This action of contract is on the probate bond of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., as trustee under the will of Edwin Bowker. The date of the writ is February 20,
The plaintiff’s bill of particulars sets out that the defendant was appointed executor of the will of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., on March 20, 1924, and gave bond as such; that all of the accounts of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., as trustee under the will of Edwin Bowker have not been settled in the Probate Court; that the present trustees were appointed March 9, 1928. The defendant filed a plea in abatement alleging that the defendant was appointed executor of the will of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., on March 20, 1924, and gave bond, and also gave due notice of his appointment; that it appeared from the plaintiff’s declaration and bill of particulars that this action was brought more than one year from the time of the defendant’s giving bond; and that the defendant should not be held to answer in this action. In the Superior Court the defendant’s plea was sustained; to this ruling the plaintiff excepted.
At the hearing on the plea in abatement the defendant offered in evidence copy of “an affidavit [of notice] hereto annexed and made part hereof.” The plaintiff objected to this evidence on the ground that the affidavit, not having been filed until more than eleven months after the defendant was appointed, was not admissible in evidence under G. L. c. 195, §§ 1 and 2. This evidence was admitted subject to the plaintiff’s exception. The plaintiff offered in evidence a copy of the decree appointing the defendant trustee as successor to Francis E. Bowker, Sr., a copy of the resignation of the defendant as trustee accepted by the Probate Court on March 9, 1928, and a certificate of the Probate Court showing its decree appointing the present trustees under the will of said Edwin Bowker. All of this evidence was excluded and the plaintiff excepted. The plaintiff offered to prove that the excluded documents would show that though the present action was brought more than one year subsequent to the
The defendant contends that as he was appointed executor of the will of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., (who had been trustee under the will of Edwin Bowker) on March 20, 1924, gave, bond on that date, and gave due notice of his appointment as executor, the plaintiff is barred by the short statute of limitations, this action not having been brought within one year from the time the bond was given. G. L. c. 197, § 9. The plaintiff’s contention on this point is that the short statute of limitations is not a bar for the reason that the defendant was appointed executor of the will of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., on March 20, 1924; that the evidence excluded showing the appointment of the defendant as trustee under the will of Edwin Bowker as successor to Francis E. Bowker, Sr., on April 1, 1924, was admissible, as it would show that the defendant was at the same time trustee under the will of Edwin Bowker and the executor of the former trustee, Francis E. Bowker, and as he held both offices the short statute of limitations was not a bar; that as the same individual is the trustee of the estate having the claim and the executor of the estate against whom the demand is made, the judge should have admitted the evidence and overruled the plea.
If from April 1, 1924, to March 9, 1928, the defendant was trustee of the estate making the claim, as the plaintiff offered to show, and as the defendant was appointed executor of Francis E. Bowker, Sr., on March 20, 1924, the defendant until March 9, 1928, represented both estates. He was the trustee of the claimant estate and was the legal representative of the one against whom the claim was made.
The statute did not begin to run until the appointment of a trustee by whom the action could be brought. The evidence showing the appointment of the defendant trustee as successor to Francis E. Bowker, Sr., his resignation on February 25, 1928, and the appointment of the present trustees on March 9, 1928, should have been admitted; it was error to exclude this evidence. If the defendant admitted these facts, his plea should not have been sustained. We find nothing in conflict with what is here decided in the decisions cited by the defendant.
The affidavit showing that notice of the defendant’s appointment as executor was given within three months from March 20, 1924, was admitted properly. The affidavit of notice was not inadmissible because it was not filed until more than eleven months after the appointment. By G. L. c. 195, § 2, an affidavit of the executor or of a person in his behalf filed and recorded with a copy of the notice in the registry of probate “shall be admitted as evidence of the time, place and manner in which the notice was given.” There is nothing in the statute requiring the filing of the affidavit within a time specified. By earlier laws a time
The refusal to admit the evidence offered by the plaintiff and the ruling sustaining the defendant’s plea in abatement were erroneous.
Exceptions sustained.