15 Ind. 490 | Ind. | 1860
On January 11, 1856, the appellee procured an allowance to be made by the Common Pleas Court for $100, against the appellants, as the representatives of the estate of one Driver; from which the appellants, on that day, appealed to this Court, where the action of the Court below was affirmed on October 11, 1858. On
As to the answer setting up the statute of limitations, the plaintiff replied, reiterating the facts of the recovery of judgment, the appeal, Ac.; and that in consequence of the pendency of said appeal, plaintiff was prevented from pressing said claim; was under a legal disability; and that three years had not elapsed since the removal of such disability.
Section 116, p. 275, 2 R. S., is the statute under which these proceedings were instituted. The former part of the section states, that after the payment, Ac., the executor, Ac., shall be discharged. “ And no final settlement shall be revoked or re-opened, except by appeal to the Circuit Court, and the same shall there appear to’ have been illegally made: Provided, however, that any person interested in said estate, so settled, may have said settlement set aside for mistake or fraud, at any time within three years after said settlement; and if such person be under any legal disabilities at the time of said settlement, then within three years after the removal of such disability.” See Camper v. Hayeth, 10 Ind. 530, for section in full.
The first point presented under this statute, is, that any effort that may be made to set aside a settlement, must be by appeal; even if it is for fraud or mistake. "We do not concur in this construction of the statute. No provision incorporated into the statute, upon the subject of appeals, at all accords with the time mentioned in which such attempt to impeach the settlement for fraud or mistake may be instituted. . It might be years after the settlement before the disability would be removed, and yet appeals have to be taken within a limited time.
More than three years elapsed from the time the settlement was ma6-e until the application to set it aside. Was the reason given for not making it sooner, sufficient ?
Tlie Court found that the judgment had been taken below, appealed from, and affirmed in this Court, and the settlement made, at the times and in the manner averred; and that said settlement was so made without paying plaintiff’s debt, and for the purpose of defrauding said plaintiff, &c.
We do not think the reason given for the delay was sufficient. The disability, mentioned in the statute, has reference to the position the party interested in the settlement may occupy in regard to his competency, capacity, &c., to urge objections to, or initiate proceedings to get rid of such settlement ; and does not, alone, refer to a disability to prosecute his claim against the estate, within that time.
If a settlement should be made without, in some manner, finally disposing of the debts against such estate, within the knowledge of the administrator, we suppose under this statute, in connection with well known legal principles, the creditors, unsatisfied, would be barred any further action against such administrator, after three years. They could not, without getting rid of the final settlement, proceed in an attempt to collect a claim, even upon a judgment of record; because, by the final settlement, the administrator would have rid himself of all assets to meet such debt, and have been discharged, by the Court, from further liability in reference thereto. So, where an administrator administered in part, and delivered to the executor, on his coming of age, all the residue, he can not be charged by a stranger. Tol. Law of Ex., p. 475. So, if an executor de son tort deliver the effects to the administrator before such suit. Id. 36Y. Nor, under this statute, could the creditor proceed to set aside the settlement for fraud or mistake, even if it was a fraud to settle without reference to a known outstanding claim, because such proceedings should be instituted within the three years, unless, &c. It is eminently a statute of repose; one to guard against the vultures who hover around almost every dead man’s estate, who
As the facts replied to the plea of the statute of limitations were held sufficient, the judgment will have to be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.