Dale v. Hays
Dale v. Hays
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 9th day of April, 1*353, Isaac Dale filed this petition in equity in the Barren circuit court, then in session, to contest the will of his son, Isaac Dale, which had been admitted to record. Process, returnable to the same term of the court, was executed on the executor and devisees, and they answered during the term. The defendants, in their answers, not only deny the material allegations of the petition, but set up and plead in bar the fact, that while the motion for admitting the will to probate was before the county court of Barren, the plaintiff had appeared in that court and opposed the probate, contesting the validity of tho will; that upon the decision of that court being against him he appealed to the circuit court,
In August, 1853, the venue of this cause was, on the application of the plaintiff, changed to Monroe county, and' the papers and 'orders appear to have been transmitted in that month. On the 28th of September, 1853, the defendants filed in court the records of the proceedings of the county and circuit courts of Barren, upon the probate of the will. On the 29th of September the plaintiff had leave to amend the petition, which was done by interlineation, and on the same day the defendants moved to dismiss the petition on the ground of the bar relied on in the answer and sustained by the records filed. The plaintiff "by -his counsel opposed the motion, but the court being of opinion that the plaintiff was precluded from® e-sorting to this remedy by the proceedings referred to in the answers, dismissed the petition, and overruled the plaintiff’s motion for a rehearing, founded mainly upon the grounds that the plaintiff had no notice of the motion to dismiss, and was surprised by it; that the records filed on the previous day ought not to have been noticed, and that the plaintiff was deprived of the opportunity of contesting the facts pleaded, &c.
Upon these proceedings two questions are presented, viz: 1st. Was it proper to dispose of the case upon the motion to dismiss, made when it was made; and, 2d. Was it proper to dismiss the suit upon the grounds assumed ?
Upon the first of these questions we observe that by section 405, of the Code, and the sections therein referred to, this case would have stood for trial at the fall term of the Barren circuit court if it had remained in that court, and that by section 13th, of chapter 13th, of the Revised Statutes, page 168, the papers having been transferred to the Monroe circuit court ten days before the September term, it stood for trial in that court at that term; and as the answer of the
We therefore proceed to the second question, and that is, can the plaintiff resort to this remedy for contesting the will after having contested it at every point in the ordinary course of probate, beginning in the county court, and following up the litigation by appeal to the circuit court, when he had full opportunity for presenting any testimony in his power, and then bringing it to this court upon the record of the circuit court. The plaintiff, although he refers to the will and probate, the record of which shows that he appeared and contested the will in the county court, passes by in silence bis attitude in the litigation which had taken ' place, and of course does not suggest that he had not full opportunity in that litigation to present every fact upon which he now relies for
But it is contended, that under the 11th section of the act of 1797, concerning wills, &c., Statute Law 1543, the remedy .by bill in chancery to contest the validity of a will admitted to probate in the county court, is given to any person interested, without regard to the part which he may have taken in the ordinary proceeding for proof of the will. That section, after providing for the immediate proof in the county court, without regard to parties, proceeds thus: “if however any person interested shall, within seven years afterwards, appear, and by his bill in chancery contest the validity of the will, &c.” In the case of Rogers v. Thomas, 1 B. Monroe, 392-3, this court intimates a decided opinion that the right of filing the bill is given only to one who had not before appeared in the course of the probate, and contested the validity of the will. In the case of Hamilton v. Berry, (14 B. Monroe, 31,) the opinion thus expressed in the previous case is said not to be a judicial decision, entitled to authority as such, because the question was not judicially presented; and although, in the case of Hamilton v. Berry, it is intimated that as upon general principles of expediency and justice, a party who has once participated in a regular litigation should be bound by the result, the same rule might be applied to the case of one, who after opposing the will as a
The question, as presented in this case, must how be decided, and although we might not regard the mere language of the 11th section as precluding a party who had opposed the will in the county court from afterwards contesting it by bill in chancery, still the language implies that the legislature was looking to a party who had not previously appeared as a contestant ; and when, in addition to this inference from the language of the act, we recur to the general principles of expediency and justice before referred to, and of which it cannot be supposed that the legislature ever loses sight in the regulation of judicial proceedings, we think the 11th section of the act of 1797 may be construed as extending the remedy by bill in chancery, to those persons only who had not, by appearing in the ordinary proceedings for probate, and there contesting the will, placed themselves in a condition to be bound by the decision of the contest which they had voluntarily made. And this construction is fortified by the act of 1842,3 Statute Laws, 585. The proviso to the third section of that act shows that the legislature of 1842 considered this as the true construction of the 11th section, and by providing for a more regular and formal decision of the question involved in the probate, by the intermediate appeal to the circuit court, from which there is an appeal to this court, it has given full opportunity for trying fully and fairly the question of will or no will, without a resort to the bill in chancery.
We conclude, therefore, that unless the plainiifl’ coming into equity shows, that by surprise or accident or some other cause he was prevented from taking the full benefit of his opposition to the will in the county or circuit court, the fact that he actually appeared and contested the will in those . courts, or in
Wherefore, the decree is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.