New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division, 1892

In re Probate of a Paper Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Fisher

In re Probate of a Paper Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Fisher
New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division · Decided May 15, 1892 · Ordinary
49 N.J. Eq. 517

In re Probate of a Paper Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Fisher

Opinion of the Court

The Ordinary.

The question presented by the motion is, whether the attempted discontinuance of the application for probate in Middlesex county was effectual. In matter of this character, the jurisdiction of the ordinary, and of the surrogate and orphans court, is concurrent, and the ordinary will not proceed if, at the time of the application to him, a similar proceeding is pending before the surrogate or the orphans court. Matter of Coursen’s Will, 3 Gr. Ch. 408.

It is not disputed that the written withdrawal of the application to the surrogate for probate was sufficient in its terms to effectuate its purpose. The contention is, that when it was presented to the surrogate the proceeding, commenced by the application, was in the orphans court, and, therefore, beyond the surrogate’s jurisdiction and control.

It is clear that, when the withdrawal was presented, Frank E. Fisher was the only party to the proceeding for probate actually in court. He, alone, had asked for probate. USTo others had ap*520peared in the proceeding he inaugurated, or had been brought iu by process. The case is, therefore, free from objection, on the score that others had acquired rights in the proceeding, of which they could not be divested without opportunity to be heard.

The precise question that has been argued is, whether, when the withdrawal or discontinuance was filed, the matter had passed from the surrogate to the orphans court.

The statute (Rev. p. 755 § 14) provides that

the surrogates of the several counties of this state shall take depositions to wills and admit the same to probate and grant letters testamentary thereon; but in case doubts arise on the face of a will, or a caveat is put in against proving a will, or a dispute arises respecting the existence of a will, the surrogate shall not act in the premises, but shall issue citations to all persons concerned to appear in the orphans court of the same county, which court shall hear and determine the matters in controversy.”

The design of this statute is too clear to be seriously questioned. It is, that the surrogate is to admit to probate where there is no doubt, question or dispute; but where doubt appears, or a dispute arises, or notification of parties is demanded, he is not to act judicially, but is to issue citations to compel appearance in the orphans court. He, not the orphans court, is to issue the citations, which are to call the parties in interest to the orphans court. The matter has inception as a proceeding in the orphans court when that court acts with reference to it and not before. Until then, or at least until the citations are issued, it remains with the surrogate.

There have been two adjudications in this state which touch the question of jurisdiction here discussed. The first of them is the case of Slocum v. Grandin, 11 Stew. Eq. 485, which was affirmed by the court of errors and appeals, 13 Stew. Eq. 342. In that case the events chronologically stated were as follows: A caveat was filed with the surrogate; the will was propounded for probate; the orphans court fixed a day for hearing; the caveat was withdrawn and the -will was admitted to probate by the surrogate. In questioning the validity of the surrogate’s action, Chancellor Runyon, sitting as ordinary, said: “ I am not able to see how, under that statute, where a caveat has been *521filed and the subject of controversy has gone into the orphans court for determination, that that court can be ousted of its jurisdiction over it and the surrogate recover his by the mere withdrawal of the caveat. In the case in hand, where the orphans court made its order fixing the day for hearing, the matter was out of the jurisdiction of the surrogate and whatever action was thereafter to be taken in the matter, whether upon the withdrawal of the caveat or otherwise, should have been taken in the orphans court and not before the surrogate.”

Following this decision is the case of Thurston v. Gough, 15 Stew. Eq. 346, in which a caveat was filed and then withdrawn, and thereafter the will was propounded for probate and admitted to probate by the surrogate. Upon this state of facts the ordinary (Runyon) said: “ In Grandin v. Slocum, 11 Stew. Eq. 485, it was held that where a caveat has been filed and the orphans court has fixed a day for the hearing thereupon, the surrogate’s jurisdiction is not restored by the withdrawal of the caveat. In this case the caveat was withdrawn before any action thereon had been taken by the orphans court. The mere fact that the caveat has been filed, will not, if the caveat has been withdrawn before the surrogate is called upon to act, and before the orphans court has taken any action under it, deprive the surrogate of jurisdiction. But if there is a subsisting caveat, or if one has been filed, and, though withdrawn, it was not withdrawn until after the orphans court had taken action under it, the surrogate will have no jurisdiction.”

In both of these cases the jurisdiction of the surrogate to admit the will to probate was the question under consideration, and in ¡both it was held that it is not lost, beyond recall, until some action had been had in the orphans court. These cases are both in harmony with that which I have stated as the design of the -statute.

The filing of a caveat does not commence a proceeding for probate. It stands as a challenge to such a proceeding, forbidding probate by surrogate, orphans court or ordinary,.until notice of the proceeding shall be given to the caveator. When a caveat 3s filed, the surrogate cannot move until some one applies to him *522to admit a specified paper to probate as the will of the decedent,, and thus calls upon him to act. Then, if the application be urged, the effect of the caveat, under the statute, is to require him to cite the caveator and others concerned to the orphans court. After the application is made to the surrogate, and before he issues his citations, and before the orphans court acts, the application remains with him, and, if it be withdrawn, it must be withdrawn from him.

In the case considered, the withdrawal of the application was perfected before the surrogate had issued citations arid before the orphans court had acted. I think that it was properly addressed to the surrogate, and that it effectually terminated the proceeding which the application began.

I perceive no sufficient reason why the present application to the ordinary should be dismissed.

The motion will be denied, with costs.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.