215 Mass. 315 | Mass. | 1913
The plaintiff, an English corporation, seeks to recover a call for a payment of £1 per share upon stock subscribed for by Eustace C. Fitz and John Simpkins respectively, both now deceased, in these suits against their devisees and legatees. Their estates were settled in probate courts in this Commonwealth before the call for payment upon the stock was made. The point to be decided is whether the devisees and legatees of these decedents are liable under R. L. c. 141, §§ 26,27. The substance of these sections, so far as now material, is that a creditor after the settlement of an estate and whose right of action accrues after the expiration of the special statute of limitations “and whose claim could not legally be presented to the Probate Court,” may recover from the legatees or heirs. It is plain upon the allegations of the bills that the rights of action did not accrue until after the settlement of the estates. The vital question is whether the claims legally could have been presented to the Probate Court. The answer depends upon R. L. c. 141, § 13, which provides in such case that a creditor may present his claim at any time before the estate is fully administered to the Probate Court, and if
The liability of the estates of these decedents was not a debt upon which action could be brought until a call was actually made by the directors of the plaintiff company. The shareholders’ liability was to pay the balance of the uncalled capital when and not until a call was made. In re Russian Spratts Patent, Ltd. [1898] 2 Ch. 149. Alexander v. Automatic Telephone Co. [1899] 2 Ch. 302. The maximum remaining liability of the decedent subscribers was £4 per share at the time the call for the £1 per share here in suit was made. The statute in question has been before the court for construction and application in several cases. It has been said that the whole “statute must be construed reasonably. It cannot have been intended to enable any one, who has an outstanding contract made by a deceased person, to suspend the settlement of the estate indefinitely, without regard to the probability of anything becoming due upon the contract, and when it still is impossible for the Probate Court to form any estimate of what amount should be retained as ‘sufficient to satisfy the same,’ ” Bullard v. Moor, 158 Mass. 418, 424; and that “the settlement of the estates of deceased persons should not be unnecessarily delayed. ” Forbes v. Harrington, 171 Mass. 386, 391. Yet it also has been said that “the language of the statute plainly implies that there may be at least some uncertainty as to whether or not the debt may be justly due,” Peabody v. Allen, 194 Mass. 345, 347; and that its “legal effect is to hold the executor or administrator answerable for the claim beyond the special statute limitation of two years, and extends the lien upon the real estate of the deceased for the satisfaction of the claim,” Bassett v. Drew, 176 Mass. 141,145; and that its purpose is not to enable the Probate Court to determine how much is due nor to collect the claim if it is not yet due. Converse v. Nichols, 202 Mass. 270. In the case at bar the public subscription for stock of the plaintiff had failed, and the necessity for and the probability of a subsequent call or calls was better within
Decree in each case affirmed with costs.