32 Conn. 553 | Conn. | 1865
This is an action on a probate bond. Such bonds are required by the statute laws of this state on the settlement of every estate. They must be of sufficient amount, and the bondsmen of sufficient responsibility to secure every claim against the estate, and every interest involved in it. The law puts the property into the hands of the executor or administrator as a trustee, to manage and dispose of the same for the parties in interest under the supervision of the judge of probate. One of his most important duties, and this is named in the condition of the bond, is to “make a true and perfect inventory of all the goods, chattels, credits and estate that have or shall come to his hands, possession or knowledge or to the hands, possession or knowledge of any other person for him,” and lodge the same with the judge of probate. This must be done within sixty days, unless a sufficient excuse can, be shown for a further delay, on a penalty of $ 17 for every month’s neglect. No special provision is made by the statute for the case of other property subsequently coming to the possession or knowledge of the >executor or administrator, but tbe reason and spirit of the law evidently require that an additional inventory should be made, or something equivalent to it.
In Pratt v. Northern, 5 Mason, 95, it appeared that administration had been granted on an estate in Rhode Island,’ in the year 1800. The administration bond in that case was almost identical with that given by the defendants. In 1803
The great object of this highly important requirement of the law regarding an inventory, is to enable the judge oí probate and the parties in interest to know what property belongs to the estate. Without it they could not understandingly call the executor or administrator to an account.
In the present case the bond on which the suit was brought is dated April 16,1862. The plaintiff alleges that the executor did not make an inventory of all the property belonging to the estate, but that promissory notes and moneys to the amount of several thousand dollars came into his hands, possession and knowledge, before the 26th day of November, 1862, the day of the settlement hereinafter referred to, which he never inventoried. The defendants in answer to this allegation interpose two pleas—one a general denial of the allegations in the declaration, and the other a special plea alleging a settlement of the administration account. Whether the plaintiff will be able to sustain his allegations by proof on the trial of the general issue, remains to be ascertained hereafter. The question for us to determine is only as to the sufficiency of the special plea, to which the plaintiff has demurred.
This plea sets up as a defence a settlement of the executor’s administration account with the court of probate on the 26tli day of November, 1862, not appealed from. In this account the executor does not charge himself with any assets, but on the contrary enters on the debtor side the following :—
“ Walter Holmes in account with said estate, Dr.
*560 “ (The appraisers of said estate made no return of personal property.”)
He then credits himself with various items, amounting to about seventy dollars. It is the decree of the court of probate approving of this account which the defendants setup as a bar to this action.
The plea does not by way of estoppel allege that any particular fact was found by the court of probate which would preclude an inquiry as to the same fact again. It could not bo seriously claimed that the court of probate, in approving such an account as this was, decided that no assets came into the hands or to the knowledge of the executor previous to the settlement. The memorandum of what return the appraisers made presents no such question for adjudication. If it did it would only cover the .time previous to the return of the appraisers, and would hot apply to the whole time covered by the declaration. The finding of the court of probate could not therefore be pleaded by way of estoppel to the allegations in the plaintiff’s declaration, as the question, if any, with regard to assets, which the court of probate was called upon to decide, was not the same as the declaration presents. For such a purpose the plea would be too narrow, and demurrable on that ground.
The plea evidently is founded on the assumption that a settlement of an administration account, approved by the court of probate and not appealed from, is a bar to an action on the probate bond charging the executor with not making a full inventory of the estate. Whether this assumption would be well founded where nothing appears on the pleadings to impeach such a settlement, it is not necessary now to decide.
As this is not, as we have seen, a plea of estoppel, it must be governed by the general rules applicable to special pleas. There is no rule of pleading more firmly established than that the defendant must either deny the material allegations of the plaintiff’s declaration or confess and avoid them. 1 Chitty PL, 472. The plaintiff in his declaration alleges that certain personal property belonging to the estate, came into the hands of the executor, which he did not inventory. In this plea the
The case of Pratt v. Northam, 5 Mason, 95, to which we have referred, presents some- strong points of resemblance to the present case, although that was a petition in equity, and not a suit on the probate bond. In that case there had been a settlement approved by the court of probate, and the statute of Rhode Island was very strong as to the conclusive
We advise that the plea is insufficient.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.