149 Ind. 587 | Ind. | 1898
This was an application to the court by the administrator to enforce his equitable right to
At the time this suit was commenced the statute of limitations had fully run against the note. Appellant unsuccessfully demurred to the complaint, and an answer was then filed, the first paragraph being the general denial, and the second set up the limitation of ten years as a defense to the action. This was the only defense or claim interposed to defeat the action. To this plea a demurrer was sustained. A trial resulted in the court ordering and decreeing that the defendant accept the amount of the note, principal and-interest, due on the first day of September, 1894, and that the same be 'deducted from his distributive share of the estate.
The appellant in his assignment of errors, complains of the court in overruling his demurrer to the complaint and in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to his plea of the statute of limitations.
Counsel for appellant says that his client might, by his oral agreement, have authorized the admisistrator ■ to have deducted the amount of his note from his share, provided the agreement had been carried into effect at the time it was made by deducting the amount from his share, and surrendering the note for cancellation. But his insistence is that the oral agreement, which, as is contended, is the only foundation on which this action can rest, is invalid and can not be enforced for several alleged reasons, and as a
We do not stop to consider the objection urged by •appellant against the oral agreement, for the reason that we do not view it as a controlling1 factor in this case. The administrator’s right to retain and apply, so far as necessary, the appellant’s share of the funds in his hands to the payment and satisfaction of the debt which the latter owed the estate, did not depend on any agreement to that effect on the part of appellant. The law invested the admisistrator with that right independently of any agreement or contract. The doctrine is correctly and firmly settled in this State that a distributee is not entitled to receive his distributive share while he is indebted to the estate, and thereby retains in his own hands a part of the fuDd out of which his own and the shares of other distributees, or other claims on such fund, ought to be paid. Fiscus v. Moore, 121 Ind. 547; Koons v. Mellet, 121 Ind. 585; Fiscus v. Fiscus, 127 Ind. 283.
This right is not one of set-off, but is founded on the principle that the administrator or executor has an equitable lien on the share of the distributee or legatee, until the latter has discharged the obligation which he owes to the estate. The heir or legatee, as the authorities affirm, is not, in accordance with justice or good conscience, entitled to be awarded and receive his share as long as he is a debtor to the estate, and thereby has in his own hands a part of the fund up'on which the payment of his own share and the
It must follow, in our judgment, that the statute of limitation could not be successfully interposed by appellant as a defense to defeat the appellee in his equitable right to apply an amount sufficient of the appellant’s share of the estate in his hands in payment of the note. It was held in Fiscus v. Fiscus, supra, that a distributee could not defeat the administrator
The court did not err in overruling the demurrer to the complaint, nor in sustaining it to the answer setting up the statute of limitation.
Judgment affirmed.