that the defendant be required to execute a release; and that judgment be rendered that she has no right, title, interest, or claim of dower, and for pecuniary damages.
Upon this complaint a temporary injunction against a transfer or conveyance only was granted by the Superior Court, which continues in force.
To the above complaint the defendant demurred, assigning four reasons, three of which, the first, third and fourth, were sustained by the court, and are as follows: —
"1. That it does not appear by said complaint that the plaintiff as executor of the last will of said Seymour D. Hall has any such interest in the property and right in question as to bring this suit."
"3. That it appears by said complaint that the matters in said complaint set out have been decided adversely to the claim of the plaintiff by a court of competent jurisdiction.
"4. That it appears by said complaint that said plaintiff was present, and had opportunity to present the matters in said complaint set out to the court of probate for the district of Wallingford as a defense and in opposition to the said petition of the defendant for assignment of dower, and that said court of probate, notwithstanding the opposition of the plaintiff, decided the issue in favor of the defendant, and assigned to her dower as prayed for in said petition."
After the judgment of the court sustaining the demurrer as above, an application was made to the court by Seymour D. Hall, of Wallingford, who, it was alleged, "brings this application by Henry F. Hall, his next friend," stating that he was the son of the testator, Seymour D. Hall, deceased, and the sole heir and sole legatee and devisee under his will, and asking to be joined as a co-plaintiff in the action with the executor. This application was denied by the court. Afterwards the plaintiff asked, and was refused, leave of the court to file an amendment to the complaint, alleging that the defendant, at the hearing in the court of probate, introduced no evidence, but claimed that the court of probate had *Page 336 no jurisdiction to determine the validity of the writing executed by the defendant, and that the plaintiff must enforce his rights, growing out of said transaction, in some other jurisdiction if at all. The plaintiff, in his appeal from the adverse judgment of the court, assigns as error the various rulings aforesaid, adding — "and Seymour D. Hall of Wallingford, by Henry F. Hall, his next friend, joins in this appeal, and in the prayer for relief thereto, so far as relates to his application to be made a party plaintiff."
The question which is fundamental in this case is that raised by the third and fourth reasons of demurrer to the complaint, which were sustained by the court below. We will, therefore, first examine that question. The successful contention of the defendant in that court is stated by her counsel, in their brief filed in this court, in these words: — "The Superior Court has no jurisdiction. Jurisdiction over the matter is in the court of probate, and that court has taken jurisdiction and has acted." It is manifest that the question here presented is of much importance, since its determination may not only be decisive of the case before us, but a clear understanding of the doctrine of the cases cited by counsel in argument, and of other cases on the subject, in this state, will be of great and far-reaching practical utility. We therefore regard it as our duty to consider it fully.
It will be readily seen, we think, that questions which may arise concerning the right of an applicant (or if application is made by those interested in an estate, or the creditors of a widow, of the person to whom it is asked that dower may be set out) to such assignment by a court of probate, can be appropriately divided into three general classes. First, whether such applicant possesses the legal or statutory requisites to entitle her to such assignment. Second, whether, notwithstanding such strict statutory requisites may exist, there are other grounds or equities which bar or prevent the existence of a right of dower against the estate. And third, whether, although at the time of the decease of the person whose estate is in settlement a right of dower did exist, the applicant has subsequently parted with or estopped herself *Page 337
from the assertion of such right. In reference to the first and last of these three classes of questions there can be, we think, but little difficulty in understanding the power, duty and jurisdiction of courts of probate. Such uncertainty as there may be pertains to the second class. All questions which may arise as to whether the applicant for the set-out of dower possesses the statutory requisites to entitle her to such assignment belong to the exclusive jurisdiction of courts of probate. Those requisites are now to be found stated in Gen. Statutes, §§ 618, 621, 622. To be entitled to dower the person must have been the wife of the decedent, married prior to April 20th, 1877, and living with her husband at the time of his death, or absent by his consent or by his default or by accident, or have been divorced without alimony, she being the innocent party, and a suitable provision must not have been made for her support before the marriage by way of jointure or a settlement of property the title to which shall not have failed wholly or in part, in her favor, in contemplation of marriage, to take effect after the death of the intended husband, and expressed to be in lieu of dower; and she must not have, with her husband, during the marriage, entered, in the manner provided by statute, into a contract for the abandonment of common law rights in the property of each other. Nor must she, by failure to decline to accept, as prescribed by statute, a devise or bequest to her in lieu of dower, have become debarred of her rights. Whenever application is made to a court of probate to have dower assigned, the court, as was said in Hewitt's Appeal,
What is conclusively settled by such order of a court of probate and the proceedings had thereon, and which, because within its jurisdiction, "cannot be attacked collaterally except for fraud, or set aside save by appeal," (Gen. Statutes, § 436,) is that the person to whom the assignment of dower is made possesses the statutory requisites to entitle her to such assignment. And such proceedings also designate the lands in which, as between her and "the persons entitled to the estate," such dower interest is to be held and enjoyed. To that extent the order of the court, and the doings of the persons appointed to set out dower, "returned to and accepted *Page 339 by said court," do "ascertain and establish such dower." Gen. Statutes, § 619.
It would seem to result from what has already been said, that if, at the time of the decease of the person whose estate was in settlement, a right of dower in such estate existed in favor of the applicant, which right was not lost in the manner expressly provided by Gen. Statutes, § 621, namely, by failure to decline to accept a devise or legacy made in lieu of dower, the court of probate would have no right or jurisdiction to consider the question whether she had subsequently parted with or estopped herself from claiming such right. That, indeed, is the precise point of Hewitt's Appeal, where the question arose as between the widow and the persons who had purchased the lands in winch dower was claimed, as free from the right of dower, from the guardian of the minor heirs, selling under the order of the court of probate; and although it is stated in the opinion, (p. 34,) that "the question is, whether a court of probate in the settlement of an estate is vested with such equity powers that it can apply an estoppel in a controversy between the widow, on the one part, regarding her right of dower in her deceased husband's estate, and strangers to the estate on the other, having no interest whatever in it except as purchasers of land belonging to it," (such being, in reality, the scope of the question presented by the facts,) yet it must be manifest from the entire reasoning of the opinion, that the mere fact that the appellees' only interest was that of purchasers of land belonging to the estate was regarded as in no sense vital; and that if the appellees in that case had been the minor heirs themselves, no conveyance having been made of their interest by their guardian and under an order of the court of probate to third persons, and the claim had been that the widow had released her interest to them, by which they would have acquired an independent, different and enlarged interest over that which they took by descent, the decision must have been the same. In that case it would have equally been an effort "to set aside, by the court of probate, Mrs. Hewitt's right to dower, which once *Page 340
existed." (p. 86.) It would equally "grow out of a purchase of her dower lands after dower had attached." (p. 87.) And it would be equally correct to say, as the court does — "Suppose she should claim that what purported to be a deed was obtained from her by fraud or duress, or was executed by mistake, in the belief that she was executing one instrument when in fact she was executing another. Must a court of probate determine all these questions before the lands can be designated in which she has dower, if she has it at all? If this be so the court of probate would be assuming the right to determine her title to dower." It is unnecessary to quote further. The whole opinion demonstrates what has been stated. See also Dickinson's Appeal,
But a much more difficult question is presented by the other class of questions, as to the jurisdiction and duty of courts of probate, where it is claimed that the right of dower is barred or prevented by other grounds than the want of statutory requisites. The case of Andrews v.Andrews,
But it by no means follows, or is to be understood, that ordinarily there is any such identity between the necessary incidental and implied powers of courts of probate and the equity powers of chancery courts of general jurisdiction. The contrary fully appears in cases referred to and quoted elsewhere in this opinion. The test is the necessity, in order to discharge the duty committed in such a way as to best promote the end and policy of the law in delegating the power and jurisdiction to such statutory tribunal. Indeed, the language used in Chase's Appeal must be understood also in the aspect of its bearing upon the claims of counsel, based *Page 343 upon some dicta, which seem to have been misapprehended, in earlier cases, as for instance inBeach v. Norton, (supra,) which latter case this court found it necessary severely to criticise, and to overrule, so far at least as the reasoning and views were concerned, in Vail's Appeal, (supra,) saying: — "The judge of the court of probate is not a chancellor. He possesses chancery powers, but they are only such as are incidental, connected with the settlement of a particular estate, and necessary for the adjustment of equitable rights, and not to find and enforce equities in the ordinary and loose sense in which that term has come to be used in the law. * * * It must be a right; one which a court of equity would take cognizance of and enforce, if application could be made to such a court." The ruling in Chase's Appeal is to be taken as an affirmance of the above language. As so understood, the incidental equity powers of courts of probate, though they may extend to and be exercised concerning matters within the exclusive jurisdiction of such courts, and therefore be employed where no other court could use them, are themselves never other or greater than such as are recognized as equitable rights by courts of chancery, and which would be cognizable and enforceable in such courts were it not that the particular jurisdiction concerning the subject matter had by statute been committed to the special tribunal therefor created; while, on the other hand, by reason of the peculiar and circumscribed jurisdiction of such special tribunals, courts of probate may be, and often are, incapable of supplying as adequate equitable relief as equity courts of general chancery powers can afford.
Returning, after the above digression, to the subject more directly before us: In Seeley's Appeal,
It seems manifest also, in the light of these cases, that any attempt to decide the questions which may arise under what we have called the second class of questions, namely those where other than strict statutory requisites are claimed to bar or prevent the existence of a right of dower against an estate, so that certain of them shall be held to be strict statutory requisites, within the exclusive jurisdiction of that court, and concerning which the action of such court, unappealed from, is final and conclusive, and others of them are held, like those arising from subsequent releases, bars or estoppels to rights which have once attached, not within the jurisdiction of courts of probate, would lead to constant and inexplicable confusion and uncertainty. It is far better that there should be a rule upon the subject, definite, practicable, and clear, even though it be somewhat arbitrary and lack in theoretical perfection. It is certain that the equity powers of courts of probate are and should be restricted, broad though they may be, along certain lines, and for the accomplishment of certain definite and definitely prescribed statutory ends. This is a necessary incident to its being a court of strict statutory jurisdiction. In Hewitt's Appeal a great contention in favor of the appellants was, that the Superior Court, by virtue of section 6 of the practice act, could find and enforce an equitable estoppel, on an appeal from probate, even if the court of probate could not, and thus exercise on such an appeal full equity powers. This court denied such power, and also over-ruled the further contention that "courts of probate have equity powers, to be administered in all cases where equitable considerations affect the matter with which they are dealing;" and proceeded to say: — "If the application is made for the assignment of dower, the court must be first satisfied that the applicant possesses the statutory requisites, without which no right of dower exists; and this power of inquiry is not exhausted, nor is this duty discharged, until the court has satisfied itself that there is no objection, equitable or legal, to the assignment of dower; for, having *Page 348 once acquired jurisdiction to determine the right of the party to such assignment, it becomes, as to that matter, vested with the amplest chancery powers, to do full justice between all the parties before it." See also Dickinson'sAppeal, (supra.)
Without extending this already lengthy consideration of this subject further, it must be apparent that there are, and must be, many cases falling within this second class, where the equity powers of courts of probate, limited and circumscribed as they are, are inadequate to furnish full and ample equitable relief. Such courts can neither grant injunctions, quiet titles, decree specific performance, nor pass title by decree. Nor can they, as we have seen, consider at all questions of a certain class, which may, in many cases, be more or less intimately connected, and, so to speak, interwoven with other questions within their exclusive jurisdiction to determine. On the other hand, where questions as to strict statutory requisites arise, the very facts upon which those questions are presented may also, as in the case of Carter's Appeal, present the most cogent of reasons, other than the want of such statutory requisites, strictly speaking, why an assignment of dower applied for should not be made.
On the whole, then, we deem the best and most serviceable rule upon the subject of jurisdiction, and the one which, we think is fully sanctioned by authority, by analogy, and by the theory and practice of our courts, to be this: The order and decree of a court of probate, having jurisdiction of the settlement of an estate, assigning dower, unappealed from, is final and conclusive of the statutory right of the applicant to such assignment, and designates the lands in which the dower exists as against such estate. That is its conclusive extent. If, notwithstanding the existence of the statutory requisites, there are other grounds why the right of dower should be equitably held not to have attached, and those grounds appear, the court of probate, in the first instance, may, and properly should, refuse to set out dower. It ought not, however, to do so in a fairly doubtful case, since it thereby casts a burden on the applicant for dower which she is compelled to meet by an appeal, as her only practicable remedy. *Page 349 If such refusal is made, and an appeal taken, which is pursued to the end, the case being finally decided upon a finding made, as in Carter's Appeal, it ought, however decided, to conclude all parties from further litigation of any questions made or which might have been made in the case. The full day in court will then have been had. But, if the case is not thus pursued, the decree of a court of probate assigning dower, and the assignment thereupon made, constitute no estoppel to a party having a proper and sufficient interest in the estate, and claiming to be aggrieved, from seeking in a court of full equity jurisdiction — the Superior Court — such relief as may be granted to him, in a case which concedes, as fully determined by the unappealed from action of the court of probate, the possession by the applicant for dower of the statutory requisites to entitle her thereto. Where however the legal right to dower has attached and it becomes inequitable for the widow to take the dower by reason of facts arising afterwards, the probate court cannot consider those facts, but must leave the parties interested against the assignment of dower to their remedy in a court of equity.
We have said that this rule will accord with the previous theory and practice of our courts. We have already referred to Seeley's Appeal,
If it be said that the rule which we have stated nevertheless does permit, and that recent cases, such asCarter's Appeal, both permit and sanction courts of probate entering into such inquiries in certain instances, and that to this extent a concurrent jurisdiction in that court and in the Superior Court is recognized, that is no new doctrine, for in Dailey v. City of NewHaven,
As bearing more or less directly upon various aspects of this inquiry, the following other cases in this jurisdiction may also be cited: Whiting v. Whiting,
Applying what has been stated, as our view of the law, to the case before us, the judgment of the Superior Court in sustaining the defendant's third and fourth reasons of demurrer to the plaintiff's complaint must be held erroneous. We should have been sorry to hold otherwise if the allegations of the plaintiff's proposed amendment to the complaint, which the court refused to allow, are true, to the effect that the court of probate, in granting the defendant's application to set out dower to her, sustained the claim there made by her counsel, that it had no jurisdiction to determine the very *Page 351 question which such counsel now claim was within its sole and exclusive jurisdiction, and concerning which it is affirmed that the plaintiff is concluded by its action.
The first reason of demurrer to the complaint, namely, the failure to state sufficient interest in the plaintiff to entitle him to bring the suit, was also sustained. The allegation was that "it will be necessary to sell all or a large portion of said real estate in order to pay the debts of said Seymour D. Hall and the expense of settlement;" coupled with the further allegation that the defendant's acts, in claiming and in procuring an order to set out dower, have clouded the title and made it difficult or impossible to sell the same for a fair valuation. Is this a sufficient averment of title in the plaintiff to enable him to maintain the suit? It seems to us that it is. The practice act, Gen. Statutes, § 880, requires and directs in pleading a plain and concise statement of material facts; not of the evidence by which they are to be proved. The material facts here are such as show an interest in the plaintiff, as, in his capacity of executor, a trustee for creditors of the estate. It is not enough, indeed, that the property may be needed for the payment of debts. It must appear that it is in fact so needed.Johnson v. Conn. Bank,
Nothing which we have said should be deemed as bearing upon the right of the defendant to ask, if she hereafter may desire, a fuller or more particular statement of the plaintiff's claim, in reference to his interest in the estate on which he relies to entitle him to maintain the suit. Gen. Statutes, § 880. Nor does it bear upon the question of the evidence by which, if contested, such allegation is to be established.
But this brings us to consider a claim made by the defendant's counsel. We quote from their brief. "But the principal objection to the complaint is that the right to decide whether the land should be sold is not in the executor, or in the Superior Court, but is in the court of probate. To enable the executor to sell he must get an order, after a hearing, from the court of probate. Only when that court has ordered the land to be sold can the executor have any possible power of sale or interest in the removal of a cloud. There is no allegation here that the court of probate has ordered its sale, or determined that it is necessary to sell it. The Superior Court cannot usurp the power of the court of probate, and decide that it will be necessary to sell the land. This allegation in the complaint is therefore superfluous, and shows no interest in the executor." Now, not only that that which this claim requires as allegation is not the ultimate fact to be stated, but the evidential one to support that statement, but also that such evidence would not be essential to its support, has been already, in effect, twice decided *Page 354
by this court. In Andrews v. Doolittle,
Again, in Bassett v. McKenna, (supra,) an action by an administrator to set aside a fraudulent deed, the defendant objected to the admission of the report of the commissioners *Page 355 on the estate, and this court, CARPENTER, J., in passing upon the question, said: — "The court admitted it for the purpose of proving that the estate was indebted in the several amounts therein stated. By that we understand that it was admitted to show the amount of indebtedness, solely for the purposes of this case. As the report of the commissioners is the only evidence of the existence and amount of the debts, as between the estate and the creditors, it is reasonable that in this proceeding, the object of which is to supply the estate with funds for the payment of the debts, the plaintiff should be permitted to show the amount of the debts by the report itself. At least it is admissible for that purpose."
In view of the conclusions which we have reached in reference to the questions raised by the assignments of error in the reasons of appeal, relating to the judgment on the demurrer, the other questions presented by such reasons of appeal become immaterial. We will, however, say that it appears to us very evident that there was nothing erroneous in the action of the court in overruling the application of Seymour D. Hall to be joined as a party plaintiff. The allowance of such application, at such time, was within the discretion of the court; a discretion which, under existing circumstances, seems to have been properly exercised. Even if there had been error in this respect, the executor could not, as such, have been thereby aggrieved. It could in no wise affect his standing in court.
There is error in reference to the ruling upon the demurrer, and the judgment of the Superior Court is reversed.
Dalley v. City of New Haven , 60 Conn. 314 ( 1891 )
Brownell v. Union & New Haven Trust Co. , 143 Conn. 662 ( 1956 )
Silverstone v. Lillie , 18 Conn. Supp. 202 ( 1953 )
State Ex Rel. Moriarty v. Donahue , 82 Conn. 308 ( 1909 )
Massey v. Main Foote , 92 Conn. 25 ( 1917 )
Hayward v. Plant , 98 Conn. 374 ( 1923 )
Hall v. Meriden Trust & Safe Deposit Co. , 103 Conn. 226 ( 1925 )