77 P. 129 | Or. | 1904
after stating the facts in the above terms, delivered the opinion of the court.
1. Phil Cohn, a warehouseman, testified that in the years 1899 and 1900 one Lassen delivered wool at his warehouse for the account of Penland, which Penland afterwards said belonged to Fields. The witness was thereupon asked to relate any conversation he had with Lassen at the time the wool was delivered in 1900 about its coming from
2. G. W. Phelps, one of the attorneys for the defendant executrix, was called by the plaintiff for the purpose of proving due presentation of the claim sued upon. On his
3. The court instructed the jury:
“In order to recover in an action of this sort against the executrix of the last will and testament of a deceased person, the plaintiff must allege and prove, among other things, that he presented his claim for the demand sued upon, and that the same was rejected, before action was commenced ; but the refusal of the executrix to act upon*260 such claim, if you find from the evidence she did so refuse, after having the same in her possession for a reasonable time, and did neither approve or reject the same, -nor take action thereon, such action on her part would amount to a rejection of the claim.”
Objection was made to this instruction because “it failed to state what a reasonable time is, and is not a correct statement of the law applicable to the case.” The instruction, we think, is erroneous for two reasons: It made the question of the rejection of the claim depend upon the refusal of the executrix to act upon .it, when a mere failure or neglect to do so would have been sufficient; and it left the determination of what was' a reasonable time after the presentation of the claim in which to allow or reject it as a question of fact for the jury. The statute provides that no action shall be commenced against an executor or administrator until the claim of the plaintiff has been presented and disallowed (B. & 0. Comp. § 388), but if the administrator neither allows nor rejects the claim within a reasonable time after its presentation, it will be deemed disallowed, and the creditor may bring an action thereon: 2 Woerner, Administration, (2 ed.), § 390 ; 1 Abbott, Probate Law, § 473. The executor or administrator has a reasonable time after the presentation of a claim against the estate of his decedent in which to examine it and determine whether he will allow or reject it, but, if he fails to do either within such time, the claim will, in law, be disallowed, and it is immaterial whether his failure to act is due to an affirmative refusal or not. For this reason the language of the instruction was at least technically inaccurate, and may have misled the jury.
4. The more serious objection to the instruction, how-. ever, is that it left the question whether the defendant had a reasonable time after the presentation of the claim in which to allow or reject it as one of fact for the jury.
5. It is undisputed that the claim was presented to the executrix by the 1st of April, and was in her possession six months later, when the action was commenced. This was clearly a reasonable length of time in which to determine whether she would allow or reject it. The court should have so declared as a matter of law, and not left the question for the jury. In Willis v. Marks, 29 Or. 493 (45 Pac. 293), a claim against an estate was presented to the administrator on the 8th of January, a demand for its return made by the claimant on the 9th of the following April, and an action of replevin commenced about two months thereafter; and the court held that the administrator was entitled to hold the claim a reasonable length of time after its presentation for examination, to determine whether it should be allowed or rejected, but that a reasonable time had elapsed, and plaintiff could therefore maintain an action of replevin to recover possession thereof.
6. The deposition of Hugh Fields was taken prior to his
7. The meaning of the statute when it applies is not easy to determine. It provides that a claim which has been disallowed by an executor shall not be allowed by any court or jury, except upon some “competent or satisfactory” evidence other than the testimony of the claimant. Whether this means that the claim shall not be allowed unless the testimony of the claimant is corroborated by other pertinent and competent testimony, or whether his evidence shall be entirely disregarded and the claim dis
8. The remaining assignments of error are based upon instructions given. It is unnecessary to set out the instructions in full, or to notice them in detail, for they are lengthy and would unnecessarily encumber this opinion, and many of the questions involved have already been disposed of. The only point remaining to be noticed is the instruction to the effect that plaintiff could not recover in this action unless Penland, at the time of the alleged settlement between himself and Fields in May,
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered. Reversed.