130 P. 637 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff, on the 5th day of March, 1909, filed a complaint against Prosper W. Smith to recover the sum of $15,000 as commission for the sale of real estate upon a contract made with one Hoberg, which was by Hoberg assigned to the plaintiff. Prosper W. Smith was a nonresident of Oregon. Upon the filing of the complaint and the issuance of the summons, which was placed in the
“In case of the death * * of a party, the court may at any time within one year thereafter, on motion, allow the action to be continued by or against his personal representatives or successors in interest.”
Plaintiff contends that the defendants Tillson and Smith are “personal representatives,” within the meaning of this statute, for the reason that they are legatees of all of Smith’s property, or at least they are successors in interest to the property of Smith. This court
“Their probate [wills] has become a necessary process to the establishment of title to either style of property, and is effectuated by the same, method and in the same court. * * Accordingly it has been held, under the statutes of this State, that the transfer of the title to the personal property of deceased persons is accomplished through the sole instrumentality of the court.”
And we find in the case of State v. O’Day, 41 Or. 500 (69 Pac. 544), the following:
“The personal property of a decedent goes by operation of law to the administrator, and, the title thereto must be derived through him.”
Williams, Executors (page 485), says:
“The general rule is that all goods and chattels, real and personal, go to the executor or administrator. By . the laws of this realm, says Swinburne, as the heir hath not to deal with the goods and chattels of the deceased, no more hath the executor to deal with the lands, * * the whole personal estate of the deceased vests in the executor or administrator.”
“But as under statutes of distribution executors and administrators are no longer the sole representatives of the deceased as to personal property, these words have lost their original meaning.”
That language can have no bearing on the terms as used in our statute, where it has not lost any of its significance; but the legal representative of the estate of a deceased person is the executor or administrator appointed by the county court. 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), p. 813, defines the term:
“The primary and ordinary meaning of the term ‘legal representatives,’ ‘legal personal representatives,’ ‘personal representatives,’ and ‘representatives’ is executors and administrators, and in the absence of anything to show a contrary intent they must be so construed.”
That is especially true under our statute, where the title to the personal estate of the deceased person passes directly to the executor or administrator. If these defendants be substituted in place of Prosper W. Smith, such substitution will not give the court jurisdiction of his estate, as they are strangers thereto.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, and the cause will be remanded to the circuit court for such other and further proceedings as to the court may seem proper, not inconsistent with this opinion.
Affirmed and Remanded.