Purviance v. Commonwealth
Purviance v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court, Duncan, J., being absent, was delivered by
As the Orphans’ Court has jurisdiction of the subject matter of distribution, it may designate the parties entitled,
But, were it even conclusive, the defendants ought to have been permitted to show that the plaintiff was not entitled under it; and
There are some things unusual in this case. The case was before the Orphans’ Court of this county. That court alone can decide who are the persons entitled to distribution of the estate of an intestate, and the amount due to each; this, by the express words of the bond in the first section of the act of 1794, and the concluding clause of the said section, and by every clause and section in the act which have any bearing on the subject: this is subject to appeal, and no other court'has jurisdiction of this matter. • The Orphans’ Court of this county had.two sets of claimants before them; one set who alleged the intestate to have been their kinsman; another, of a different family, from another part of Ireland, claiming him to have been of their family. An issue was found and tried, taken to the Supreme Court, and affirmed. It is singular that the order for this issue and the whole record are not now to be found. Who directed the trial, and what was to be tried by that direction, we must collect from parol proof, or from inference from some things which do appear.
After this trial one set of claimants disappears; the other comes into the Orphans’ Court and claims the estate. At first a scheme of división into five parts, dividing it per stirpes, was submjtted to the Orphans’ Court:, in this the defendants in the feigned issue, are all named, and one other is named, or the name of John Alexander is twice introduced.
This mode of division was not adopted by the court; but the paper on which it is drawn up is found in the office of the Orphans’ Court, and is annexed to the following paper; commencing, “'The defendants in the feigned issue, who represent the intestate, submit to the court to decree in what manner distribution shall be made. John Mexander, the intestate, died since 1794.” And then proceeds to name all the defendants in the feigned issue, and states their pedigree, showing them to be the children of the uncles of the intestate, and that the uncles are all dead. The Orphans’ Court made a decree, in which, after premising the facts, they say, “ The court, therefore, decree distribution of the intestate’s estate to be made among all the persons named, they being cousins and being in equal degree with the intestate.”
“John Jllexander, one share, one thousand three hundred and twenty dollars and seventy-eight cents,” and the same as to nine other names, being the names of the defendants in the feigned issue, and in the paper submitted to the court. This endorsement was in the handwriting of a gentleman of the bar who was counsel for the administrators. I consider this an absolute, and, being unappealed from, final decree of the Orphans’ Court, deciding the persons entitled, and the sums to which each was entitled.
1. The objections to it are, that we have not the records of the feigned issue. I think we have enough to show that it was directed by the court; and what it was to decide, and did decide, and that it was adopted by the court. If we have not, we have a decree, independent of the feigned issue before us.
2. It is objected, that as two schemes of division were before the court, and in one of them eleven persons were named, and in the other ten, and as both have been put in the bundle of papers, it is uncertain which number the court had in view in the decree. I have no difficulty on this subject. The court adopted one of them; that which referred to the feigned issue, and it would be strange to suppose the phrase, the persons named, referred to a rejected paper.
3. The distribution endorsed, and the names of the ten, and sum to each, is not in the handwriting of the judge who wrote the decree, but of a gentleman of the bar. 1, however, consider it as the act of the judge, done as it were by his clerk, a reader accountant and scribe, as read to him when completed and adopted by the Orphans’ Court, and from that moment their own act. The general practice is, that when the account is passed the court order “ distribution to those entitled according to law.” This is the minute on the account. The clerk of the Orphans’ Court, however, in all cases so far as I have known, writes on the record of the Orphans’ Oourt at length the names of the distributees, and the sum due to each. This is done in the presence of the administrators, and is considered the act of the court, as such made out when a copy of the record is called for. In ordinary cases where parties live in the county, no difficulty arises or can arise: if the clerk has not leisure at the moment, he takes a memorandum of the names and makes the calculation, and completes the record at his leisure. Unfortunately in this case no record was ever made; all is y.et on loose paper; still I consider this the decree of the court, made out, adopted, and decreed by them; for no human being who knows him who made it, can surmise it was done in any other way than as I have stated it; that is, to relieve the court from the labour of
By our law a man may put in a plea after the jury have been sworn, and ii1 the other party is surprised and wishes time to meet it, the jury are dismissed, (on payment of costs by the party putting in the new plea in some districts;.), this being by positive enactment, it is error to refuse such plea unless it is plainly frivolous or totally inconsistent with former pleas, (as non est factum, after another plea which expressly admitted the execution of the instrument and avoided the effect of it.) This case is singularly circumstanced; the distributees all live or did live in Ireland. The plaintiff sues as administrator of John Alexander. The defendant may put him to prove that the John Alexander, whom he represents, was the són of Hugh Alexander, of the parish of-, in the county of-:-, and the brother of Mrs. Jamieson, Mrs. Stewart, and Mrs. Gilleland, named in the feigned issue, and in the paper on which the decree is founded.
There was then error in this; and also in refusing to permit the defendants to prove that the plaintiff’s intestate was not the son of Hugh Alexander, and not the John Alexander named in the feigned issue and the paper before-mentioned.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PURVIANCE and others against The COMMONWEALTH, for JOHN ALEXANDER'S Administrator
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published