This is an action in debt upon the bond of Charlotte Montross, administratrix of the estate of James Montross, deceased.
Charlotte Montross was appointed administratrix August 17, 1874. Commissioners on claims were also appointed. They filed their report May 10, 1875. The parties for whose benefit this suit was instituted were allowed claims amounting to $149.52. The report of the appraisers filed October 2, 1874, showed about $2,800 of personal property in the hands of the administratrix at that date. August 17, 1874, an order was made by the probate court, limiting the time for the payment of the debts to one year and six months. The administratrix never filed any account in the probate court.
December 24, 1877, the plaintiff creditors filed a peti
The declaration in this cause was filed October 12, 1885. Service was had on the administratrix the same day, and on Miller, October 15, 1885. An amended declaration was filed by stipulation, May 17, 1889. This amended declaration is identical with the original, except that it adds new creditors and additional debts. The defense interposed is the statute of limitations. The circuit court of St. Clair county, in which the suit was tried, overruled this defense, and gave judgment for plaintiff.
It is claimed by defendant Miller, one of the sureties on the bond and the only person defending in this Court, that August 17, 1874, the date of the order limiting time in which to pay debts, the statute of limitations began to run against these claims, and under such contention more than 10 years had elapsed before the commencement of this suit; and that if it is found that the statute did not 'commence to run until June 3, 1878, the date of the order granting leave to sue on the bond, more than six years had passed before this suit was begun, and that the debts or claims would be outlawed in six years from said 3d of June, 1878. ¥e are of the opinion that the statute
The suit was commenced in time, and within 10 years. The action is laid in debt, and it is the form of the action, and not the cause of action, that fixes the bar of the statute of limitations. See Stewart v. Sprague,
Judgment of the court below is affirmed, with costs.
