192 Wis. 71 | Wis. | 1927
The following opinion was filed December 7, 1926:
The vital issue presented on the appeal embraces a question of the jurisdiction of the county court of Lafayette county (such court having jurisdiction of actions for specific performance, like that of the circuit court), it being argued by plaintiffs’ counsel that such county court had full and adequate jurisdiction to grant full relief in the action for specific performance as prayed for in the complaint and as ordered and adjudged by such court; while the defendants’ counsel insist that the only remedy afforded to the plaintiffs under the statutes consisted in the filing of their claim in the probate proceedings in the matter of the estate of Ole Halverson, deceased, in the probate court of Iowa county.
Defendants also claim that, inasmuch as they were not
It is freely conceded by plaintiffs’ counsel that the present action is prosecuted under the provisions of sec. 296.02 of the Statutes (formerly sec. 3499), and the court in its opinion fully agreed with plaintiffs’ counsel in that behalf. Ch. 296 of the Statutes of 1925 is entitled as follows: “Estates of Wards; Specific Performance; Change Names and Establish Heirships.” Sec. 296.02 is as follows :
“Specific performance of contract. The circuit court shall have ppwer to authorize or compel the specific performance of any bargain, contract or agreement made by any party who may die before the performance thereof, or by any person incompetent to manage his affairs by reason of insanity, idiocy, unsoundness of. mind or habitual drunkenness, while he was capable of conducting his affairs, by any infant heir or devisee or other person, or by such incompetent person or his guardian, on the petition of the executors or administrators of such deceased person, the guardian of such incompetent person or of any other person interested in such bargain, contract or agreement.”
Ch. 313 of the Statutes of 1925 is entitled “Proof and Payment of Debts and Legacies.” Sec. 313.08 under said chapter (formerly sec. 3844) provides as follows:
“Statute of limitations. Every person having a claim against a deceased person, proper to be allowed by the court, who shall not after notice given as required by sections 313.03 and 313.04, exhibit his claim to the court within the time limited for that purpose, shall forever be barred from recovering such demand or from setting off the same in any action.”
Sec. 313.09, Stats. 1925 (formerly sec. 3845), provides:
“Actions against executors, etc. No action shall be commenced against an executor or administrator, excepting ac*76 tions for the recovery of specific real or personal property, or actions to establish, enforce, or foreclose a lien or right of lien, on real or personal property, or to quiet title or remove a cloud on title, to construe wills, enforce the liability of stockholders, to avoid fraudulent conveyances, to affect or pass the title to real property and other actions in which the county court cannot afford a remedy as adequate, complete, prompt or efficient as the circuit court. Nor shall any attachment or execution be issued against the estate of the deceased or the executor or administrator thereof, until the expiration of the time limited for the payment of debts, except as provided in sections 266.25 and 272.14. Nothing in this section shall prevent any person having a lawful claim against a deceased person from bringing an action therefor against the executor, administrator, heir, devisee, or legatee of such deceased person, when no time has been fixed in which creditors may present their claims against the deceased for allowance, or when no notice of such limitations has been ordered or given.”
Sec. 313.22 (formerly sec. 3858) and sec. 313.23 (formerly sec. 3859) provide for the filing of a contingent claim and the manner of payment thereof. Sec. 313.24 (formerly sec. 3860) and sec. 313.25 (formerly sec. 3861) provide for the presentation and payment of subsequently accruing claims.
The legislature in using the language contained in sec. 296.02, defining the power of the circuit court to entertain actions for specific performance of any bargain, contract, or agreement made by any party who may die before the performance thereof, on petition of the executors or administrators of such deceased person or any other person interested in such bargain, contract, or agreement, did not legislate in vain; and it must be assumed that it had a specific purpose in mind. The language is broad and inclusive, and must be held to apply not only to an action brought by the vendee but also to one brought by the vendor. If this were the only statute upon the subject, the jurisdiction of the cir
“The relation between the parties is analogous to that of equitable mortgagor and mortgagee. The former has an equity of redemption, the latter has the correlative right of foreclosure.”
In an action brought by a vendor for specific performance of a land contract, the circuit court is authorized to order the land described in the contract sold and to direct that the proceeds be applied to the payment of the amount due there
During the lifetime of the vendee in a land contract, where a default occurs, he subjects not only the property contracted for to the payment of the amount due or to become due, but all of his other assets, both real and personal, subject to prior liens, excepting only such as may be exempt. This liability is not extinguished by the death of the vendee, but finds full recognition both by the provisions of sec. 296.02 of the Statutes and the probate statutes above referred to, with respect
In the case of Pereles v. Leiser, 119 Wis. 347, 96 N. W. 799, it was held with respect to the rights of a mortgagee as follows:
“If no claim ... is presented against the estate of the deceased maker within the time limited for such presentation, under sec. 3844 of the Statutes, personal liability on the note is extinguished and a subsequent judgment for deficiency against the executor of the deceased maker is erroneous.”
In a similar case, Franklin v. Killilea, 126 Wis. 88, 104 N. W. 993, it is said in the opinion:
“This limit of time for the filing of claims against the estate was not extended by the court. The plaintiff filed no claim against the estate on the note in question. It has been repeatedly held that all claims against estates must be made and exhibited to the court within the time limited by the court, and under sec. 3844, Stats., a person failing to so present a claim is to be ‘forever barred from recovering such demand or setting off the same in any action whatever.’ ”
Giving full effect to all of the provisions of the statutes above referred to, in an attempt to harmonize the same, we conclude:
First. That the action for specific performance can be properly brought by a vendor in a land contract in the circuit court or in any other court having concurrent jurisdiction, in a case where no executor or administrator has been appointed, or where no order has been made by the county court in probate limiting the time for creditors to present claims, and where no notice of such order has been given as required by the statute.
Second. That under the provisions of sec. 296.02, Stats., an action for specific performance may be brought, but that full performance cannot be enforced or decreed by a court where a creditor has failed to file his claim in the proper probate court, where the estate of the deceased is administered.
The position of the heirs in the instant case is not unlike that of an assignee holding an assignment from the vendee, which assignment contains no covenants by which the as-signee, for a valuable consideration, assumes and agrees to
Plaintiffs’ counsel ingeniously argue that by reason of the fact that the defendants paid the note for $4,000 before the expiration of the time for filing claims, and because they also paid the interest on the unpaid sums for a period of upwards of four years, they therefore created a situation which made manifest their intention not to hold plaintiffs to the
By the Court. — The judgment of the lower court in so far as it decreed a sale of the land covered by the land contract and the application of the proceeds towards the payment of plaintiffs’ claim, and in so far as it reformed the contract, is affirmed. The balance of the judgment is reversed and set aside, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on February 8, 1927.