Barron v. Barronian

Decision Date05 March 1931
Citation275 Mass. 77
PartiesCHARLES BARRON v. FLORENCE BARRONIAN, administratrix, and others.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

March 3, 1931.

Present: RUGG, C.

J., CROSBY, PIERCE & WAIT, JJ.

Probate Court Jurisdiction: in equity; Decree; Appeal: late. Equity Jurisdiction, To vacate decree of Probate Court in equity. Supreme Judicial Court.

Under G.L.c. 215 Section 6, a probate court has jurisdiction to entertain a petition in equity by an administrator containing allegations that the petitioner has in his possession a book of deposit in a savings bank standing in the name of an alias of his intestate as trustee for another, and prayers that the deposit be declared to be an asset of the estate of the intestate and that the bank be ordered to pay the deposit to the petitioner as administrator; and, after hearing of such a petition and the entry of a decree thereon in favor of the petitioner, one, who had appeared in the

Probate Court to oppose the petition, could not maintain a suit in equity in a court of general equity jurisdiction to set aside that decree.

More than a year subsequent to the entry in the Probate Court of the decree above described, the respondent commenced a suit in equity in the Supreme Judicial Court to vacate the decree of the Probate Court.

The bill also contained allegations that the attorney whom he had employed to prosecute an appeal to this court from the decree of the

Probate Court had been faithless and negligent, and a prayer that his claim of appeal be reinstated and he be allowed to perfect and prosecute the appeal. Held, that

(1) Assuming that the plaintiff was entitled to seek relief under G.L.c. 215 Section 15, in this suit, no relief could be granted under that statute because more than a year had elapsed between the time of the entry of the decree in the Probate Court and the time of the commencement of the suit;

(2) The circumstances did not call for action by this court to relieve the plaintiff under G.L.c. 211, Section 3.

BILL IN EQUITY, filed in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk on September 27, 1929, described in the opinion.

The defendant Barronian demurred. The demurrer was heard by Sanderson, J., and was sustained. A final decree was entered dismissing the bill. The plaintiff appealed.

W.J. Brown, for the plaintiff.

R.W. Frost, for the defendant Barronian.

RUGG, C.J. This is a suit in equity brought in the Supreme Judicial Court. Its object is to vacate a decree of the Probate Court. The decree sought to be vacated was entered under these circumstances The defendant Florence Barronian, hereafter called the defendant, was duly appointed by the Probate Court of Suffolk County administratrix of the estate of a deceased resident of Boston, and in that court brought a petition in equity, to which the present plaintiff was a party defendant, against numerous savings banks alleging that she had as such administratrix in her possession books of deposit showing deposits in the banking institutions joined as defendants standing in the name of several aliases of her intestate as trustee for various persons, and praying that these several deposits in savings banks be declared to be assets of the estate of her intestate and that the savings banks be ordered to pay such deposits to her as administratrix. The present plaintiff appeared as a party defendant, filed appropriate pleadings and contested the allegations of that petition. After hearing, the Probate Court entered a decree that said deposits were the assets of the estate of the intestate and ordered them paid to his administratrix. It is contended by the plaintiff that the Probate Court was without jurisdiction to entertain a suit in equity of that nature, it being his further contention that such jurisdiction is vested exclusively in the Supreme Judicial Court or the Superior Court.

Apart from comparatively recent statutes, jurisdiction over that subject matter was not vested in the Probate Court. Probate courts have jurisdiction in equity in those cases alone where it is expressly conferred upon them by statute. It is provided now by G.L.c. 215, Section 6, that "Probate courts shall have jurisdiction in equity, concurrent with the supreme judicial and superior courts, of all cases and matters relative to the administration of the estates of deceased persons, to wills . . ., or to trusts created by will or other written instrument. . . ." These are words of broad import. While there may be exceptions to their comprehensive sweep growing out of the nature of things, the case at bar does not present any such exception. The bank books were in the possession of the administratrix. The meaning of the form of the deposit and the facts...

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