Craighead v. Alexander
Craighead v. Alexander
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
1. These appeals were argued by both parties, upon the as
The object of the section is to extend to the persons coming within its description a certain period within which to contest a will that has been regularly admitted to probate. As to them the probate is not a finality until the expiration of the prescribed periods. Until then the right to the caveat is absolute.
The section, it will be observed, gives three months to anyone in interest to file a caveat to a will, or to so much of a will as relates to personal property, while the one year within which to contest a will of real estate is extended to those interested, actually served with process, or appearing in such proceedings; two years to those who have not been found, and have been cited by publication; and to those under twenty-one years of age, one year after attaining that age. That the caveators are persons of interest, and as such entitled to file the caveat as to the will of personal property, seems clear.
While a liberal construction would include them among those “personally appearing in such proceedings,” who are entitled to contest a will of real estate within one year, we need not now decide whether such construction should, or should not, prevail. As the caveat was not filed until more than three months after the order of probate, the allegations of fraud, practised in procuring the waiver of citation and service, were evidently made to excuse their failure to proceed within the statutory period; applying thereto, by analogy, the rule in re
For the reasons given, so much of the order as has been appealed from by the caveators in No. 2346 will be affirmed, with costs, and an order entered in No, 2347, dismissing the appeal of the executors.
It is so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CRAIGHEAD v. ALEXANDER ALEXANDER v. CRAIGHEAD
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- 4 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Wills; Probate Court; Appeal and Error; Bill oe Exceptions; Caveat. 1. A proceeding in a probate court is not a proceeding in equity, and final orders therein are only reviewable in accordance with the practice at common law. 2. It is the safer practice to bring up to the appellate court, all evidence taken in hearings in probate, whether they are special proceedings or not, by regular bill of exceptions. (Citing Willcins & Oo. v. Hillman, 8 App. D. C. 469.) 3. Allegations of fraud in a caveat to a will alleged to have been practised upon the caveators in procuring from them a waiver of citation and service of process, made to excuse their failure to file the caveat within three months after the probate of the will, as far as it is a will of personal estate, are insufficient for the purpose (even if the rule in respect to the operation of the statute of limitations be applicable), where it appears from the caveat that the fraud alleged to have been perpetrated upon them was discovered immediately, and no fact is alleged from which it can be inferred that the alleged mental incapacity of the testatrix, or the undue influence alleged to have been practised upon her, were fraudulently concealed from the caveators, or were not as well known to them when the will was admitted to probate, as when the caveat was filed; and where it also appears that the caveat was filed a year, lacking a day, after the probate of the will. 4. A decree of the probate court directing a petition to set aside the probate of a will, to stand as a caveat to the will as a will of real estate, is not a final order, and as such appealable, nor is it such an interlocutory order as can be appealed from as a matter of right under see. 226, D. C. Code [31 Stat. at L. 1225, chap. 854], providing for appeals to this court (following Dugan v. Horthcutt, 7 App. D. C. 351) ; and an appeal by the executors from such a decree will be dismissed. 5. Quare, — whether the receipt by a legatee of a legacy under a will estops him from maintaining a caveat to the will on the ground of mental incapacity of the testatrix and undue influence practised upon her; and also as to the effect of an offer by him to return the legacy upon his right to maintain such a caveat.