The complaint in this action, dated January 19, 1949, is in three counts. In each it is alleged that the plaintiff has been duly appointed and has qualified as administrator o£ the estаte of Charles J. Drumm, deceased. The first alleges that the defendants wrongfully seized about $11,050 belonging to the decedent, the second that the defendants hold that money undеr an implied trust for the decedent, and the third that the defendants obtained the money by the exercise of undue influence. The plaintiff claims an accounting, damagеs and other equitable relief. The answer, in addition to a general denial, contains .five special defenses. Two of these are that the plaintiff had filed no invеntory in the Probate Court prior to the institution of the action and, in particular, had not inventoried the claim sued upon. Demurrers to these defenses were overruled. The reply admits these allegations but alleges by way of “Additional Averment” that the plaintiff did inventory the claim on February 21, 1951. Thereupon judgment was entered for the defendants on the pleadings on the ground that the filing of an inventory of a claim by an administrator is a condition precedent to the institution of a suit by him thereon. The controlling question on this appeal is whether that ruling was correct.
Section 6987 of the General Statutes reads: “An inventory of all the property of every deceased person and insolvent debtor, except real estate situated outside the state, duly appraised, shall be made and sworn to by the executor or administrator or trustеe and by him filed in the probate court having jurisdiction of the estate of such deceased person or insolvent debtor within two months after the acceptance of the bond or other qualification of such fiduciary. . . .” It goes on to provide that the Probate Court shall send a certified copy of the inventory and appraisal to the state tax *378 commissioner and “£w]ithin sixty days after the receipt of such copy by the tax commissioner, he or any party interested may file in such court a writing setting forth in detail such objections as he may have to the acceptance of such inventory or appraisal.”
This statute clearly imposed upon thе plaintiff the duty to inventory the claim which his decedent’s estate had against the defendants even though that claim may have been of uncertain value. See
Spicers Appeal,
We have said that the inventory required by § 6987 “is the bаsis and foundation upon which all the other proceedings prescribed by the statute, or requisite to be had, rest and depend.”
Frisbie
v.
Preston,
It is basic in our probate law that the legal title to the personal property of a decedent, including choses in action, vests in his administrator or executor.
Blodgett
v.
Bridgeport City Trust Co.,
The defendants rely very largely upon the following excerpt from the opinion in Gold’s Appeal, Kirby 100, 103, a case decided in the Superior Court in Fairfield County in 1786. “In case the estate belonged to the intestate, the administrator could not prosecute his claim or apply the property for the payment of debts (if neсessary) until it was inventoried.” The case was not one in which an administrator was seeking to enforce a claim against a debtor of the estate. The sole question involved was whether the Probate Court should accept an inventory which listed land which, it was claimed, the decedent had transferred while incompetent. The quoted statement, therefore, was purely dictum, and, in so far as it relates to the prosecution of claims before they are inventoried, it was not a correct statement of the law.
The defendants also rely upon
Frisbie
v.
Preston,
We conclude, therefore, that the filing of an inventory is not a condition precedent to an administrator’s right to enforce his claim against a person indebted to his decedent on account of a chose in action.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to sustain the demurrer to the second and third special defenses and then proceed in accordance with law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
