89 Mass. 427 | Mass. | 1863
By the Gen. Sts. c. 128, § 11, “ when an executor or administrator dies or is removed from office during the pendency of a suit in which he is a party, the suit may be prosecuted by or against the administrator de bonis non ip like manner as if it had been originally commenced by or against such last administrator.” This provision was first made by St. 1817, c. 190, § 18, and has been in force ever since. Rev. Sts. c. 110, § 7. .And it was made, as were the provisions of St. 1812, c. 105, in consequence of the decisions in Grout v. Chamberlin, 4 Mass. 611, 613, (contrary to what was before supposed to be the law, 1 Dane Ab. 577,) that there was, by the common law, no privity between an executor and administrator de bonis non ; that the latter, therefore, could not maintain a writ of error to reverse a judgment recovered by the former ; that such judgment became ineffectual by the death of the former while it was unsatisfied;
When Sts. 1812 and 1817 were passed, the only cases in which authority to appoint administrators de bonis non was' given or recognized by previous statutes were those of .the death of an executor or former administrator, or of his removal which was the legal effect of granting a new administration. Anc. Chart. 434. Sts. 1783, c. 36, § 10; c. 24, § 19; and 1782, c. 25, §§ 2, 3. And for this reason these statutes mentioned those two cases only. But they repealed the common law as to want of privity between such administrators and those whom they succeeded, in all cases in which the appointment of such administrators was then authorized; and thereby a change in our law was effected, which Chief Justice Parsons, in 4 Mass. 612, had said was “ to be wished.”
It was not until the passing of the Rev. Sts. c. 63, § 9, (reenacted in Gen. Sts. c. 101, § 4,) that the marriage of a female sole executrix or administratrix extinguished her authority, and authorized the appointment of an administrator de bonis non.
We are of opinion that although § 4 of c. 101 of the Gen. Sts., which authorized the plaintiff’s appointment as administrator de bonis non, is silent as to his authority, yet that he is within the intention and equity of \ 11 of c. 128 of the same statutes, and was rightly admitted by the superior court to prosecute the present action. In making this decision, we apply an old and unshaken rule in the construction of statutes, to wit, that the intention of a remedial statute will always prevail over the literal sense of its terms, and therefore when the expression is special or particular, but the reason is general, the expression should
Exceptions overruled.