98 N.W. 710 | N.D. | 1904
In December, 1899, one Louis Houg, thirty years of age, disappeared from Grand Forks county under circumstances which afforded reasonable grounds for the belief that he was dead, or had been secreted or otherwise unlawfully made away with. Upon his disappearance, search was made for him by the public authorities, and a reward offered by the county commissioners o£ said county for the production of his body and the apprehension of his murderers. All his relatives were notified of the facts relating to his disappearance. Some of the relatives resided in Minnesota, and others in Norway. Upon their request, a most careful and thorough search was again made for his body. One Swenson, a brother-in-law of Houg, consulted the states attorney, and upon his
It is conceded by the respondent that the administrator and all persons concerned in the appointment of an administrator acted in good faith. It is also conceded by the respondent that the disbursements, as presented for allowance, are reasonable in amount, in view of the services rendered. It is conceded by the appellant that the order appointing the special administrator was properly set aside, but he contends that the necessary expenses of such administration should be allowed and paid before he can be compelled to turn over the property. The grounds of his contention are that the statute under which the appointment was made does not contemplate a general administration of the estate, but simply taking pos
“Section 6325. A special administrator shall be appointed when necessary or proper for the protection of the property or the rights of creditors or other persons interested in the estate, in either of the following cases: * * * (2) In a special proceeding in which probate or general administration is denied because the death of the person whose estate is in question is not satisfactorily proved; but he is shown to have disappeared under circumstances which afford reasonable’ grounds to believe either that he is dead or has been secreted, confined or otherwise unlawfully made away with.”
“Section 6328. A special administrator has the same authority -as a general administrator to take into his possession personal property, to secure and preserve it, to collect debts due the estate, and to take charge of the real estate and preserve it from waste or other injury and receive the rents, profits and income thereof, and for either of those purposes he may maintain any action or special proceeding. He must also make an inventory and render an account and may sell perishable property or do any other act which he may be specially required to do by direction of the court, but cannot act generally in matters pertaining to the settlement of the estate.”
“Section 6331. When letters testamentary or of general administration on the estate are granted, the powers of a special administrator cease and he must forthwith deliver to the executor or administrator all the property and effects of the decedent remaining in his hands.”
It will be observed that the appointment of a special' administrator is to continue, under the terms of the statute, until a general administrator or an executor is appointed. The statute makes no provision for the disposition of the property by the special administrator in case of the return of the person believed to be dead. Nor is there any provision for allowance of his costs or for his compensation in the event of the person returning and demanding his property. The appellant claims that he should be allowed his costs in the proceeding, on the ground that the statute contemplates taking care of an absentee’s property, and does not provide for its final distribution, and that it is, in that view, a valid law.
We shall not determine in this case whether this statute is applicable to the estate of dead or of living persons, or both, nor whether the statute is unconstitutional, as conferring powers upon the probate court, in respect to preserving the property of absentees, not vested in it by section 111 of the Constitution. Conceding, for the purposes of this case only, that such power may be conferred upon the county court in respect to the property of living absentees, we reach the conclusion that the law, so far as it affects the property of living persons, contravenes the provision of the fourteenth amendment of the Federal Constitution, that persons shall not be deprived of their property without due process of law. The proceedings under which special administrators are appointed in cases like the one at bar follow a refusal to appoint a general administrator on account of the failure of satisfactory proof of the death of the owner of the property to be taken into possession. No additional notice is given after the refusal to appoint a general administrator. The notice previously given as provided by section 631?', Rev. Codes 1899, is a notice to all persons interested in the estate, and rests on the assumption that the owner is dead. This is in no sense a notice to the owner of the estate, but is a notice to those interested therein adversely to him. Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34, 14 Sup. Ct. 1108, 38 L. Ed. 896; Carr v. Brown (R. I.) 38 Atl. 9, 38 L. R. A. 294, 78 Am. St. Rep. 855. He Is not a party to the notice, nor to the proceedings. No hearing is afforded him on any question. The fact that he “has disappeared under circumstances which afford reasonable grounds to believe either that he is dead or has been secreted, confined or otherwise unlawfully made away with,” is adjudicated without any finding of any kind of an attempt to notify him. The possession of the property is transferred to another. The tangible form of the property is changed by suits and collections. What may be deemed perishable property is sold. Costs and expenses are in
Appellant’s contention on' the question of notice is that this is a proceeding in rent, and taking possession of the property is
It is lastly claimed that the proceedings can be sustained, although based on no notice, and the statute upheld as constitutional, under the police power of the state. No case is cited, and we find none, bringing this case within the regulations of that power. Such power extends to protection of life, health, general welfare, and the property of citizens from injurious results from the actions of others, or in the use of their property, but does not generally go to the extent of depriving them of such property, or its possession, without notice and due process of law. Generally, and except in cases of danger to health or property rights, the exercise of such power is subject to the constitutional guaranty of the fourteenth amendment. It is only in such and other similar cases that property can be taken without notice. “Due process of law” has been defined as follows: “By the ‘law of the land’ is most clearly intended the general law — a law which hears before it condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial. The meaning is that every citizen shall hold his life, liberty, property, and immunities under the protection of the general rules which govern society.” Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 579, 4 L. Ed. 629; Cooley on Const. Lim. (5th Ed.) 432; Burdetf v. Allen (W. Va.) 13 S. E. 1012, 14 L. R. A. 337; City of Ft. Smith v. Dodson (Ark.) 11 S. W. 687, 4 L. R. A. 252, 14 Am. St. Rep. 62. In Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34, 14 Sup. Ct. 1108, 38 L. Ed. 896, the court said: “The appointment by the probate court of an administrator of the estate of a living person, without notice to him, being without jurisdiction and wholly void as against him, all acts of the administrator, whether approved by that court or not, are equally void. The receipt of money by the administrator is no discharge of a debt, and a conveyance of property by the administrator passes' no title. * * * And he is not bound either by the order of appointing the administrator, or by a judgment in any
The language of the court in Moore v. Smith, 11 Rich. 569, 73 Am. Dec. 122, may be quoted as applicable to this case to some extent : “Under a comparison of the several merits of these parties, blame and laches have been imputed to the plaintiff for his long continued neglect of his property and friends, by which others were misled. Of the reasons of the plaintiff’s conduct, we are not informed. It is enough that he was under no legal obligation to stay where his property was, or to give information concerning himself when he was away. He encountered the risk of the statute of limitations, which, if his absence had been a little longer, would have forever barred him.”
For a general 'discussion upon the validity of statutes similar to the one under consideration, see Woerner’s Am. Law of Adminis., vol. 1, section 212.
The judgment is affirmed.