Filed Date: 3/4/1966
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
Plaintiff Maxson brought an action under R. R. 5 :3-4 in the Ocean County Court attacking the admission of decedent’s will to probate by the surrogate, claiming it was executed through undue influence. Petitioners, who stand to gain if the will is set aside, were given notice of the proceeding but did not attempt to intervene formally until plaintiff notified them he was about to settle his claim and to withdraw his'complaint. Petitioners’ consequent application to intervene was denied because made later than six months after the judgment of the surrogate’s court. The court relied upon R. R. 5 :3-4(a) which fixes that period for an application in the County Court by a nonresident seeking to challenge a judgment of the surrogate’s court. The court also held that the delay in the application caused it to be not timely, within the requirement of the general rule on intervention. R. R. 4:37-l.
We think the trial court erred. The parties apparently failed to call the court’s attention to the last sentence of R. R. 5:3-5(b) which provides that “in a proceeding under Rule 5:3-4(a), persons in interest may on their own motion intervene.”
It is not denied that plaintiff’s proceeding was brought under R. R. 5 :3-4(a). Nor can it be disputed that petitioners were “persons in interest.” As beneficiaries under a prior will of the testator they would be “injured” by the probate of his later will which did not name them as such. In re Myers’ Will, 20 N. J. 228, 235 (1955). They would be entitled to an opportunity to be heard on the proceeding then pending before the court. Hid.
In our view, petitioners’ right to intervene herein is governed solely by the above-quoted portion of R. R. 5 :3—5(b) and not by the general rule of intervention, R. R. 4:37-1. The controlling rule merely requires that there be pending a proceeding under R. R. 5:3-4(b). The instant proceeding was in that status, not having been dismissed prior to petitioners’ motion.
In re Hynes’ Will, 69 N. J. Eq. 485 (Prerog. 1905), and In re Schuberts’ Estate, 7 N. J. Super. 48 (App. Div. 1950), were both decided before the promulgation of R. R. 5 :3—5 (b) in its present form and thus are presently inapplicable. In the latter case, moreover, no one had ever filed a timely proceeding to review the judgment for probate.
Beversed.