stated it as his opinion that the replication was insufficient; that an administration bond did not oblige an administrator to return an inventory of real estate, and that therefore there must be judgment for the defendants.
(after stating the pleadings.) The only question referred by this record to the decision of the Court, is the extent of
As to the case of Dickinson vs. Hastings, which has been pressed on our consideration as deciding the point referred to the Court by this record, every thing that was then said, which relates to this case, was extrajudicial. As to the point adjudged, it is not necessary, now, to give an opinion — it will be the time to decide when the question shall come judicially before the Court. I am not, however, prepared to say, that the point there adjudged * is law. It is an attempt to bar a just debt, without satisfaction ; and there appears to be no object of public policy to justify it. As to the case of Lyon and Fisk, it was decided on the authority of Dickinson vs. Hastings — and if the latter be unfounded, the former must be so likewise. The defendants therefore must have judgment.
As these pleadings stand, the single question before the Court is, whether the administrators and their sureties are liable as having broken the condition of the bond upon which the present action is brought, by not. having inventoried the real estate of the intestate. This depends entirely on the words of the condition of the bond
As to the opinions said to be expressed by the Court in the cases cited by the counsel for the plaintiff, they were mere obiter opinions, and cannot be considered as binding.
That difficulties exist as to the administration * of insolvent estates, is certain — but I do not undertake to say in what way the creditors ought to proceed — perhaps the subject requires legislative interference — be this as it may, I am clear that, in the case before the Court, the replication is insufficient, and that judgment must be entered for the defendants.
Judgment for the defendants.
having been of counsel for one of the parties in the case of Lyon and Fisk, above cited, and which related to the same estate for the administration of which the bond, in this case was entered into, declined giving an opinion. But there is no doubt that he was of the same opinion with the other judges.
Note. By the act passed in 1692 (Provin. stat. 4 W. & M. c. 2, § 1.) for the settlement and distribution of the estates of intestates, it is provided, “ that upon granting administration, the judge of probate shall take bond, with sureties, in manner as is directed by the statute of the twenty-second and twenty-third of Charles the Second.” It has been said that at that time lands and tenements were not liable for the payment of debts, and that they were first made so by the act of 1696. (Provin. stat. 8 W. 3, c. 3.) If this be so, the legislature could not, by the act of 1692, (Provin. stat. 4 W. & M. c. 2.) have intended that the bond should extend to real estate. As the legislature, upon the revision of that act in 1784, has directed the form of the bond to be the same as before, which appears to be the fact from the form prescribed in the last act, the presumption seems to be conclusive that it was not intended to lay the administrator under any further obligation, by the bond, than that which results from the known, settled technical meaning of the words used in the condition. — Vide post, p. 204, Prescott vs. Tarbell
[The law has been altered by the Revised Statutes, Ch. 64, sec. 5. — Ed.]
[The condition of the bond is now changed by the Revised Statutes, and real estate must be included in the inventory. Ch. 64, sec. 5. — Ed.]
The former attorney-general of this commonwealth, Mr. Sullivan, entertained an opinion hostile to this decision of the Court. See his treatise on land titles, page 111.
It has been since decided (though consistently with this case) that when an administrator, having obtained a judgment against a debtor of his intestate, satisfies it by an extent on land, he is not so seised to uses as to vest the land in the heirs, &c., of hia intestate, but has a trust estate until the settlement of the administration account, and may maintain an action in his own name, to recover possession against a disseisor vol. iv. 598, Boylston vs Carver
[By me Revised Statutes, the executor or administrator may enter and declare on his own seisin Chap. 71, sec. 13. — Ed.)
