49 A. 698 | R.I. | 1901
This is a bill to restrain the respondent, as administrator upon the estate of Nathaniel W. Jenks, of Burrillville, from selling certain real estate, to pay debts of the intestate, to the prejudice of the complainants. The respondent demurs to the bill.
The case stated is this: A part of the real estate of said intestate was acquired by descent from his paternal ancestor, and the other part by purchase. He died in 1897, intestate and leaving no children. The administrator, having found it necessary to sell a portion, at least, of the real estate to pay debts, obtained permission of the Probate Court to sell all of the real estate if necessary; and the bill alleges that the administrator is about to sell that portion which came to the intestate by descent, before exhausting that which came to him by purchase.
The complainants are those who succeed to the ancestral estate under Gen. Laws, cap. 216, § 6, and the proposed sale thereof, it is claimed, will deprive them of all interest therein, because the debts amount to more than the value of this part of the real estate. Their claim is that the real estate acquired by purchase should be first sold; the effect of which would be to deprive the respondents, heirs of a moiety through the mother, of whom the administrator is one, of nearly all of their share of inheritance. There can be no doubt of the power of a court of equity to control the execution of a decree of a Court of Probate, upon a proper statement for equitable relief.Rathbone v. Lyman,
The argument for the defendant is that as our law has never made any express distinction between the classes of property to be sold, but makes it all liable for the payment of debts, one part can be sold as well as another.
In Smith v. Smith,
In Hays v. Jackson,
In that case the debts were ordered to be paid out of the residuary estate, the second of the above classes, upon the ground that a testator may bind, by his dispositions, his legatees, devisees and heirs, and that a residuary devise, operating after the payment of debts, was such a binding disposition.
If it be inequitable to discriminate against the heirs of ancestral estate, it is equally inequitable to do so as to general heirs, whose rights are as strong and as carefully preserved in our statutes as the others, with respect to the property which can go to them. Neither the diligence of counsel nor the examination of the court has disclosed a case involving the exact question here raised. The principle, however, upon which it depends is not hard to find.
It is a familiar rule in regard to creditors that equality is equity. The principle is equally applicable to classes of claimants such as those before us. Each class is entitled to interests in real estate after the payment of debts. The whole burden should be thrown neither upon one class nor the other. The bill prays for alternative relief by dividing the burden of the debts proportionately upon the two classes of heirs, and this we think is proper.
The demurrer to the bill is therefore overruled upon this ground.