Court Opinion

ID: 5512288
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 04:20:45.110272+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:11.590099
License: Public Domain

E. Darwist Smith, J.
The single question presented upon this appeal is, whether the surrogate had power to allow the respondent to withdraw the will from probate and to discontinue proceedings.
It is difficult to see upon what principle a court or judicial officer authorized to entertain any suit or proceeding of a judicial character is not necessarily possessed of the power to dismiss such a proceeding or to allow the same in his discretion to be discontinued. Surrogate’s courts possess the incidental powers common to all courts or officers .exercising judicial functions. Sipperly v. Baucus, 24 N. Y. 46. The necessity for the existence and exercise of such powers has been repeatedly asserted in the courts. Pew v. Hastings, 1 Barb. Ch. 454; Vreedenburgh v. Calf, 9 Paige, 128; Skidmore v. Davis, 10 id. 316; Matter of Brick’s Estate, 15 Abb. 12; Campbell v. Thatcher, 54 Barb. 384.
Surrogate’s courts, it is true, are courts of special and limited •jurisdiction. Such courts must show their authority in the statute book for taking jurisdiction of any particular subject-matter, but in respect' to all matters committed to their cognizance after they have fully acquired jurisdiction, they must possess the ordinary incidental common-law powers necessary to the due discharge of the duties intrusted to them.
The power to entertain a suit or proceeding implies a power to dismiss or discontinue it, and we can see no reason why this power should be denied to surrogate’s courts.
We think the surrogate clearly possessed the power to allow the proponent in this case to retire from an impending litigation upon *604the will in question, and to leave to others its assertion who might be disposed to encounter the controversy.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.

Order affirmed.