112 Ala. 403 | Ala. | 1895
An executor or administrator, by the provisions of the statute, is not liable beyond the amount of assets which have come to his hands, or which have been lost, destroyed, wasted, injured, depreciated, or not collected, by want of diligence on Ms part, or an abuse of his trust. — Code of 1886, § 2269. And he may protect himself against any liability of the deceased by reporting the estate insolvent at any time he is satisfied the property of the estate is insufficient to pay its debts. — Code of 1886, § 2223.
By the common law, upon judgment against an executor de bonis testatoris, there were two modes of enforcing it: 1st, by fieri facias or scire fieri inquiry ; 2d, by an action of debt on the judgment, suggesting a devastavit.— 3 Williams on Exrs., 1983-85. The author states, that while the latter course suggested may be pursued, ‘ ‘the usual course is first to sue out a fieri facias, upon the judgment, and upon the sheriff’s return of nulla bona, to bring the action, and state the judgment, the writ and return in the declaration ; and, on tire trial, the record of the judgment, the fieri facias and the return will be sufficient evidence to prove the case. The action is in form an action of debt in the 'debet and detine and the judgment is de bonis propriis. * * The jury are bound, upon the judgment being put in evidence, together with the fi.fa. and the return, to find a devastavit, as suggested by the writ, unless the executor can show that there were goods of the testator which might have been taken in execution, and that he showed them to the sheriff.” — Ib. pp. 1985-1988; 7 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 791-2; Grace v. Martin, 47 Ala. 139.
Our statute was intended to do away with the necessity for this common law form of proceeding, and to substitute the one provided therefor, to accomplish the same end by a more direct, expeditious and less expensive proceeding. After a return of nulla bona on the execution against an executor, it has always been held by
The constitution of this State (Act. X, § 1), and the statute (Code, of 1886, § 2511) each provides that the personal property of a resident of the State, to the value of $1,000, shallbe exempt from levy and sale under execution or other process, — the first, in words, ‘ ‘for the collection of any debt contracted since the of 13th July, 1868, or after the ratification of this constitution ;” and the-second, “for the collection of debts contracted after the 23rd of April, 1873.” Where there is no contract between the parties, express or implied, for the violation of which the one breaking it would be liable in assumpsit to the other, the provisions of the constitution would seem to be inapplicable. In construing these provisions, -we have repeatedly held that no exemption can be claimed against a liability growing out of a tort. — Meredith v. Holmes, 68 Ala. 190; Williams v. Bowden, 69 Ala. 433; Vincent v. The State, 74 Ala. 275; McLaren v. Anderson, 81 Ala. 106; Scheussler v. Dudley, 80 Ala. 550; Benton v. Diamond, 92 Ala. 610; Stuckey v. McKibbon, 92 Ala. 622. In Scheussler’s Case, which was a bill in equity by a surety on a tax collector’s bond to enforce a statutory lien on the property of his deceased principal, it was said : “The constitution and statutes apply only to sales on execution, or other process, from courts for any debt contracted. It has no application to judgments based on torts, or liabilities in the nature of torts ;” and the homestead exemption claimed was denied.- In Vincent’s fíase,— that of a defaulting State treasurer, who had converted the money of the State to his own use, — the exemption was denied, not on any alleged prerogative of the State, ‘ ‘but upon the broader ground, that the conversion of the money was both a tort and a crime, and no exemption of property could be claimed ór allowed against such a liability.” And so in actions of detinue, trepass, trover
It is scarcely open to controversy that a devastavit committed by an executor is a tort. At common law, if the cause of action was founded in tort, it died with the person who committed the wrong. “The right of action for default and embezzlement, in trust public and private, died, upon the same principle, with the offender. So, if an executor or administrator himself-committed waste, and died, it was treated as a personal tort which died with his own person, saving his estate harmless.” Schouler on Exrs. & Admrs., § 370.
Cooley in'his work on Torts, p. 525, after treating of the wrongs committed by trustees, adds : “The above rules apply to executors and administrators, guardians, assignees in bankruptcy or insolvency, partners, agents for the sales of property, and all other persons occupying similar. relations. * * This is a rule of public policy, necessary to preserve honesty and fidelity in the administration of trusts, and is too well settled to be departed from.”
The fact that the executrix and her sureties in this case, if she gave bond, whiqh is not shown, might be sued thereon for the recovery of this judgment, constitutes no plea to sustain the exemption as now claimed. The judgment proper is against claimant's testator. Having sufficient assets in her hands with which to pay it, which she unlawfully withholds or has wasted, puts her, as the case is now before us, in the attitude of one who has violated a private trust, — a tort-feasor, — who is not entitled to the exemption claimed. To sustain it, would be to allow her to take advantage of her own wrong, so injurious to the plaintiff, and escape indirectly the penalty the statute in such cases imposes, and to reap a double reward for her own infidelity, — that of appropriating the assets of the estate to her own use, and, afterwards, claiming exemption of her personal property from liability, to the extent of the wrong she has perpetrated.
Reversed and remanded.