101 Me. 314 | Me. | 1906
The first of these cases is an action of debt on a judgment for $708.65 recovered in 1899 by Albert A. Robbins against the defendant Rich. It is alleged in the declaration that Feb. 10, 1900, Robbins, for a valuable consideration, assigned this judgment “to Alvah R. Hayes then the administrator de bonis of the Dingley Brothers estate.” In support of this allegation the following instrument signed by Robbins was offered in evidence: “ For a valuable consideration, in a note of one hundred and fifty dollars payable to F. B. Dingley, admr., d. b. n. Dingley Bros.’ estate, dated Feb. 1, 1899, to me this day surrendered by A. R. Hayes, admr., d. b. n. of same estate, I assign and transfer to said estate the within judgment debt with full power in my name but without expense to me to collect the same.”
The plea was the general issue with a brief statement denying that there was any assignment of the judgment to the plaintiff in his capacity as administrator as set forth in the declaration.
It was accordingly contended in behalf of the defendant, first, that the instrument in question was ineffectual as an assignment and inadmissible as evidence because not under seal; second, that under our statutes an assignee of a judgment could not maintain an action in his own name, and third, that in any event the instrument could not operate as an assignment of a judgment to Hayes in his capacity as administrator of Dingley Brothers but only as an assignment to Hayes in his individual capacity, and hence fails to support the plaintiff’s declaration..
These objections were severally overruled pro forma by the presiding judge, the assignment received- as evidence, and judgment ordered for the plaintiff for $888.95. The case comes to this court on exceptions to this ruling.
In Prescott v. Hull, 17 Johns. 284, the court said “I do not consider the want of a seal essential. The mere delivery of a chose in action upon good and valid consideration would be sufficient even were it a specialty.” See also Wood v. Decoster, 66 Maine, 542, and Ware v. Railroad Company, 69 Maine, 97.
In the two last named cases it was also decided that under section 146, chapter 84 of the Revised Statutes (originally chapter 235, laws of 1874,) a judgment must be deemed a chose in action upon which an action might be maintained by the assignee in his own name.
In considering the peculiar terms of the instrument in question and its operation as an assignment with reference to the defendant’s third contention, it is allowable to observe the situation of the parties at that time and the obvious purpose of this assignment.
In October, 1904, the defendant Rich obtained a verdict of $2093.25 against the plaintiff Hayes in his capacity as administrator de bonis non on the estate of Dingley Brothers, The action which
It is true that the plaintiff Hayes obtained the assignment of the Robbins judgment two months before the actual commencement of the original suit of Rich v. Hayes, last described but it has been seen that the note on which this action was brought was dated Dec. 29, 1894. It may reasonably be inferred from all the circumstances disclosed by the evidence to which we are permitted to refer that both Hayes and Fred B. Dingley, his predecessor in the administration of the estate in question had reason to apprehend that a suit would be brought by Rich on his noté against Dingley Brothers and having an opportunity to purchase the Robbins judgment at less than twenty cents on the dollar, Hayes appears to have consummated the arrangement alleged to have been made by Fred B. Dingley, and obtained an assignment of the judgment in the obivious hope of being allowed to offset the full amount of it against any judgment that might be recovered by Rich on his $3000 note. But a judgment against Rich standing in the name of Robbins as plaintiff could not be offset against a judgment obtained by' Rich against Hayes in his capacity as administrator d. b. n. of the estate of Dingley Brothers, and the suit at bar was manifestly brought for the purpose of obtaining a judgment in the name of Hayes, the assignee, in his capacity as administrator in the expectation that in this form the Robbins judgment could be offset pro tanto against the larger judgment of Rich against Hayes, administrator. Accordingly, on the rendition of the judgment for $2093 in favor of Rich, a motion to offset the Robbins judgment was promptly made.
It is the'opinion of the court, however, that in the case at bar the plaintiff 'is not entitled to. a judgment in his right and Capacity as administrator. In the first place it does not explicitly or satisfactorily appear that the $150 note invested by Hayes in the purchase of the Robbins judgment in fact represented any part of the assets of the estate of Dingley Brothers. It is described in the assignment
But if it be assumed that the Robbins judgment was purchased by Hayes with funds belonging to the estate of Dingley Brothers, still, in a broader view of the question, insuperable objections present themselves arising from considerations of sound public policy, and the rights of a party in the situation of Rich as defendant in a suit in the Robbins judgment which must prevent the plaintiff Hayes from recovering a new judgment in his name and capacity as administrator on the estate of Dingley Brothers. It is the recognized function of an administrator to settle the estate, reduce the assets to cash as far as necessary and practicable, pay the debts and legacies and under the order of court distribute the residue among those entitled to it under the intestate laws of the state. “ So great a breach of trust is it for the representative to engage in business witli the funds of the estate that the law charges him with all the losses thereby incurred without on the other hand allowing him to receive the benefit of any profits that he may make, the rule being that the persons beneficially interested in the estate may either hold the representative liable for the amount so used with interest or at their election take all the profits which the representative has made by such unauthorized use of the funds of the estate.” 18 Cyc. 241 & 242, and cases cited.
In Mead v. Merritt & Peck, 2 Paige, 402, the facts were analogous to those at bar. In a suit by the defendant Peck against the plaintiff as executor of the will of one Sherwood, the plaintiff alleged that he had purchased a note against Peck and asked to have it set off against the claim of the latter upon Sherwood’s estate. It was further alleged, it is true, that Peck’s claim had been assigned to the defendant Merritt for the purpose of defeating the plaintiff’s claim to a set off, and the question of jurisdiction was also involved. But in the opinion Chancellor Kent says : “Independent of this question of jurisdiction, it is evident that the complainant has no right to the equitable interposition of this court. The note of Peck, which he
So in Dudley v. Griswold, 2 Bradf. N. Y. 24, the court say, “It is the duty of an executor or administrator to settle the estate pay the debts and distribute the surplus, and not to speculate in demands against creditors.”
The distinction between the duty and authority of an administrator, and the functions of a trustee or receiver, is so well established and a matter of such common knowledge as to render unnecessary the citation of authorities or any extended discussion of the subject. It has been recognized from time immemorial as the characteristic duty of an administrator to settle the estate of his intestate with reference to the situation of the assets at the time of the death of the decedent, and not attempt, by trade or speculation to adjust the affairs of the estate upon an entirely different basis, which might seriously affect the question of distribution and in some instances render the estate insolvent. See the numerous cases upon the question of set off in Rich vs. Hayes, Admr., 101 Maine, 324. In the case at bar it appears that at the time Hayes purchased the Robbins judgment, Rich was hopelessly insolvent and had no available property, with which to satisfy any judgment, except the note in suit in Rich vs. Hayes, Adm’r.; while, on the other hand, there is no -evidence that Robbins was not entirely solvent and able to pay the mote for $150, which the plaintiff held against him. It was the obvious duty of the plaintiff, if acting for the interest of the estate which he represented, to collect this note in cash, and not invest it in -a worthless judgment at twenty cents on the dollar. If he assumed the repsousibility of' employing the funds of the estate for such a purpose, he should be deemed to have done so in his individual capacity; and if an administrator thus changes the nature of the debt originally due the intestate by a contract made with himself, he must sue for the new debt in his own name and not in his repre
Again the assumption that the plaintiff can maintain this action and recover judgment in his capacity as administrator is incompatible with the right of the defendant to testify as a witness in his own behalf respecting matters that happened before the death of the plaintiff's intestate. In an action on a judgment brought by the original judgment creditor or by an assignee in his individual capacity the defendant would be a competent witness as to all matters material to the issue. It would be the privilege of the defendant Rich, for instance, to give personal testimony that before the death of the Dingley Brothers he had paid the Robbins judgment in full but under the provisions of section 112 of chapter 84 of the revised statutes, the fact that the plaintiff brings the action as the representative of a deceased party precludes the defendant from giving any such evidence in his own behalf, although Robbins the judgment creditor would be a competent witness for the plaintiff. Under the operation of such a rule any person could effectually close the mouth of his adversary as a witness by assigning his claim to an administrator of some estate.
But it has been seen that the ruling of the presiding judge to which exceptions were taken fails to specify whether the judgment was ordered in favor of the plaintiff in his individual or representative capacity. But it is not alleged in the declaration that the cause of action accrued to the estate which he represented but for aught that appears it may have been one accruing to him in his own right. The words describing him as administrator of the estate may therefore be stricken out as merely descriptio personae and he may be allowed to take judgment in his individual capacity. Bragdon v. Harmon, 69 Maine, 29. Fleming v. Courtenay, 95 Maine, 128. Same v. Same, 98 Maine, 401.
Inasmuch therefore, as the plaintiff is entitled to judgment in his individual capacity, the entry in the first case must be,
Exceptions overruled.
In this case therefore, the entry must also be,
Exceptions overruled.