26 Minn. 433 | Minn. | 1880
On April 9, 1866, Parker Paine was appointed .by the probate court of Ramsey county administrator, with
McLean, one of the sureties upon Paine’s bond, died testate, April 11,1871. On July 8, 1871, his will was admitted to probate, and letters testamentary issued to Paine and one Pollock, the present appellant. Ever since Paine’s death
Upon the filing of the petition, the probate court issued an order, reciting the leading facts of the petition and a default in the conditions of Paine’s administration bond, and requiring Pollock, as executor aforesaid, to show cause on the third day of April, 1878, why the amount found due the Craig estate, as aforesaid, should not be allowed as a claim against the McLean estate, and why such further and other order as might be proper upon such petition should not be made. This order was served upon Pollock, who appeared in answer thereto, and at his request the hearing was postponed to April 10th. On that day, after Pollock had filed his answer to the order to show cause, but before a hearing upon the petition, the judge of probate made an order directing that Paine’s administration bond be prosecuted in the name of the judge
The matters involved and issues raised by Bell’s petition, and Pollock’s answer to the same, were heard and tried by the probate court on April 10, 1878, and on May 16th, following, said court ordered and adjudged that the sum of $4,510.91, found to be due the Craig estate upon the final settlement of the final account of Paine as administrator of said estate, be allowed as a legal and valid claim against the estate of McLean, together with interest thereon from March 9, 1878; and further ordered and directed Pollock, executor as aforesaid, to pay the same, or such part thereof as the assets of said McLean estate which were in his hands March 29, 1878, would permit, to Palmer, as administrator as aforesaid. From this judgment of the probate court Pollock appealed to the district court, upon questions of both law and fact. Upon the trial of the appeal, the district court, in addition to the foregoing facts, with an exception hereafter noted, found that administration of the estate of McLean is not yet concluded, and that there is real and personal property belonging to said estate, not yet sold, disposed of, or distributed; that in October, 1874, Paine, being insolvent, assigned his property for the benefit of creditors; that on August 1, 1878, the assignee tendered to Palmer, administrator as aforesaid, on account of the aforesaid claim of the Craig estate against Paine, $435.10, being a pro-rata dividend thereon of ten per cent.; that the tender was refused, and that the assignee has ever since been, and now is, ready to pay the sum tendered to said Palmer, and that the estate of Paine is insolvent.
As conclusions of law, the district court found, first, that Paine’s conversion of said sum of $2,975.86 of moneys belonging to the Craig estate, and which had been received by
The district court did not find (and this is the exception just mentioned) that Paine’s administrators were ordered to bring into the probate court the amount found due as aforesaid from Paine to the Craig estate, nor that they responded to the order by saying that they never had any money or assets of the Craig estate in their possession or under their control. But it will be observed that the matter of the allowance of the claim against the McLean estate was heard and tried in the district court without any formal pleadings, but upon Bell’s petition, and the order to show cause, and Pollock’s answer. These papers took the place of pleadings on the appeal. They were so treated by the parties and the court, and must be so treated here; so that, as the order upon Paine’s administrators to bring in the amount mentioned into court, and their answer to the same, are set up in the petition and recited in the order to show cause, and the allegations are nowhere controverted in Pollock’s answer, they are to be taken as admitted; and as, in accordance with the rule laid down in Brainard v. Hastings, 3 Minn. 30 (45,) and Dickinson v. Kinney, 5 Minn. 332 (409,) it is not necessary to find that which is admitted in the pleadings, the
The case of O’Gorman v. Lindeke, ante, p. 93, which was an action upon Paine’s administration bond, disposes of many of the points made by the appellant in this case, and, among other things, it is there settled that the omission of Paine’s administrators to obey the order directing them to pay into the probate court the amount adjudged by the district court to be due the Craig estate, upon the final account of Paine’s administration, is a breach of Paine’s administration bond, for which an action will lie. This omission occurred in March, 1878, and, as the present proceeding against the McLean estate was commenced during the same year, there is no foundation in fact for the appellant’s position that the claim in controversy is barred by the statute of limitations.
One of the main points made by the appellant is that the probate court has no jurisdiction of an action or proceeding upon an administrator’s bond; but that such action or proceeding must be instituted in a district court. "We think it has the jurisdiction as a part of its general “jurisdiction over the estates of deceased persons.” The bond in this instance was given for the benefit of the Craig estate, and, in the exercise of its jurisdiction over that estate, we see no reason why it is not proper for the probate court to take and authorize to be taken whatever proceedings are allowed by statute for the purpose of making the bond effectual for the purposes for which it was given. The cause of action upon the bond was a claim against the McLean estate, and, in the exercise of its jurisdiction over that estate, we can conceive of no reason why it was not competent for the probate court to pass upon and allow it. As respects this authority of the probate court, there is no distinction between a claim against the estate of a surety upon an administrator’s bond, and a claim against the estate of the same person upon any ordinary bond or obligation. The claim of the Craig estate was a contingent claim against the McLean estate — that is to say, it was a claim, the
By Gen. St. 1878; c. 55, § 6, when -an administrator omits to perform any order made by a judge of probate for rendering an account, or upon a final settlement, the judge of probate ‘■may cause the bond of such administrator to be prosecuted, and the moneys collected thereon to be applied in such manner' as they ought to have been applied. By section 9, if 'judgment is rendered for the plaintiff in any action upon such ‘bond for not performing any order mentioned in section 6, ’execution shall be'awarded, etc.and by section 10, all moneys 'received'on any execution so issued on a judgment in favor :of the judge of. probate shall be paid over to such person, other'than the defendant, as shall then be the rightful executor, administrator or guardian, and such moneys shall be ’disposed of according to law.
Under these provisions of statute, it was competent for the 'judge'of probate to cause the bond in this case to.be prosecuted in his own name, or where, as in this case, it was prosecuted by presenting a claim founded upon it to the judge of • probate for allowance, by causing such claim to be presented as a claim in favor of the Craig estate, though not formally in the name of any person. In such circumstances -we do not ' think it necessary that the judge of probate should pursue the course prescribed by Gen. St. 1878, c. 55, § 7, by granting ' permission to some person to prosecute the bond in his own
To the mode of prosecution adopted in this instance we dis-cover no valid objection. Indeed, it is not altogether certain that any other mode would have been proper. The McLean estate was in course of administration, and, as we have before ■seen, the claim in this case was such a claim as is referred to by Gen. St. 1878, c. 53, § 49, which provides for its presentation for allowance to the judge of probate.
Many other points made by the appellant are disposed of •by sections 8, 9 and 10, before quoted from chapter 55, Gen. St. 1878. Among other things, these sections show that an administrator de bonis non may properly be entitled to receive the amount collected upon his predecessor’s administration -bond, from which it would seem to follow that such adminis.trator de bonis non is a proper party, by petition to the probate court, to set in motion the proceedings which will result in such collection. Section 10 also shows that the money to be collected on such bond is properly directed to be paid to the administrator de bonis non, to be disposed of by him according to law, for the payment of the debts of his decedent, • or otherwise. This disposes of all the positions taken by the .appellant which appear to us to require to be discussed; and -the result is that the judgment of the district court is affirmed.