44 Conn. 569 | Conn. | 1877
This is an action at law brought by the receiver of the Ocean National Bank of the city of New York, to recover an assessment which is claimed, under the facts hereinafter stated, to be due from the defendant as administrator de bonis non of the estate of Nathaniel Weed. The parties agreed by stipulation in writing, waiving a jury, that the case should be tried by the court. The pleadings subsequently terminated in a demurrer to the special plea of the defendant.
The declaration alleges the organization of the Ocean National Bank of the city of New York, as a national banking association; its failure on December 12th, 1871, to pay
The declaration further alleges, as follows: About the time of the failure of said bank Nathaniel Weed died intestate, leaving a large real and personal estate; at the time of said failure he was the owner of 514 shares of said bank; on or about September 9th, 1872, Harvey A. Weed was duly appointed administrator of said estate; subsequently Harvey A. Weed died, and on or about December Bd, 1872, the defendant, Harvey H. Weed, was duly appointed administrator de bonis non upon the estate of Nathaniel Weed, who accepted said trust, and is now said administrator; demand was made on March 22d, 1877, and on June 12th, 1877, for payment of said respective installments, and by reason of the premises the defendant is liable to pay said assessment.
The defendant pleaded specially the following facts: “ The said Nathaniel Weed died in January, A. D. 1871, intestate; afterwards, on the 9th day of September, A. D. 1872, one Harvey A. Weed was duly appointed and qualified as administrator of his, said Nathaniel’s estate; six months from the date of said appointment was by the court of probate for the district of Stamford, which was the domicile of said intestate, limited as the time for creditors to present their claims against said estate; no claim in behalf of this plaintiff was presented by said administrator; all claims theretofore presented against said estate were paid and settled, and said estate was settled and according to law; afterwards, said Harvey A. Weed died, on the 3d day of December, A. D. 1872, the defendant was
In this state of pleadings the defense is two-fold.
1st. It being admitted that the estate of Nathaniel Weed had been settled according to law, prior to the demand, and that there were no assets in the hands of the administrator at the time of the demand, and that he has fully administered the estate, and that no assets have come to his hands as administrator since the demand, no judgment can be rendered against him.
2d. That, inasmuch as the insolvency of the bank occurred after the death of the intestate, when the title of the stock became vested in the administrator, no debt or liability existed at any time against the estate ; that the liability, if any, was against the administrator, who by section 5,152 of the Revised Statutes is freed from personal liability, and is only liable to the extent of the trust estate and funds in his hands at the time of the demand.
The plaintiff does not claim that a judgment de honis propriis can be rendered against the defendant.
The settlement of estates in Connecticut is regulated by statute. A time is limited by the court of probate for the exhibition of claims against the estate of a deceased person which is represented by the executor or administrator to be insolvent, and every creditor who has not exhibited his claim within the time limited is debarred, unless he can show some estate not in the inventory. In the case of an estate which is actually insolvent, the proceedings under the orders of the court of probate, by which all the estate has been actually paid to the claimants who have proved their claims within the limited time, are a bar to claims which subsequently accrue and have not been proved.
But it is provided that where an estate which has been represented insolvent turns out to be solvent, “the rights of all persons having claims against such estate subsequently accruing, and which shall not have been exhibited to the commissioners within the time limited for the exhibition of claims, shall be the same in respect to any estate of such deceased person remaining after the payment of the claims allowed by them, as they would have been in regard to such remaining estate if said estate had always been treated as a solvent estate.”
Existing claims against a solvent estate must be presented to the representatives of the estate within the time limited by the court of probate; “ but any creditors not inhabitants of this state may exhibit their claims against any estate which has not been represented insolvent, at any time within two years after publication of such notice, and shall be entitled to payment only out of the clear estate remaining after the payment of the claims exhibited in the time limited; and when a right of action shall aedrue after the death of the deceased, it shall be exhibited within twelve months after such right of action shall accnie, and shall be paid out of the estate remaining after the payment of the debts exhibited in the
Intestate solvent estates, after deducting the debts and the expenses of settlement, may be distributed to the heirs by persons appointed by the court of probate, and “ every person to whom any part of an estate shall be distributed, and every person to whom any estate shall be devised or bequeathed, when no sufficient provision is made by will for the payment of the debts out of some particular estate, shall give a bond to the state, with surety, to the acceptance of the court of probate, conditioned that if after the settlement of the estate debts shall appear and be allowed, he will pay to the executor or administrator his proportional part of such debts, and of the charges of the executor or administrator.” Page 374 of the Revised Statutes. The provision for the giving of a bond is cumulative, and the bonds are not the only fund for the payment of debts which are properly allowed after the settlement of a solvent estate. Griswold v. Bigelow, 6 Conn., 258.
No suit except for debts due to the United States or to the state, or for the expenses of the last sickness or funeral charges, can be brought against the executor or administrator of an insolvent estate in course of settlement. Suits against the representatives of a solvent estate are not prohibited.
The two provisions which have been mentioned in regard to the payment from a solvent estate of the debts which accrue after the expiration of the time limited for the presentation of existing claims, viz: the provision for payment of a claim accruing after the death of the deceased, if exhibited within one year after the right of action accrued, and the provision
From the statutes which have been cited, and the Connecticut decisions upon the statutes, the following principles are deduced:
1. In Connecticut, real and personal estate of the person are alike a fund for the payment of his debts, and both are assets in the hands of the administrator.
2. The non-exhibition against a solvent estate, within the time limited for the presentation of existing claims, of a claim which accrued after the expiration of such limitation, is not a bar to its payment, provided it is exhibited within one year after it accrues. Hawley v. Botsford, 27 Conn., 80; Bacon v. Thorp, 27 Conn., 251.
3. The order of a court of probate settling the administration account and the distribution of real or personal estate to the heirs, does not prevent such estates being subjected to the payment of a debt of the solvent intestate, which accrued after the settlement of the estate. Distribution is not necessarily the final consummation of the administrator’s powers, and is not necessarily a complete settlement of the estate. Griswold v. Bigelow, 6 Conn., 258; Seymour v. Seymour, 22 Conn., 72; Booth v. Starr, 5 Day, 419.
4. When an administrator of a solvent estate denies the validity of a claim against the estate accruing after the time appointed for the exhibition of existing claims, or after distribution, it is necessary that the validity of the claim should be determined by suit thereon against the administrator before a court of common law or equity jurisdiction. A court of probate has no original jurisdiction to allow or reject disputed claims against a solvent estate.
The question whether a suit can be sustained against an administrator upon a claim which accrued after distribution, and when all the estate had been distributed before the claims accrued, has not arisen before the Supreme Court of Errors of this state, except in the case of Booth v. Starr, 5 Day, 275, a case which was decided by a divided court, and the authority of which has been much shaken by subsequent decisions. In Griswold v. Bigelow the first administrator had died¡, and a new one was appointed, who allowed the accruing claim upon presentation. In Seymour v. Seymour the administrator was himself the creditor and allowed his own claim. In Bacon v. Thorp unadministered estate was in the hands of the-executrix of a solvent estate which had been represented insolvent. In Hawley v. Botsford undistributed real estate was in the hands of the two sons of the intestate, one of
It may be urged that the administrator, having settled his administration account, and having distributed the, estate, is functus officio, and that it is necessary for the creditor to apply to the court of probate for the appointment of a new administrator. Distribution, as has been said, does not necessarily exhaust the administrator’s power. ’ If he is living he is still the representative of the estate, and if he is competent and willing to act there is no necessity of a new appointment. He has not ceased to be administrator from the fact that his account has been approved and that the estate which was in his hands at the time of the settlement of the account has been distributed. If new personal assets should be discovered, the title would vest in him, and he would be the person to reduce such estate to possession. If it should be ascertained that a debt theretofore undiscovered was due the estate, he is authorized as administrator to commence suit for its. recovery. It is believed that the court of probate cannot-appoint a new administrator until there is a vacancy by death or removal or resignation.
5. The system of the settlement of estates in Connecticut;
By the common law, where the estate was insolvent, the representative was obliged to pay debts in a particular order, and among creditors of equal degree could pay one in preference to another, although this election was in a degree controlled by legal or equitable proceedings. The real estate was not liable in the hands of an executor to pay debts, but the lieii's and devisees were liable upon specialties. 1 Swift’s Digest, 459. The plea of plene administravit, or want of assets at time of suit brought, was adapted to this system. In Connecticut, if the estate is insolvent,, there should be a representation of insolvency so soon as that fact appears, and thereafter the payment of debts is conducted under the orders of the court of probate. So long as the estate is Solvent, the debts which accrue after the expiration of the time for presentation of existing claims are a valid claim against the estate, if «they are presented within one year from the time the debts accrue. Plene administravit is a good plea by an executor de son tort, ( Olmsted v. Clark, 30 Conn., 108,) and want of assets is pleadable in an action against an executor for a legacy (Knapp v. Hanford, 7 Conn., 132); but, says Judge Swift, in speaking of the statutory system of Connecticut for the payment of debts, “ I can imagine but one instance in which the executor or administrator can avail himself of the plea of plene administravit. Debts due to the state, and the expenses of the last sickness and the funeral, are preferable debts; if the whole estate should be absorbed in discharging these debts it would be useless to proceed in the settlement of it as aii insolvent estate; and if a suit should be brought by a creditor against the executor or administrator for a debt, he might plead this in bar.” 1 Swift’s Digest, 459; Bennett v. Ives, 30 Conn., 329; Bacon v. Thorp, 27 Conn., 251; Griswold v. Bigelow, 6 Conn., 258.
So also in England, a judgment against an executor de bonis testatoris is equivalent to a finding that he has assets.
In this case the bank became insolvent in December, 1871. An assessment was made upon the stockholders by the comptroller of the currency on January 19th, 1877; demand was made of the plaintiff on March 22d, 1877, and June 12th, 1877, and suit was commenced July 14th, 1877. Until the order of the comptroller of the currency the claim was contingent. He ascertains and decides how much shall be collected, and until his decision the receiver has no power to enforce a liability against the stockholders arising out of their stock. The action of the comptroller “is indispensable whenever the personal liability of the stockholders is sought to be enforced, and must precede the institution of a suit by the receiver.” Kennedy v. Gibson, 8 Wall, 498. The claim accrued at the date of the comptroller’s order. The amount
' II. The defendant next insists that, inasmuch as the intestate died previous to the insolvency of the bank, there was at the time of his death no claim, contingent or otherwise, against his estate; that the title of the stock vested by operation of law in the administrator upon his appointment; that the assessment is against stockholders, and that therefore the liability has accrued against the administrator who holds the stock as trustee; that by section 5,152 of the Revised Statutes, he is- freed from personal liability, and that the estate and funds only which are in his hands are liable for payment, and that it is admitted by the pleadings' that the defendant has no estate or funds in his hands.
The action is based upon the theory that the claim is against the estate of the intestate as an estate in process of settlement, and under the facts in the case the question arises whether a receiver of an insolvent national banking association has a valid claim for an assessment against the estate generally of a deceased stockholder, who died prior to the insolvency of the bank, but whose stock has not been transferred at the date of the comptroller’s order. The defendant contends that the receiver never had a claim against the estate of Nathaniel Weed, but that his claim is against existing stockholders, and that the title to the stock vested in the administrator September 9th, 1872, and related back to the date of the intestate’s death.
It is true that the title to personal property of an intestate vests in Connecticut in his administrator by force of local law and the grant of administration, but I think that the claim of the defendant, although ingenious, is not tenable, for the following reasons:
1. “An executor or administrator has his estate as such in autre droit merely, viz: as the minister or dispenser of the goods of the dead.” 1 Williams on Executors, 562.
2. The original liability of the intestate to pay the- assessments which may be ordered by the comptroller was a volun
8. When an obligation devolves upon an executor solely by virtue of his successorship to the estate, and not by express contract or agreement of his own, the estate is liable. If an executor is liable to pay an obligation resting upon personal property which came to him from the testator, and of which the executor is the owner only as a representative of the estate, and which obligation is due from him solely because he represents the estate, he is liable as executor, even if suit might have been also brought against him personally. East Hartford v. Pitkin, 8 Conn., 404, per Williams, J.
4. I do not think that section 5152 was intended to affect the liability for assessments of estates in process of settlement. The principal object of the section was to prevent a personal liability from running against executors, administrators, trustees or guardians, who had purchased as trustees, or to whom had been transferred in their names as trustees
I am therefore of opinion that the facts alleged in the plea are not a valid defense to prevent a judgment against the defendant from the estate of the intestate.
As it is not suggested that the defendant has any other ground of defense, the demurrer is sustained) and judgment should be rendered against him as administrator de bonis non, solely from the estate of the intestate, for the sum of $10,280, with interest on $5,140 thereof from February 26th, 1877, and on $5,140 thereof from April 26th, 1877, at six per cent.