102 F. 423 | 9th Cir. | 1900
The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the court below. The action was commenced by him in that court, upon the ground of diverge citizenship of the parties, to recover $6,525, — the alleged value of his services as physician and surgeon, rendered to the deceased, Henry C. Nelson, during his lifetime. The original complaint alleged that by the last will of the deceased, which was duly admitted to probate on November 29, 1897, by the superior court of Colusa county, Cal., the plaintiff and the defendants J. Thad Jones, J. W. Goad, and R. E. Smith were appointed executors thereof, to all of whom letters testamentary were duly issued, and all of which executors duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of their duties. The original complaint further alleged that at all times therein mentioned the Honorable H. M. Al-bery was, and still is, the judge of the superior court of Colusa county, Cal., and that on or about the 10th day of October, 1898, the plaintiff presented to him his verified claim for the said services, which the said judge refused to -allow as presented, but on the 10th day of November, 1898, allowed for the sum of $575. The prayer of the original complaint was for judgment against the defendants Jones, Goad, and Smith, as executors, for the sum of $6,525 and costs of suit, to be paid in due course of administration of the estate. A demurrer interposed by the defendants to the original complaint upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants was sustained by the court below, with leave to the plaintiff to amend. Thereupon, and on April 13, 1899, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint, in which the estate of the deceased, Nelson, eo nomine, was made defendant, together with the original defendants^ and in which the plaintiff repeated, in substance, the averments of the original complaint in respect to the rendition of his professional services to the deceased during his lifetime, their value, the death of the deceased, the probate of his will, the appointment and qualification of the plaintiff and defendant executors, and alleged that, by reason of the fact that the plaintiff is a claimant against the said es
If the court below was right in overruling the demurrer of the defendant executors to the amended complaint, it must have been wrong in granting their motion for judgment on the pleadings. The cause of action counted on is the implied promise of the deceased, Nelson, to pay the plaintiff the'value of the services rendered by him. True, he was, by the statute of California, required, as a condition to his right to bring suit against the estate of the promisor, which had passed into the control of the probate court of Colusa ,county, to present his claim therefor. How and to whom? Section 1490 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California provides:
“Every executor or administrator must, immediately after his appointment, cause to be published in some newspaper of the county, if there be one, if not, then in such newspaper as may be designated by the court, a notice to the creditors of the decedent requiring all persons having claims against the estate to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, to the executor or administrator, .at the place of his residence or business, to be specified in the notice,” etc.
Section 1494 provides:
“Every claim which is due,' when presented to the executor or administrator, must be supported by the affidavit of the claimant, or some one in his behalf, that the amount is justly due, that no payments have been made thereon which are not credited, and that there are no offsets to the same, to the knowledge of the affiant.' If the claim be not due when presented, or be contingent, the particulars of such claim must be stated,” etc.
'Section 1496 provides:
“When a claim, accompanied by the affidavit required in this chapter, is presented to the executor or administrator, he must indorse thereon his allowance or rejection, with the day and date thereof. If he allow the claim, it must be presented to a judge of the superior court for his approval, who must in the same manner indorse upon it his allowance or rejection. If the executor or administrator, or the judge, refuse or neglect to indorse such allowance or rejection for ten days after the claim has been presented to him, such refusal or neglect may, at the option of the claimant, be deemed equivalent to a rejection on the 10th day,” etc.
Section 1503 provides:
“Whenever any claim is presented to an executor or administrator, or to a judge, and he is willing to allow the same in part, he must state in his in-dorsement the amount he is willing to- allow. If the creditor refuse to accept the amount allowed in satisfaction of his claim, he shall recover no costs in any action therefor brought against the executor or administrator, unless recover a greater amount than that offered to be allowed.”
Section 1500 declares:
“No holder of any claim against an estate shall maintain any action thereon, unless the claim is first presented to the executor or administrator,” with an exception not pertinent to the present case.
Section 1498 provides:
“When a claim is rejected either by the executor or administrator, or a judge of the superior court, the holder must bring suit in the proper court*427 against the executor or administrator -within three months after the date of its rejection, if it be then due, or within two months after it becomes due, otherwise the claim shall be forever barred.”
By section 17 of the same Code it is provided that the singular includes the plural.
Section 1-510 provides that:
“If the executor or administrator is a creditor of the decedent, his claim, duly authenticated by affidavit, must be presented for allowance or rejection to a judge of the superior court, and its allowance by the judge is sufficient evidence of its correctness, and must he paid as other claims in doe course of administration. If, however, the judge reject the claim, action thereon may be had against the estate by the claimant, and summons must he served upon the judge, who may appoint an attorney, at the expense of the estate, to defend the action. If the claimant recover no judgment, he must pay all costs, including defendant’s reasonable attorney’s fees, to be fixed by the court.”
The provisions of the slate statute in respect to the presentation of claims against the estate of a deceased person apply equally to all creditors, he they citizens of the same or some other state, or alums. If, after such presentation, a controversy arises concerning' the claim, an action at law or in equity may arise, of which the proper United States court may take cognizance where the requisite jurisdictional facts are shown to exist, hut not until then. In the present instance the plaintiff in error presented his claim to his co-executors as well as to the judge of the probate court. His co-executors did not allow it at all, and the probate, judge allowed it in part only. Thereupon a controversy arose in respect to the debt, which the plaintiff in error, being an alien, and his co-executors and the probate judge being citizens of the state of California, had the right to have determined by the court below. Clark v. Bever, 139 U. S. 97, 11 Sup. Ct. 468, 35 L. Ed. 88; Byers v. McAuley, 149 U. S. 615, 620, 13 Sup. Ct. 906, 37 L. Ed. 867. This is not directly denied on the part of the defendants in error. Their contention is that the plaintiff in error’s co-executors were not suable at all; that the estate of the deceased, Nelson, eo nomine, could only be sued; and that it was not made a party to the action until after the time allowed by (he state statute for the bringing of a suit on the plaintiff’s cause of action had expired. But, as a matter of course, if the plaintiff in error’s co-executors were not suable, the- diverse citizenship of the parties requisite to give the court jurisdiction of the action would not exist; for it certainly will not be claimed that the estate of the deceased, Nelson, is a citizen of any state. “The estate of a decedent,” said Mr. Justice Miller in delivering the opinion of the supreme court in Hess v. Reynolds, 113 U. S. 73, 76, 5 Sup. Ct. 378, 28 L. Ed. 928, “is neither a person nor a corporation. It can neither sue nor be sued. It consists of property, or rights to property, the title of which passes, on his death, with right of possession, according to the varying laws of the states, to executors of a will, administrators of estates, heirs or devisees, as the case may be. "These parties,” continued the court-in the case cited, “represent, in their respective characters, the rights which have devolved on them in any controversy, legal or equitable, which may become "a matter of judicial contest with other parties
In the cáse of The Burns, 9 Wall. 237, 19 L. Ed. 620, it was attempted to sustain certain writs of error by virtue of the statute of Missouri known in that state as the* “Boat Law,” by which act proceeding was authorized against the res, and the vessel was a good deal treated of by the act as the defendant in the case. In the course of its opinion the shpreme court observed:
*429 ‘•It is said that the statute of Missouri allows the steamboat to be sued by name, and allows a defense to be made by the owner in the name of the vessel. But the states cannot in this manner confer on an inanimate object, without sense or reason or legal capacity, the right to prosecute legal proceedings in the federal courts.”
For ¡lie same reason it would be very difficult to resist the conclusion (hat the states cannot, should the attempt be made, in a case like the one at bar, where there are executors representing the rights of the estate, and capable of acting in their representative capacity, provide that they cannot be sued, but that an inanimate object,— the estate, eo nomine, — without sense or reason or legal capacity, should be; thereby ousting the jurisdiction of the federal court In a case, like the present one, where the plaintiff would otherwise have the eonsüiaíional right to have the controverted question of debt or no- debt determined by a federal court. However, we do not find it necessary to decide that question; for we do not find that the supreme court of California has ever held that by the terms of the statute of that state, the provisions of which are quoted above, the estate, eo nomine, only can be sued by an executor having a claim against it in cases where there are more than one executor of the estate duly qualified and acting, which is the exact case at bar; nor does our construction of the provisions of the California statute lead to any such result. Sections 1490, 1494, 1498, 1503, 1500, and 1498 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California are manifesily general provisions, by which provision is made for the publication by the executor or executors, administrator or administrators, as the case may be, of a notice to the creditors of the decedent, requiring all persons having claims against the estate to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, to the executor or executors, administrator or administrators, as the case may be, at a designated place and within a designated time. It is also (hereby declared how claims shall be verified, and provision is then made for their allowance or rejection by the executor or executors, administrator or administrators, as the case may bo, and by the probate judge. It is then provided by section 1498 that “when, a claim is rejected either by the executor or administrator, or a judge of the superior court, the holder must bring suit in the proper court against the executor or administrator within three months after the date of its rejection, if it be then due, or within two months after it becomes due, otherwise the claim shall be forever barred”; and by section 1500 it is declared that “no holder of any claim against an estate shall maintain any action thereon, unless the claim is first presented to the executor or administrator,” with an exception not important to mention.- These provisions clearly cover and apply to cases where there is more than one executor or administrator, and one of them is a creditor of the estate; for in all such cases there is a qualified representative of the estate, capable of acting, and who is by the statute required to act, on the claim. But the legislature of the state recognized the fact that there might be cases in which there would be but one executor or administrator, who himself might have a claim against the estate, and, further, that the judge of the probate court might be a creditor of the