15 D.C. 520 | D.C. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
The history leading to this litigation may be stated in a very few words. Wm. Hogan, sr., who was the father of the female complainants and of the defendant, was the owner of a tract of land situated in Australia. In 1856 he employed the defendant, his son, to go to that country, with powers of attorney authorizing him to manage the property and make sale of it. When he first went, his absence was intended to be only a temporary one, but it turned out that he remained a number of years in that country. He collected rents from property and made sales, and out of these moneys made sundry disbursements and remittances to his father. He rendered accounts from time to time, and finally the transactions were closed up in 1865 by the son’s taking, himself as purchaser, the undisposed of balance of the land, at a price agreed on between the father and son; and then the son rendered a final account to the father embracing all the transactions from the beginning. He remained in that country several years after that, and did not
The exception which relates to this particular item is, “they except to the credits claimed by the administrator in vouchers one and two, consisting of five notes amounting to $8,315.41.” They claim that the -notes were obtained from the intestate at a time when, from infirmity of body and mind, he was incapable of doing business and that they were obtained without a legal consideration.
This exception, which is one of several to the admission of the account, raised the whole question of the balance due upon the account between the father and the son. Upon the application of the exceptants, the case was referred to Mr. J. J. Johnson to take testimony and report. Very voluminous depositions were taken, and he reported that the account was correct, that the father was capable of making this settlement, and, upon discussion in that court and a review of the whole proceeding, the court directed the account to be allowed and overruled the exception. An appeal was taken from that decision to this court and an order passed fixing the appeal bond at $250, but no further step
On May 26, 1878, the same parties who had excepted in the Orphans’ Court filed their bill in this court, calling upon the defendant for an account of his agency in Australia, charging that he had not rendered a true account, that he ivas not entitled to credits claimed hy him, &c., all of which opened up the precise question which was under discussion in the Orphans’ Court and on which that court had pronounced a decision. The defendant at first demurred, and that being overruled, he then filed an answer in which lie responded to the various allegations of the hill, and also set up as conclusive of this question, and as res adjudicata, the determination of it in the Orphans’ Court. If his position in that respect be well taken, it blocks all further inquiry and it brings us at once to the consideration of the question how far the decision of the Orphans’ Court is conclusive of a controversy in that court — a question of very great importance and one which does not seem to have been at all definitely settled.
We are forced, therefore, to examine into the statutes relating to the jurisdiction of that court. We find that the act of 1798, ch. 101, sub-ch. 15, section 12, provides that “The Orphans’ Court shall have full power, authority and jurisdiction to examine, hear and decree upon all accounts, claims and demands existing between wards and their guardians, and between legatees or persons entitled to any distributable part of an intestate’s estate, and executors and administrators, and may force obedience to and execution of their decrees in the same ample manner as the court of chancery may.”
Now it must be admitted that this language is as comprehensive and as strong in conferring jurisdiction as any that ever was used in reference to any court. It is to have “full power, authority and jurisdiction to examine, hear and decree upon all accounts, claims and demands existing between wards and their guardians, and between legatees or distributees and executors and administrators.”
There is, however, this distinction to be observed between a claim by an administrator against the estate as a creditor, and a claim by a third person. If the administrator chooses to dispute the claim of another creditor, it must be asserted in a court of common law or equity, but it is difficult to see exactly how the claim of an administrator on the personal estate can be determined otherwise than by presenting it
So that it does not seem that there is any other way in which an administrator can have his own claim against an estate adjudicated, as between himself and distributees, than by presenting it as a credit in his accounts of administration. But whether that be so or not, it is very plain that he may present a claim in that way, and when it is so presented it is within the jurisdiction of the court to determine whether he shall have credit in the account for his individual claim.
I find there are three cases in which such claim, by an administrator or executor; was the subject of adjudication in which it was assumed as a matter of course, without dispute, that it was a proper subject for determination in the Orphans’ Court in the settlement of administrator’s accounts. One is the case of Nicholls vs. Hodge, in 2 Cranch, C. C., 582; another, Stockett vs. Jones, in 10 Gill & Johnson, 276; and another, Cover vs. Stockdale, 16 Maryland Reports, 10.
On this branch of the case then, we conclude that the court has full power, authority and jurisdiction to examine, hear and decree upon a credit claimed by an administrator in the settlement of his accounts for an individual claim of his against the deceased.
It will be further observed that the court is provided with the most ample apparatus for the most exhaustive examination and determination of questionsof thiskindfalling within its scope and jurisdiction. Section 16 of the same act provides that: “Whenever either of the parties having a contest in the Orphans’ Court shall require, the said court may direct a plenary proceeding, by bill or petition, to which there shall be an answer on oath (or affirmation) and if the
Now, it will be observed that in determining a controversy there are two modes of proceeding; first, a plenary proceeding, which is only another term for a formal proceeding in which the allegations of both parties are reduced to writing in the shape of a petition, and a sworn or affirmed answer, and dejDositions taken in writing, just as in a court of chancery. The other is a summary proceeding, which is simply where the court hear the allegations of the parties orally, and decide in a summary way, either upon written documents in the cause or upon the oral testimony of witnesses. It will be seen that either party has the right to convert the summary into a plenary proceeding upon demand, and then the proceedings are reduced to writing. Then a trial by jury is provided for, an appeal is provided for, and in respect to the privilege of an appeal, and in respect to the effect of the decision and the judgment of the ourt, it does not appear that there is the slightest difference between the plenary and the summary proceedings. The act implies, unavoidably, that the contest may be as well in a summary proceeding as in a plenary one, because it says, in reference to the right of appeal, that “any person who may conceive himself aggrieved by any judgment, decree, decision or order,” &c., shall have liberty of appeal, and “if the judgment, decree, decision or order shall have been given or made on a summary proceeding,” such and such measures shall be taken. Although it assumes that the contest inter partes is inaugurated and a decree authorized, whether the proceeding be a plenary or summary one.
Now, this was the law when the Orphans’ Court constituted an entirely distinct forum from the appellate court when the old Circuit Court was in existence, and for a certain period after the creation of the present court. But sine®
But we have not been referred to any case; no case has been decided in Maryland, and no case, that I am aware of, in any other State, to the effect, that a decree or judgment of the Orphans’ Court in a contested matter has not the same force and effect as the decree of any other court in a contest inter partes. All the decisions that have been brought to our attention and that we have been able to discover, are in the opposite direction. As far back as 1838, we find the case of Lupton vs. Janney, 5th Cranch Circuit Court Reports, 478, in which -it appears that a bill in equity was filed to open an executor’s accounts after they had been settled more that 12 years in the Orphans’ Court, by the residuary legatees. That was a case
“This is a peculiar and exclusive original jurisdiction. An original bill in this court to compel executors to account with a residuary legatee not necessarily connected with any other ground of equitable jurisdiction, is a bill asking that which originally belongs exclusively to the Orphans’ Court to do. It is a part of its ordinary duty to ascertain and distribute the surplus, or residuum of the estate, and for that purpose to settle the administration ac-s count. When that account necessarily and incidentally comes before this court, either as a court of equity or of law, in a suit of which this court has original jurisdiction, the ex parte settlement by the Orphans’ Court would probably be taken to be prima facie correct, but the opposing party would have a right to surcharge and falsify, and the court would open it for that purpose; but if th§ settlement had been made by the Orphans’ Court in a contested case between the same parties, it would probably be deemed by this court conclusive until it should be reversed upon appeal.”
A similar question arose in the circuit court of the United States, before Justice Washington, then a member of the Supreme Court, in the case of Blount vs. Darrach, 4 Washington C. C. R., 659, which was the case of an effort to unsettle a guardian’s account, which stands on the same footing as an administrator’s account, by a bill in equity. Justice Washington there said: “The single question which arises upon the facts stated in the plea is, whether the account of the guardianship of James Darrach, which, by the decree of this court, was allowed and confirmed, is conclusive or not, so as to be a bar to the discovery and relief sought to be enforced by this bill. The general principles of law in respect to the conclusiveness of the judgments and decrees of the domestic tribunals of the country are well settled and perfectly intelligible. A judgment or decree of a. court of competent jurisdiction, directly up
Then he examines the statutory jurisdiction conferred on the Orphans’ Court and says (p. 660), “ upon a view of the above provisions respecting the Orphans’ Court, I could not entertain a doubt were the question before me for judgment for the first time, that that court has jurisdiction to settle and to allow or confirm the accounts of guardians, and finally to decide upon the different items of those accounts, subject to the reversing and correcting jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.”
Then he goes on to say that the same parties appeared in the case, and the decision of the Orphans’ Court must be regarded as conclusive.
In 1861, the case of Sparhawk vs. Buel, occurred in 9th Vt., p. 41, in which this same question was considered. And so in McKinney’s Administrator us. Davis. This case arose under a statute which empowered the Orphans’ Court to adjudge between a creditor and administrator. And the same principle is asserted in the case of McDougal vs. Rutherford,
So that all the authorities which have been brought to our attention and which I have been able to find myself, unite in conceding the same authority to the decree© of an orphans’ court or court of probate, in a contested matter, as they do that of any other court.
The question brought before us in the bill and answer in this case is the identical question brought before the Orphans’ Court, on which a decree was rendered and from which decree an appeal was noted. In our judgment the only way to prosecute that investigation was to prosecute that appeal. That not having been done, the decree helow has the same conclusive effect on this question as if the appeal had been taken, and the decree been affirmed here. That being our view of the operation of that statute and the effect of this decree, the defence is complete without going into the merits of the controversy between the parties as to the merits of the account. We are,. therefore, of the opinion that the decree below must be affirmed.