17 R.I. 619 | R.I. | 1892
This is an action of assumpsit in which the plaintiff, as administrator de bonis non on the estate of John Charlton, deceased, sues to recover damages for the breach of a contract of sale. Jury trial was waived, and the case was tried to the court. The facts are as follows: On January 13, 1885, William W. Nichols, at that time administrator de bonis non on the estate of the deceased, was, on his petition, authorized and empowered by the Municipal Court of Providence to sell at public auction all the right, title, and interest which the deceased had at his death in and to certain real estate situated on the southerly side of Orms Street, in Providence. Thereupon Nichols, as such administrator, duly advertised all the right, title, and interest of the deceased at his death in the real estate mentioned, for sale at public auction on the premises, on February 28, 1885, at 12 o’clock, noon. In pursuance of the power granted to him as stated, and in accordance with the advertisement, Nichols, as such administrator, at the time and place specified, through George H. Burn-ham, a duly authorized auctioneer of Providence, sold to the defendant, who was the highest bidder at the sale, all the right, title, and interest of the deceased at his death in and to said real estate for $3,100. By the conditions of sale, an administrator’s deed in the usual form was to be delivered to the purchaser at the office of the auctioneer on March 14, 1885, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon. A deed from Nichols, as administrator as aforesaid, to the defend
On November 21, 1887, the plaintiff was appointed administrator de bonis non on the estate of the deceased in place of Nichols, who had been removed from that office, and on September 11, 1888, brought this suit to recover the difference between the sum bid at the first sale and the sum bid at the second sale.
The defendant takes the point that the plaintiff cannot maintain the action, because there is no privity between the plaintiff and his predecessor, Nichols, and, therefore, as the contract .sued on was made with Nichols, he alone can sue for its breach.
We do not think the point is well taken. The early cases, it is true, proceeded upon the principle that contracts made with an administrator were personal to him, and that he must sue upon them in his own right, and not in his representative capacity; but the later cases hold that where the money to be recovered would be assets of the estate, an executor or administrator may sue in his representative capacity, and therefore, if the original administrator die, an administrator de bonis non, who succeeds to all the rights of the original administrator in the estate not administered,
The contract in suit was a contract with Nichols, not individually but in his representative character. The damages, when recovered, will be assets of the estate of the intestate. Nichols might have sued for them in his capacity as administrator. He, however, did nothing in relation to the claim, and upon his removal, and the appointment of the plaintiff as his successor, it remained as an asset of the estate wholly unadministered, and passed, with the right to bring suit upon it, to the plaintiff in his capacity as representative of the intestate.
The defendant also contended that he was not liable, because the auctioneer guaranteed the title to the estate to be good, whereas it was in fact defective. In support of this contention the defendant himself testified, and called as witnesses, in corroboration of his testimony, his son and a neighbor who were present at the sale. The defendant and these witnesses state that the auctioneer said that the title was good as gold, and would be^ guaranteed to any purchaser. This was denied by the testimony of the auctioneer.
The burden is upon the defendant to establish the guaranty by a preponderance of evidence. We are not convinced that the guar-, anty was made as the defendant claims. The sale as advertised, and as shown by the conditions of sale upon the auctioneer’s book, was simply of the right, title, and interest of the deceased, and the deed, as also shown, was to be an administrator’s deed in the usual form, which does not contain covenants of general warranty. Nichols himself did not attend the sale, and it seems to us highly improbable that the auctioneer, in the absence of his principal, and having no interest in the property or in the sale except as auctioneer, should have taken upon himself the responsibility of guaranteeing the title. The defendant and his witnesses state that the alleged guaranty was made in answer to inquiries concerning the title addressed to the auctioneer by one Hennessy, who was present at the sale but has since died; that there was considerable chaffing back and forth between the auctioneer and Hennessy while the sale was progressing. We think it is not improbable that the defendant and his witnesses derived an erroneous impression of what may have been said chaffingly by the auctioneer; or that, with the lapse of years since the sale, they have misrecollected it.
We give judgment for the plaintiff for $1,058.75 and costs.