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Moss v. Vincent

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jan 1, 1816
4 N.C. 298 (N.C. 1816)

Opinion

(January Term, 1816.)

A petition filed to set aside the probate of a will, must be accompanied with an affidavit.

THIS was a petition filed in the County Court of NASH to set aside the probate of the will of Joshua Vincent, on the ground of the will having been made by fraud and circumvention, and that the petitioners were not made parties to the probate, although they would have been entitled to a distributive share of the estate.


To this petition there was a demurrer for want of an affidavit.


Upon the question of practice presented in this case, the Court are of opinion that an affidavit verifying the facts on which it is sought to set aside the probate of a will is indispensable. A probate is an act of a court of justice, and a consequent degree of solemnity is attached to it forthwith. Property is held under it, and many important affairs of the estate transacted by the executor on its authority. The Court, therefore, cannot sustain a petition, founded on a mere suggestion or assertion that it was fraudulently or irregularly obtained.

Petition dismissed.

Cited: Jeffreys v. Alston, post, 438; Redmond v. Collins, 15 N.C. 439; Armstrong v. Baker, 31 N.C. 112; Randolph v. Hughes, 89 N.C. 430.

(299)


Summaries of

Moss v. Vincent

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jan 1, 1816
4 N.C. 298 (N.C. 1816)
Case details for

Moss v. Vincent

Case Details

Full title:MOSS AND WIFE v. VINCENT. — 2 L. R., 414

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jan 1, 1816

Citations

4 N.C. 298 (N.C. 1816)

Citing Cases

Redmond v. Collins

Bell v. Armstrong. And it is settled that one of the next of kin is barred from calling in a probate by being…

Armstrong v. Baker

The cases on the subject were all looked into in Redmond v. Collins, 15 N.C. 430, and the rule stated as it…