145 Ga. 660 | Ga. | 1916
The sole question for decision is whether during the twelve months next ensuing after the appointment and qualification of the administratrix she was exempt from suit for an accounting and settlement of claims of the character set out in the petition. The claims were for money alleged to have been expended by the temporary administrator from his private funds, for other money borrowed from a bank in carrying on the business of the intestate, and for compensation for his services as temporary administrator. The effort was to require payment of these demands from the property of the estate. The permanent administratrix was charged by law with the duty of administering the property of the estate. This involved payment, among other things, of demands against the estate in favor of other persons, according to their several priorities, and distribution of any residue to the heirs at law. Civil Code, § 4000. Eor failure to comply with the duty of an administrator the administratrix and her bondsmen would be liable to any one injured directly by such failure. Civil Code, § 3972. The administrator’s duty to a large extent relates to conditions which the administrator did not bring about, and transactions carried on by the decedent to which the administrator was not a party. Where claims are presented for payment from the assets of the estate in the hands of the administrator, it is but reasonable that the administrator should have opportunity, not only to investigate the validity of the claims, but to make provision for their payment in case they should be found binding against the estate. Recognizing the- conditions under which administrators are appointed and required to act, it is declared in the Civil Code, § 3997: “The administrator shall be allowed twelve months from the date of his qualification to ascertain the condition of the estate.’’ In the Civil Code, '§ 4015, referring to administrators other than administrators de bonis non, it is declared: “N<J suit to recover a debt due by the decedent shall be commenced against
The other demands of the plaintiff for money used for the benefit of the estate by him as temporary administrator, whether regarded as expenses of administration or as debts or claims of other character against the estate, created after the death of the intestate, are sought to be established as liabilities of the estate and payment thereof made from assets of the estate through the instrumentality of a suit for an accounting and settlement. In this view, the ease is within the ruling in Cunningham v. Schley, supra, that “no proceedings can be sustained against the administrator for a settlement, either final or partial, within the twelve months.”
The ease is entirely different from those which involved suits against administrators to recover property in their possession that did not belong to the estate, and suits for mismanagement by the administrator and waste of the estate, or to establish some right against the estate not involving payment of money by the administrator from the assets in his hands for administration.
Judgment affirmed.