25 Minn. 466 | Minn. | 1879
This case, as does almost every case •coming here upon the same statute, shows the urgent need for a thorough revision of the statutes regulating the settlement of the estates of deceased persons. Those interested in such estates are frequently widows and infants, incapable of adequately protecting their interests. The administration of the estates is mainly controlled by the probate courts, the judges of which are oftentimes men not learned in the law. The statutes on the subject should be as simple and clear as language can make them. On the contrary, they are the
The question in the case is, can the obligee in a penal bond, executed by a person since deceased, and whose estate has been fully administered and distributed before a breach in the condition of the bond, and the claim upon which bond was not presented for proof either to the probate court or to the-commissioners appointed to audit claims against the estate of the deceased obligor, maintain an action on the bond, after breach of its condition, against the heirs, devisees, next of kin or legatees to whom the estate has been distributed ?
Gen. St. c. S3, which treats of the proof and payment of debts in the course of administration, seems to contemplate two classes of claims, one, of those for which the liability is-absolute and fixed, including those not yet due; the other, of those the liability for which depends upon some future contingent event. The latter are designated “contingent claims,” and in this class falls a penal bond the condition of which has not been broken. The first forty-two sections of the chapter are devoted to the establishment and payment of claims of the first class, an 1 the distribution of the estate after they are paid. As to those, section 14 provides: “Every person having a claim against a deceased person, proper to-be allowed by the commissioners, who shall not, after the publication of notice as required herein,.exhibit his claim to the commissioners within the time limited by the court for that purpose, shall be forever barred from recovering such demand, orfrom setting off the same in any action whatever.” Section 49 saves such a claim from the bar if the appointment of commissioners is omitted. Except in case of such omission, no action on a claim proper to be allowed by the commissioners can be maintained against any one, executor, administrator, heir, next of kin, devisee or legatee, unless it has been presented to and allowed by the commissioners. The actions regulated in Gen. St. c. 77, are not actions on-claims so barred by the provisions of chapter 53. Sections-
Section 43 provides: “If any person is liable as security for the deceased, or has any other contingent claim against his estate which cannot be proved as a debt before the commissioners or allowed by them, the same may be presented with the proper proof to the commissioners, who shall set forth the claim and proof in their report; and said court may •order the executor or administrator to retain in his hands sufficient to pay such contingent claim when the same becomes absolute; or, if the estate is insolvent, sufficient to pay a proportion equal to the dividends of the other creditors.”
“Sec. 44. If such contingent claim becomes absolute, and is presented to the executor or administrator at any time within two years from the time limited for other creditors to present their claims to the commissioners, it may be proved before the commissioners already appointed, or before others to be appointed for that purpose, in the same manner as if presented for allowance before the commissioners had made their report.”
Section 46 provides for the payment of such contingent •claim, when allowed, to the same extent as other creditors, and for the disposition of the assets or residue thereof retained to meet the claim.
From these sections, we conclude that when a claim resting 'in contingency becomes absolute, so as to be capable of being fully established before, and allowed by, the commissioners, within the time limited for other creditors to prove their debts, it is a claim proper to be allowed by the commissioners; and that the holder of a contingent claim may have provision made for its security, by retention of assets in the hands of the ex-•eeutor or administrator, if the claim do not become absolute
That this is so, is further apparent from sections 46, 47, 48. Section 46 provides, “If the claim of any person accrues or becomes absolute at any time after the time limited for creditors to present their claims, the person having such claim
No contingent claims are provided for in this chapter, except by the sections quoted. There is nothing with respect to such as may become absolute after administration is closed, and the jurisdiction of the probate court is exhausted. The holder of such a claim, after it has become absolute, is undoubtedly a creditor within the meaning of chapter 77, regulating actions by creditors against heirs, devisees, next of kin and legatees. They are not barred by section 14 of chapter 53, because they are not proper to be allowed by the commissioners ; and the provisions of sections 43, 44, 46, 47, 48 are not for the purpose of preserving them as claims, but to give the holders of contingent claims an opportunity, within a limited time and on the prescribed conditions, to secure pay
The action will lie. Order affirmed.