7 Mo. 351 | Mo. | 1842
Opinion of the Court, delivered by
Iehabod Seargent sued Eioy Lacompte and Joseph Bogy in the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county, and obtained judgment against them. They appealed from that judgment, and Bogy dying in the mean time, Lacompte, the surviving partner, prosecutes the appeal.
The suit was founded on a note in these words, viz: “Received of Mr. Ebenezer Dickey, administrator of the estate of Antoine Simmino, deceased, seven hundred dollars, which we will pay him at any time, clear of interest.
(Signed) Bogy & Lacompte.”
On which note or receipt, (as it is called,) were endorsements, made by Dickey, of payments to the amount of
These-facts being admitted to be proved, the circuit court rejected the evidence of moneys paid, and also of the goods purchased by Dickey from the defendants below, while he was administrator as aforesaid.
No principle of law is more generally acknowledged, than that the executor or administrator is, for every purpose, the owner of the moneys of his intestate which have come to his hands. Accordingly a cou ¡t,.on a promise made by a defendant, as administrator, to pay money received by him as such, to the plaintiff’s use, cannot be joined with another count on promises made by the intestate. See 4 Durnford and East, 347 ; Farr and others v. Newman, et al. The money, then, for which the note here sued on was given, was the money of Ebenezer Dickey, subject, in the hands of the defendants, Bogy and Lacompte, to their claim for all sums which they may have paid on the order of Dickey, after the deposit was made, and also the price of the goods which he afterwards purchased from them, was a fair set off against their note; and the circuit court ought to have permitted them to give evidence of those several sums of money paid by them, on the order of Dickey ; and of the goods sold to him. The words, “Administrator of the estate,’’&c., used
Because, then, the circuit court did not permit such evidence to be given, its judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, to be proceeded in as above directed.