57 Kan. 393 | Kan. | 1896
I. The Court of Appeals in effect held that the remedy provided by sections 171 and 172 of the Executors and Administrators Act (¶ ¶ 2957, 2958, Gen. Stat. 1889), relating to the refunding of legacies and distributions, is exclusive, and that no action having this purpose in view can be maintained in the District Court. Referring to those sections as affording a remedy, the Court says :
“We apprehend that if a proper showing had been made in this case it would have been the duty of the •Court to appoint an executor or administrator de bonis non, and he, under the direction of the Court, would have proceeded after the allowance of the claim to procure assets sufficient to pay said claim.”
II. The defendants claim that, in any event, the judgment of reversal was proper on other grounds, one of which only we think it necessary to discuss. The covenant of warranty does not assume to bind the heirs of George W. Hamblin, and it is well settled in England that in such case they would not be liable. In order to hold them liable on such a-covenant, it was necessary to show that they were named therein and that they should have assets by descent sufficient to meet the demand. 2 Bl. Com. 304, and Rawle, Cov. Title §§ 309, 310. The latter author says :
“The liability (whether immediate or ultimate) of the heir by reason of his ancestor’s covenants for title depends in this country, to a great extent, upon the statutory provisions adopted in the different states for making the real estate of a decedent liable for the payment of his debts. ... In the United States, it may be said that, as a general rule, lands are liable for the debts of a decedent, whether due by matter of record, by specialty, or by simple contract. In the last two cases, the existence of the debt, unless it be reduced to judgment, creates no lien during the debt- or’s life. By his death, however, its quality is-*397 changed, and it becomes á lien upon his real estate, which descends to the heir or passes to the devisee subject to the payment of the debts of the ancestor according to the laws of the state in which it lies, and the rights of the creditor can, in most of the states, be enforced against the lands in the hands of a bona fide purchaser, within certain statutory limitations as to time.”
The judgment of the Court of Appeals must be re