52 A. 484 | Conn. | 1902
The question in this case rests upon the meaning and effect to be given to the provisions of § 629 of the General Statutes, Rev. of 1888. These proceedings are incidental to an attempt to charge the administratrix with the personality of the estate of her intestate left in her hands after the settlement of her administration account, in the same manner as though she had not, since the settlement, in fact parted with the property to those who at the time were at least equitably entitled to it. The claim of the applicant is, that as the administratrix did not observe the preliminaries prescribed in said section before parting with the personal estate, she has not, in contemplation of law, parted with it at all; with the legal result, therefore, that it is still in her hands as undistributed estate subject to any lawful claim the applicant may have upon it to satisfy the newly-arisen claim which he represents. As the good faith of the action of the administratrix in dividing the personal estate as she did to the rightful inheritors of it, and the completed character of that action following the judicial order for distribution and before the existence of the applicant's claim was known, are both amply found, the legal question is squarely raised as to whether or not a strict compliance with one of the two methods of distribution prescribed in the statute is a necessary condition precedent to a division by an administrator upon an intestate estate, comprising personal property other than cash, which shall thereafter relieve him from liability to persons not distributees for such personality as was in his hands after the settlement of his account and an order of distribution.
When an intestate estate is ready for distribution, all known claims having been paid, and the order for distribution having been made, the only persons who have any interest in it are the rightful distributes. The only persons who have any interest in the manner of the distribution are the distributees, *36 and the administrator who has the estate in custody and who is charged with the duty of delivering it over to those entitled to receive it; the former, that they may receive their due, and the latter, that he may be protected in his action. Other parties may, indeed, through subsequently-accruing claims, become possessed of the right to follow the property into its new hands, but until the claims accrue they have no interest which the law then recognizes, either in the estate or in the fact or manner of its division. The right to make and to have distribution is complete. The manner of it concerns only the parties interested.
If we study our statutory scheme for the distribution of intestate estates, we shall obtain some light as to its aim, and, incidentally, as to the object and meaning of the particular section under consideration. The Court of Probate ascertains and designates the heirs and distributees, as was done in this case. General Statutes, Rev. of 1888, § 628. If there is found to be only a single heir, or in case the estate consists wholly of cash, the court orders the administrator to deliver or pay over the property to said heir or heirs, taking proper receipts therefor. General Statutes, Rev. of 1888, § 628. The provisions of § 629, providing for distribution by distributors, or mutual writing, apply only to estates which are required to be divided among more than one person, and where the subject of division is presumably not susceptible of a simple mathematical division into equal parts, as is cash, but which involves a preliminary valuation. Davenport v. Richards,
From this analysis of our statutes it becomes quite apparent that the provisions of § 629 have no other purpose than to furnish the necessary statutory machinery for assumed emergencies. The interests of distributees in undistributed estates are, *37
theoretically at least, adverse to each other. They may become harmonized by agreement, or they may not. A way or ways should be provided by which, through the arbitration of disinterested persons, or mutual agreement, the rights of all may be finally determined and the action of the administrator in handing over the property effectually safeguarded. Therefore the provisions; and here we think their object begins and ends. They are exclusive, if the administrator would fully protect himself against all demands. They are not exclusive, if he is willing to assume the risk of payment by himself to the proper parties upon some other evidence of their respective rights. The essential thing is a correct and satisfactory division. That is all the law has in view; all it seeks to accomplish. If that is in fact made, although upon an informal agreement, or even no agreement at all, no one is in a position to equitably complain. Dickinson's Appeal,
It is said that the language of § 629 is mandatory. So it is. The mandate, however, runs to the Court of Probate, and *38
is, that the court shall, upon application by an interested party, proceed to make distribution. The language of the earlier statutes, as we shall have occasion to notice later, made this quite apparent. In Dickinson's Appeal,
This latter case is full of suggestions in support of the construction we have adopted. Although the question now at issue was not directly involved, it is scarcely possible to read the opinion without seeing in it an assumption that the statutory forms of distribution are not exclusive.
The case of Baxter v. Gray,
If further support is needed for the view we have taken of the statute, it is found in the history of its evolution. In 1699 it was enacted, after provisions for the settlement of administration accounts, that "the said Court of Probate shall and hereby are fully empowered to order and make a just distribution of surplusage or remaining goods and estate of any such intestate, as well real as personal, in manner following, that is to say, one third part of the personal estate to the wife," etc., "the division of the estate to be made by three sufficient freeholders upon oath or any two of them to be appointed and sworn by said Court of Probate, unless where all the parties interested in any estate being legally capable to act, shall mutually agree of a division among themselves, and present the same in writing under their hands and seals," etc. Colonial Records, p. 307.
In 1786 the provisions appear as follows: "That the Courts *39 of Probate shall and are hereby fully empowered to order, and make a just division or distribution of all the estate, both real and personal, of such intestate, that shall remain after deducting all debts and charges, whatsoever, payable out of the same, in manner following, that is to say: . . . and the division of the estate shall be made by three sufficient freeholders, upon oath, or any two of them, to be appointed by said Court of Probate: unless all the parties," etc. Statutes of 1786, p. 54.
In 1821 the language becomes as follows: "The Courts of Probate shall make, and they are hereby empowered to make, a just division or distribution of all the estate, both real and personal, of any person dying intestate, after deducting," etc., "which distribution shall be made by three sufficient freeholders, or any two of them, to be appointed by the Court of Probate," etc., as before. Revision of 1821, p. 206, § 29.
In 1849 changes in phraseology were made, so that the section read: "The Courts of Probate shall make a just distribution of all the estate, both real and personal," etc., "which distribution shall be made by three disinterested and judicious persons, or any two of them, to be appointed," etc. Revision of 1849, p. 356, § 46.
Thus the statute remained until 1875, when the revisers, evidently for no other purpose than to simplify the language of the section, put it into its present phraseology. Revision of 1875, p. 372, § 5.
It will thus be seen that the statute as it was for well nigh two hundred years, and especially in its early forms, contained little suggestion of any exclusive character to its provisions. It was in the nature of a mandate to the Court of Probate to provide a distribution: not a designation of exclusive methods. It was the creation of an authority; the conferring of a power upon Courts of Probate to provide a way to meet a legal need. Such, we think, continues to be the purpose and scope of this ancient enactment in its present form. It provides legal machinery for those who need it. It compels no one to use it who has no occasion to do so. To give the section any other construction would be to give to the act of *40 the revisers of 1875 too great a significance, and to the language they chose to express the idea an extreme meaning neither required nor justified by the general tenor and purpose of our statutory scheme for the distribution of estates.
It is, however, suggested that there is a principle of public policy involved, to the end that the public records shall disclose, for the benefit of possible claimants, when estates have passed from the hands of administrators. There may possibly be force in this suggestion, although there may also be room for argument as to whether the practical benefits to be thus occasionally attained would compensate for the trouble and expense imposed by a rigid requirement of uniform compliance with statutory modes of distribution. That question, however, is one for legislative consideration and decision. In the law as it is, we see no recognition of such a general policy. Otherwise, why are the methods prescribed not applied to cash estates? Why is there no provision for a return by administrators of their actual delivery of the distributive shares? Why nothing akin to the certificates relating to real estate? It is quite apparent, we think, that the purpose of our statutory scheme is fully met when appropriate machinery was provided for distributions and a definite basis for the action of administrators furnished. The General Assembly has not sought to go further and adopt a principle of public policy such as is above indicated. Davenport v. Richards,
In this case the administratrix has, and before the applicant's claim arose had, divided and delivered over the whole estate in her hands for distribution to the rightful distributees, and in a manner to meet their continued sanction. By this delivery the title at once passed to the recipients and is now fully in them. Hough v. Bailey,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.