24 Fla. 320 | Fla. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the.court:
The leading question to be decided in this cause is-whether or not the decree of foreclosure and sale, rendered agaiust John Clarke, as administrator of the estate of his wife, Mrs. Ann Clarke, concludes her daughters, Mrs. Daffin and Mrs. Perry, as her heirs. There is no doubt that it the property covered b}' the alleged mortgage deed were-personal instead of real estate, they would be concluded, though not parties to the decree, for both at common law and under our statute, the administrator of an estate is the only necessary representative of the personalty of a decendent in such a suit. Whether or not this is also true of a-suit of foreclosure and sale, under our system of laws, when the property involved is real estate, is to be ascer
. Though this precise question has not ever been before this court, yet there are a number of decisions as to the effect of our legislation upon the status of lands with reference to the administration of the estates of deceased persons.
In Gilchrist vs. Filyau, 2 Fla., 94, it was held that an action of debt could not be sustained .in this State against an heir upon the bond of his ancestor, although the heir was expressly named in the bond ; and in Union Bank vs. Heirs of Powell, 3 Fla., 175, that lands being assets in the hands of the personal representatives, it was necessary that such representatives should be parties to a scire facias brought to revive a judgment rendered against a testator or intestate, and that under the statute (Th. Dig., p. 444,) providing a limitation for an action of debt or scire facias against any executor or administrator, or other person having charge of the estate of the testator or intestate, upon any judgment obtained against his testator or intestate, to revive such judgment, it was questionable whether it was necessary to make the heirs and ierretenants parties to such a scire facias brought to subject the land of the decedent to the judgment; and that, unless they could be regarded as persons having charge of the estate of the testator or intestate, within the meaning of the statute, and the lands in their hands assets, they were not properly parties. The failure to institute the scire facias against the personal representative within the statutory limitation was held to be a good defence in behalf of the heirs to the scire facias.
In Sanchez, Administrator, vs. Hart, 17 Fla., 507, the
In Wade vs. Doyle, 23 Fla., 90, it was held that when administration has been granted on the estate of a decedent and the estate is unsettled, and the administrator not discharged, the heirs at law of the decedent can not maintain a suit in ejectment tor the recovery of real estate of such decedent, but the administrator is the proper party plaintiff. In Eppinger, Russell & Co., et al., vs. Canepa, 20 Fla , 264, we have a decision to the effect that an executor in possession of real estate of the testator is, when the rents thereof are necessary to the satisfaction of the debts, personally accountable to the creditors for the rental value thereof when the circumstances of the case disclose a failure to realize rents, and a neglect to exercise the diligence and business activity required at his hands in the management of the property.
It is unnecessary to review all the statutes upon which these decisions are founded. The conclusions reached flow naturally and logically from the lact that our statutes have made lands “ assets,” and that as such they are answerable in the hands of the executor or. administrator for the payment of the decedent’s debts ; and as assets the administrator is the one in whose possession the law, by making them such, places them, and to whose care it entrusts them.
It is contended by counsel for appellees citing the au
The title to real estate descends upon the death of an intestate to the heirs, but this title is cast subject to the effect the existing provisions of law may have upon it.
Not only did the statutes in force at the death of Mrs. Clarke make real estate assets in the hands of executors or administrators, (sec. 3, act of Nov. 20, 1828, pp. 202-3, Th. Dig.,) but they also declared that real estate in the hands of one or the other “ may and shall be equally liable with personal property to an execution existing upon any judgment against such executor or administrator; provided, however, that no real estate of any deceased person shall be taken in execution unless first directed by the administrator, so long as there remains personal property sufficient on which such execution may be levied, but the executor or administrator in every ease may designate the property or kind or part of property which shall first be taken in execution, and whether it shall be real or personal property ; provided, always, that the officres levying said execution shall judge of the sufficiency, and shall take sufficient property, if it
The 1st and 2d sections of the same act of 1828, secs. 57, 58, pp. 93, 94, McC’s. Dig, are to the effect that in all cases where written agreements and contracts shall have been made for the conveyance of real estate in this State, and the person agreeing or contracting to make such conveyance has died, or shall hereafter die before the execution of such conveyance, the executors or administrators of such person shall be authorized and empowered to execute such conveyance according to the rules and forms prescribed by law for the conveyance of real estate, and such conveyances are given the same force and effect as other conveyances of real estate made under and in pursuance of the laws of the State.
By the act of February 10th, 1834, section 5, p. 112, MeC’s. Digest, it is provided that when one executor or administrator resides or has removed beyond the limits of the State, and there are “ assets ” of the testator or intestate in the State, it shall be lawful for any person having a debt or demand against the estate to take out an attachment against such assets in the manner provided therein.
Though it be true that upon the death of the ancestor the fee of real estate descends to, or the title thereof is cast through the instrumentality of the statute of descents, upon the heir, it cannot be denied at this day that the administrator is entitled to the possession of it as assets, nor do we think it can be said that an execution sale of it, and a conveyance by the Sheriff pursuant thereto, under a common law judgment de bonis intestate*ris rendered against the ad
"When the ancestor has made a written contract to convey, the person entitled to the conveyance does not have to-ascertain and apply to the heirs upon whom the technical title may have fallen, for a conveyance, but the adminstrator may convey the title; and finding nothing to justify a suspicion that real estate is not included in the “ assets ” of the attachment statute referred to, the conclusion that a sale under a judgment in such an attachment proceeding to which the administrator was the only party representing the intestate and the land of his estate levied upon under the attachment, would carry the entire interest and title of the intestate and be binding upon the heirs, is, we think, unquestionable.
In view of these several provisions it cannot be denied that to a great'extent the administrator is under our statutory policy the representative of the entire title and inter
If it be, as clearly is the case, that upon the adjudication by a common law court of an indebtedness of the intestate against the administrator as such, an execution sale may be had of the real estate held as assets by the administrator, with the effect stated upon the heirs, unless the estate being insolvent he stop such sale by insolvent proceedings, aud that he has the representative authority as to the lands otherwise indicated above, how can it be logically said that he has not such a representative capacity as to lands as assets, where his intestate has not only contracted during his lifetime the indebtedness, but also given an express lien on the land entitling the creditor to a decree of foreclosure and sale to satisfy such indebtedness in a court of equity? A mortgage in the ordinary form is, when duly executed, as much an agreement that the mortgagee shall have such a decree as it would be were there an express contract to this effect embodied in it. Hart vs. Sanderson’s Admr., 18 Fla., 100, 114; 15 Fla., 337. There is no more reason, on the score of protection of their interests in fee in lands, why the heirs should be before the court in the case of a foreclosure suit than in a common law action, or than that they should execute the deed of conveyance where there has been a written contract of sale. To hold that it is necessary that thi y should be parties in order to be bound by the decree would be antagonistic to the clearly defined policy of the statutes as to the extent of the administrator’s representative power in all adversaiy proceedings instituted by creditors to reach the land as assets of the intestate.
There is nothing in any of the authorities cited that conflicts with the conclusion we have reached, nor is it neces
The Michigan statute, as to which the remarks of the Supreme Court of that State in Campaw vs. Campaw, 25 Mich., 127, quoted, were made, is not so broad as ours, but merely gave the administrator right to the possession of real estate and to receive the rents, issues and profits of the same until the estate was settled or delivered over by order of the Probate Court to the heirs or devisees.
As to Steele et al. vs. Steele’s Admr., 64 Ala., 438, it is only necessary to say that while we do not feel called upon to say whether or not a judgment de bonis intestatoris recovered by a creditor concludes an heir as to the validity of the claim in a proceeding by the administrator under the stat
Though the administrator is not the owner, nor invested with the title to the real estate of his intestate, he holds them in trust to pay debts and lawful charges and to manage for the benefit of all concerned, and his representative capacities as to it as assets are such under our statute as to make him the sole necessary party in a proceeding by a creditor to subject it to foreclosure and sale under a mortgage. The fact-that our statute of 1841, in providing a special proceeding to be instituted by the administrator for the sale of real estate, where the personal estate was not sufficient to pay the debts, may have required that the heirs shall have notice or be made parties, does not overcome the general effect of other laws making them assets or as to proceedings instituted by creditors. The act of 1828, and that of 1870, have no such requirement. Though he could not himself procure under the act of 1841 a sale on his own application, except upon notice to the heirs, this does not take away the power given him to represent the assets and all interested in them in proceedings instituted by creditors, nor does it otherwise qualify the general effect of the Legislature to make lands assets in the hands of administrators and liable to the debts of the intestate. It is subject to those liabilities and conditions that they descend.
II. As the administrator of Mrs. Clarke vras a proper, and the only necessary party to the foreclosure proceeding, the defenses, if there were any, to the bill resulting in the decree of foreclosure and sale should have been made by him. What the allegations of that bill were is not made known to us. They may have been such as to constitute a binding charge upon the land notwithstanding the defect
III. The record does not show that the administrator, John Clarke, is not still living and such administrator. If he is, he is the proper party to correct any error there may have been in the manner of appointing a second master after the death of che first one. The bill does not suggest that the administrator is not still living aud the defendant’s demurrer to the bill is not the pleading by which such a fact can be suggested either directly or in-fereutially.
The decree is reversed and ihe injunction dissolved, and it will be so ordered.