192 Iowa 694 | Iowa | 1921
The petition was filed August 26, 1919. It is in the ordinary form of a petition in replevin, with the essential allegations required by our statute. In the petition, the plaintiff alleges that he is the duly appointed, qualified, and acting administrator of the estate of F. M. Brandenburg. He also alleges that he is the absolute and unqualified owner of and entitled to the possession of the property in controversy, and that he acquired such ownership and right of possession by reason of his being administrator of the estate of said F. M. Brandenburg, and by reason of being an agent for the children and heirs at law of said F. M. Brandenburg and Mrs. F. M. Brandenburg.
On November 8, 1919, appellant filed an answer, denying specifically that the plaintiff in said action was the legally ap
On February 10, 1920, plaintiff filed a second amendment to his petition, wherein he alleged that, prior to the commencement of said action, he was the agent of the legal heirs of F. M. Brandenburg and of Enfield Brandenburg, deceased, and was authorized and empowered by them to take possession of and exercise control over all the property belonging to the estate of the said decedent, and was, as such agent, authorized and empowered to take possession and control of the property particularly described in the petition.
It appears from the record in the case that, after the death of F. M. Brandenburg, in 1916, the appellee herein was appointed executor of his estate, and was finally discharged as such executor on November 8, 1917, nearly two years before the commencement of this action. It further appears from the record that the appellee herein was not appointed administrator of the estate of his deceased mother, Enfield Brandenburg, until the 20th day of January, 1920, about five months after the commencement of this action. It also further appears from the evidence that, shortly after the death of Enfield, in the fall of 1918, the appellee herein was orally requested by the other heirs of said Enfield to take care of the deceased mother’s property and to look after her estate for and in behalf of all her heirs.
At the close of the testimony, appellant moved for a directed verdict and, after verdict, filed a motion for a new trial, and also a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The
I. Appellant’s first contention is that appellee cannot maintain the action as executor of the estate of F. M. Brandenburg, because he had been finally discharged as such executor before this action was commenced. This contention would be meritorious, if germane and pertinent. Appellee could not maintain the action as executor of the estate of F. M. Brandenburg, because said estate had been closed, full distribution made, and appellee discharged as such executor, nearly two years before this action was commenced. But the court did not submit to the jury any question of appellee’s right to recover as executor of the estate of F. M. Brandenburg. This question was entirely eliminated from the case by the action of the court, and .appellant’s argument on this point is beside the mark.
II. Appellant’s next contention is that appellee cannot maintain this action in the capacity of administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg. The record shows that Enfield Brandenburg died November 20, 1918. This action was commenced August 26, 1919. The appellee was appointed administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, January 20, 1920. On January 26, 1920, he filed the amendment to his petition, alleging his appointment as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, and that she was the owner of the property in question at the time of her death. No objection appears to have been made by the appellant to the filing of this amendment.
The action is the ordinary action in replevin, brought under Code Section 4163 et seq. Our-statute has modified in some particulars the common-law action of replevin, but under this statute, as well as under the common law, the right to the immediate possession of the property in controversy is the very gist of the action. At the time appellee instituted this suit and obtained the writ of replevin under which the property was taken, he made no claim whatever in his petition to a right to possession of said property as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg. He could not do so, because, as above set forth, he was not appointed as such administrator until several months later. However, before trial of the case, he had been appointed as such administrator, and thereafter, without objection, he
“ If a third person claims the property or any part thereof, the plaintiff may amend and bring him in as a codefendant, or the defendant may obtain his substitution by the proper mode, or the claimant may himself intervene by the process of intervention. ’ ’
The appellee did not intervene in the pending action in his capacity as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, but he amended his petition and set out the facts upon which he claimed he was entitled to the possession of the property in controversy as such administrator. Under our liberal rules of practice, the appellee had the right to tender this issue by amendment to his petition, rather than in another manner, especially where no objection was interposed. In this connection, see Head v. Hale, 185 Iowa 199.
Conceding appellant’s contention, for the sake of argument, that the appellee could not maintain this action in replevin, as executor of the estate of F. M. Brandenburg or otherwise, as originally brought, still the fact remains that such action was pending, and the question involved therein was the right to the possession of the property in controversy. While such action was pending, and before trial thereof, and without objection, the duly appointed and qualified administrator of the estate of En-field Brandenburg appeared in the case and filed a pleading therein, claiming the right to the possession of the property in controversy in such capacity. Assuming that a third party, instead of appellee, had been appointed in the interim, as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, and had appeared in said action and filed a petition of intervention, claiming the right to the possession of the property in controversy, it cannot ivell be disputed that, under the section above quoted, such administrator would have had a right to have his claim to
Conceding the soundness of appellant’s contention, for the purposes of the argument, it does not of necessity follow that ap-pellee could not maintain this action in his representative capacity as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg. At an early date, it was held that, if a man dies possessed of certain goods, and a stranger takes and converts the same unto his own use, and thereafter administration is granted upon the estate, the administration shall relate back to the time of the death of the decedent, and the administrator may maintain an action of trover
In Dempsey v. McNabb, 73 Md. 433, it was held that, when administration is granted, it vests the property in the administrator, by relation, from the time of the death of the testator; and that the administrator could maintain trover or trespass.
In Welchman v. Sturgis, 13 Q. B. 552, where the defendant, after the death of plaintiff’s intestate and before the taking out of letters of administration, applied cash that was in the house of the,intestate at the time of his death to the payment of funeral and other expense's, it was held that an action of assumpsit would lie, and that the letters of administration related back to the time of the death of the decedent.
In Brackett v. Hoitt, 20 N. H. 257, the action was in trespass; and it was held that the appointment of administrator related back to the death of the testate, so as to enable the administrator to recover the value of personal property belonging to the estate at the time of the death of the decedent. It was held that such administrator may sue in either trespass or trover.
The title to personal property of a decedent is in abeyance until his executor qualifies or an administrator is appointed, when it vests in the executor, by relation, from time of the death. McDearmon v. Maxfield, 38 Ark. 631.
Trover will lie against one who converts property, and the appointment of an administrator relates back to the date of the death, for the purposes of said action. Ham v. Henderson, 50 Cal. 367.
The rule is recognized generally that an administrator of an estate can maintain an action in trespass or trover where the cause of action arose prior to the appointment of the administrator ; and that, in all such cases, the appointment relates back to the time of the death of the decedent. It is contended, however, that such rules do not apply to actions in replevin, because the latter is a possessory action. In Haynes v. Harris, 33 Iowa 516, we said:
“At common law, the personal property of an intestate goes to the administrator, and not to the heirs. Upon the appointment of an administrator, his title in such property relates back to
In Blackman v. Baxter, 125 Iowa 118, we held that, regardless of when appointed, an administrator’s title to the property of the decedent relates back to the instant of the death of the intestate.
We think that the weight of authority and the better reasoning are to the effect that the right to the possession of the property of a decedent vests in a subsequently appointed administrator as of the date of the death of said decedent. If an action of trover will lie at the instance of an administrator, to recover for property converted between the time of the death of the decedent and the appointment of the administrator, there is no logical reason why, in a case where an action in replevin is pending for the possession of the property of a decedent, a subsequently appointed administrator cannot appear in said action and assert his rights to the possession of the res; and, for the purpose of such action, his appointment will relate back to the date of the death of the said decedent. Such conclusion is logical, and consistent with the weight of authority.
Applying these general rules to the facts of the instant case, we hold that the appellee, after his appointment and qualification as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, had a right to appear in the then pending action in replevin and assert his claim to the possession of the property in controversy, in his capacity as administrator of said estate; and that, for the purpose of asserting his right to the possession of said property, his appointment as administrator would relate back to the time of the death of the said decedent.
It therefore follows that the court did not err in submitting to the jury the question of the right of the appellee, as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, to the possession, of the property in controversy in said action.
. In Instruction No. 4, the court told the jury that plaintiff had a right to bring the action, both in his own right and as agent for the other heirs of Enfield Brandenburg, and that, if the jury found that the plaintiff was so acting as agent at the time of the commencement of the action, then it was properly commenced.
In Instruction No. 6, the jury was told:
“If you find by a preponderance of the evidence that the property in controversy was the property of Enfield Brandenburg at the time of her death, or property which she had received from the estate of her husband, F. M. Brandenburg, deceased, and further find that plaintiff is now the administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, deceased, then plaintiff may be properly termed the owner of all the property involved in the cause; and if you so find, by such preponderance of the evidence, and further find that plaintiff is entitled to recovery in this action, then you will state the nature of his interest in the property as that of ‘owner.’ ”
It is, therefore, obvious that the court iiistructed the jury that appellee could recover, if at all, only in his capacity as administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg. As presented to the jury, the case was in the situation where the court told the jury that, if the action was commenced by appellee as agent for the heirs of Enfield Brandenburg, it was “properly commenced ; ’ ’ and that if, at the trial, it appeared that appellee was “now the administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg, deceased,” then he could recover. The court expressly limited the appellee’s right to recover the property, if at all, to a finding that, at the time of trial, he was the duly appointed administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg. He was not permitted to recover in any other capacity. Under the court’s in-
Appellant malees no claim, by either pleading or proof, of any right whatever to the possession of the property. He simply stands on a denial of appellee’s right thereto. He did not claim that appellee’s petition presented inconsistent claims, nor did he attack it by motion, or seek to put appellee to an election. There was no error here of which appellant can complain.
Y. Appellant strenuously insists that there was no sufficient demand for possession of the property by appellee before the commencement of the action. The particular point urged is that the appellee had not been appointed administrator of the estate of Enfield Brandenburg at the' time he made demand upon appellant for the property, and that a demand by him as agent of the heirs at law of Enfield Brandenburg was unavailing. It is unnecessary that we determine the question of the rights an heir at law may have to the possession of the personal property of a decedent before the appointment of an administrator, as against one not entitled to such possession. Under
In Smith & Co. v. McLean, 24 Iowa 322, we said:
“It is hardly necessary to remark that the action of re-plevin, under our code of procedure, being a statutory remedy, and our system of pleading being not that of the common law, the rules that govern this action, as well as the pleadings therein, are not those that are applicable to the action bearing the same name under the common law. The application of rules and reasons drawn from authorities treating of the common-law action of replevin, to this proceeding, under our system of procedure, will inevitably lead -to erroneous conclusions. Under our Code, it is a remedy for the recovery of personal propei^ to which the plaintiff has the right of possession, or the ownership coupled with that right. The mist of no common-law fictions obscures the proceedings in the action. As in the action at bar, the plaintiff alleges in his petition the facts constituting his right of possession of the property. If this right is based upon the full ownership, he so avers. The answer of the defendant, by denial of the allegations of the petition, or the averment of proper matter of defense, puts in issue the plaintiff’s right of possession or ownership of the property. If the defendant’s right can only be terminated by a demand of the property, or plaintiff’s right thereto depends upon such demand, the fact will appear in the pleadings, or will be drawn as a conclusion of law therefrom. Now, it is evident that proof of demand of possession will be required at the trial only in such cases where it is necessary to terminate the defendant’s right of possession or confer on plaintiff that right. To require such proof in any other cases would impose on one party a vain and useless labor, which the law will not exact.”
In the instant case, the defendant squarely put in issue, by general denial, all the allegations of the petition as amended. Appellee was suing only for possession of the property. Appellant denied his right to possession. Under the law of this state, no demand was necessary, in such a case, before bringing an action in replevin. There was neither claim in the pleadings nor proof in the evidence that appellant held possession under
VI. Appellant contends that there is such confusion of parties that the court should have directed a verdict for appellant. The case could undoubtedly have been framed more artistically by counsel for appellee, and doubtless timely motions by appellant would have contributed to that result. But the appellant has not been misled in any way by the manner in which the issues were presented, and has met them skillfully and' adroitly. The court properly overruled appellant’s motion to direct on this ground.
We find' no error in the record entitling appellant to a reversal of the case, and the judgment appealed from is, therefore, — Afjwmeci.