Court Opinion

ID: 6422790
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:01:23.241607+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:51.044473
License: Public Domain

Holmes, J.
This is a petition to declare void a decree of the Probate Court for Suffolk County appointing an administrator of the estate of William 0. Hodgdon, a minor, and to vacate all proceedings upon the same. The minor died on February 5, 1880. The administrator was appointed on March 8, 1880, and his final account was allowed on June 28, 1880. On September 10, 1885, a petition was filed by Dorcas H. Cummings, the sole heir at law of William C., to have the account reopened, on the ground of fraud. On December 11, 1885, this petition was'filed by her, on the ground that William C. Hodgdon was domiciled, *22not in - Suffolk, but in Barnstable County, at the time of his death.
At the time of the death of William C. Hodgdon’s father, in April, 1867, the latter was domiciled in Roxbury, which is now part of Suffolk County. In the next month the widow and her son William removed to Barnstable, where she lived until she died. But whether she ever changed her domicil to that county, and, if so, when she did so, is not stated. The respondent was appointed guardian of William C., whether before or after the removal to Barnstable is not stated, but we presume before the widow’s change of domicil, if she did change it. The guardian never changed' William’s domicil, but always intended that he should return to Boston. Kirkland v. Whately, 4 Allen, 462, 464. On these facts, we do not perceive how we could say that William’s domicil was ever changed from Roxbury, or, Roxbury having been part of Suffolk County since 1868 (St. 1867, c. 369), how we could decide that the proceedings instituted in 1880 were void for want of jurisdiction. St. 1867, c. 359, § 3. Harding v. Weld, 128 Mass. 587. Pub. Sts. c. 156, § 2.
But, however this may be, it is now too late to contest the jurisdiction on the ground of the residence of William C. Hodgdon. The time for appealing from the decree assuming jurisdiction and appointing the administrator has gone by, and the statute does not allow the objection to be taken except by appeal. Pub. Sts. c. 156, § 4. See Report of Commissioners on Rev. Sts. c. 83, § 11. The point has been decided in Maine upon a similar statute. Record v. Howard, 58 Maine, 225. See Derome v. Vose, 140 Mass. 575.
The suggestion in argument from the petitioner, that the proceedings in the Probate Court were procured by fraud, is wholly unwarranted by the facts agreed.

Decree of Prohate Court reversed.