32 N.H. 81 | N.H. | 1855
The Revised Statutes, chapter 161, section 8, provide that no action shall be commenced or prosecuted against an administrator, when the estate is decreed to be administered as an insolvent estate; and by section 31, of chapter 184, it is enacted that attachments shall be dissolved by the death of the defendant, in case his estate shall be decreed to be administered as an insolvent estate, but not otherwise, if the cause of action by law survives.»
After the death of Gilman, his administrator, at February term, 1848, came in and assumed the defence of the action, and continued to defend until judgment was rendered against him, at September term, 1851. On the first of January, 1850, the estate was decreed to be administered as an insolvent estate. If the administrator had taken advantage of this decree by plea or suggestion, the suit could not have been further prosecuted, but must have abated. No such objection appears to have been made, and the record shews regular proceedings, a regular judgment, and an award of execution against the goods and estate of the deceased in the hands of the administrator.
Where an estate is administered as insolvent, the administrator has a claim on the lands for the payment of the debts ; he enters into possession to take the rents and profits, and, by license from the judge of probate, he may sell for the purpose of satisfying the debts. Compiled Statutes 407, § 10.
But the general property in the lands is not in the administrator ; they belong to the estate, and are part of the estate of the deceased in his hands. Whether this estate was in fact insolvent, and these lands necessary for the payment of debts, the case does not shew, and it would not seem to be material until some claim is made by, or in behalf of the creditors. The lands, at any rate, were part of the estate of the deceased in the hands of the administrator.
It is not necessary now to inquire whether the seizin and title of the plaintiff, derived under this judgment and levy, might not be divested so as to satisfy the claims of creditors allowed by the commissioner. The question on this case is between the judgment creditor, claiming under his judgment and levy, and the defendants, who have no claim to the estate, as creditors or otherwise.
It is objected that the levy is void, because it was made to the assignee, and not to the nominal plaintiff, in whose name the suit was prosecuted. There is no suggestion that the assignment was not valid, and it was put on file in the suit.
Our statute on this subject uses the word “ creditor,” and not the word “plaintiff.” The land is set off to the creditor; the creditor appoints one of the appraisers, &c. Compiled Statutes 500, § 1, 2, 6, 10,11,13 and 14. Was the assignee of this' judgment the creditor, within the meaning of the statute ?
The equitable interest of an assignee is protected by courts of law. If Woodman, after the assignment, had attempted to control this suit, he would not have been permitted to do it; and his discharge could not have been regarded at law. The officer in the service of the execution would be bound to follow the instructions of the assignee, and if he had notice of the assignment, could not protect himself under the orders of the assignor. Martin v. Hawks, 15 Johns. 405; State v. Herod, 6 Blackford 444; Colburn v. Rossiter, 2 Conn. 503; Baker v. Davis, 2 Foster 27.
The several tracts levied on were contiguous, and if an undivided eighth part of the whole tract had been set off on the execution, the creditor would have been seized of an undivided eighth in the whole and in every part; that is to say, of an undivided eighth in each lot. That is exactly what he takes under this levy. So under the levy he takes an undivided eighth in each lot, and that gives him an undivided eighth in the whole tract; and the whole being appraised together, it is in effect exactly the same thing as if an undivided eighth had been set off in the whole by that description. The title is the same, the appraisement is the same, and the right of redemption is the same, as if an eighth had been set off in the whole. It is no more than a different description of precisely the same thing. This objection to the form of the levy cannot prevail.
The judgment of the appraisers as to the expediency of setting off an undivided share, is conclusive, but we do not understand that any objection was made on that account; and it is, perhaps, to be inferred from the case, though not distinctly stated, that at the time of the levy no more than one undivided eighth belonged to the estate. Comp. Statutes 510, \ 8 ; Mansfield v. Jack, 24 Maine 98.
In the sale for the taxes of 1840, the collector returns that he offered for sale one eighth of the lots, “ and was struck off to Jonas Howe for the whole.”
In the sale for the tax of 1849, the collector returned that he “ set up three eighths of the lots, which were struck off to E. Dunn for the whole.”
The lists and advertisements shew that in both cases all the land for which the taxes remained unpaid was set up and offered
Judgment that partition he made.