154 A. 671 | Vt. | 1931
The decedent, a resident of Middletown, Connecticut, was killed on a grade crossing by a train of the defendant railroad. This action was brought by his administrator under the provisions of G.L. 3314 and 3315, to recover damages for the benefit of his widow and children. The defendant filed an answer in which the legality of the appointment of the plaintiff as administrator is denied, because, as it is alleged, the probate court was without jurisdiction to appoint him, since neither the decedent nor the defendant was a resident of the probate district and the decedent left no property within it, as appeared by the petition for administration which stated the only goods and estate belonging to the decedent within the State of Vermont to be a "death accident claim upon which suit will be brought against Rutland Railroad Company." The plaintiff *390 demurred to the plea. The demurrer was sustained, the plea adjudged insufficient, and the defendant excepted.
The defendant argues that a cause of action arising out of wrongful death is not a common law right, but wholly statutory and no part of the estate of the decedent within the meaning of G.L. 3179, because while the decedent was alive it did not exist, but came into being only after his death, and is a right in favor of others, the administrator being only the nominal party by whom it is to be enforced. Our attention is also called to G.L. 3316, providing that when an executor or administrator prosecutes an action founded upon a debt, demand or claim for damages as to which he is only a trustee for the use of another person, and where the claim, although prosecuted in his name, belongs to another person "the sum or property recovered shall not be assets in the hands of such executor or administrator, but shall be paid over to the person entitled thereto, after deducting or being paid the costs and expenses of the prosecution."
Two things are essential to the jurisdiction of a probate court to grant letters of administration: The death of the person upon whose estate the letters are granted and domicile or assets within the district. If these two facts exist and appear of record as judicially ascertained, the grant of administration is valid, however irregular the proceedings may have been; and if they properly appear of record, the administration is at leastprima facie valid, and he who questions it must establish its invalidity. Manning v. Leighton,
The right to letters of administration does not depend upon the existence of tangible assets to administer. Mesker v. Bishop,
The provision of G.L. 3316, to the effect that the sum recovered shall not be an asset in the hands of the administrator, must be taken to mean only that it shall not be an asset subject to the payment of decedent's debts. Agee v.Saunders,
No claim is made for the allegation in the answer that the defendant is not a resident of the probate district in which the plaintiff was appointed administrator, or that the situs of the assets was affected thereby, and so we give these matters no consideration. All the arguments advanced in the defendant's brief have received our attention, and no error appears.
The defendant has requested that, if the ruling below should be affirmed, the case may be remanded so that it may replead. The entry is therefore:
Judgment affirmed, and cause remanded with leave to thedefendant to apply.