54 P. 882 | Or. | 1898
delivered the opinion.
This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage upon real property against the personal representative and heirs of the deceased mortgagor. The executor maintains that he has a lien upon the premises for the costs and charges, or expenses, of administering the estate of the deceased, prior and superior in right to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage, there not being sufficient other property of the estate with which to pay such costs and charges. Whether this contention is sound, presents the only question foi our consideration. In our view of the matter, this may be resolved by ascertainment of the statutory intendment tou’ching the administration of the estates of deceased persons. Section 1183, Hill’s Ann. Laws, provides as follows : “The charges and claims which have been allowed, or established by judgment or decree, shall be paid in the following order : (1) Funeral expenses ; (2) taxes due the United States ; (3 ) expenses of last sickness; (4) taxes due the state or county or other public corporations therein ; ( 5 ) debts preferred by the laws of the United States ; ( 6 ) debts which at the death of the deceased were a lien upon his property or any right or interest therein, according to the priority of their several liens, and (7 ) debts due employees of decedent for wages, etc.; (8) all other claims against the estate.” Section 1184 : “The preference given by Subd. 6 of the last section shall only extend to the proceeds of the property upon which the lien exists, and as to such proceeds such debt is to be preferred to any of the classes mentioned in such section, other than the taxes upon such property.” This latter section, when read in connection with the former, leads to but one conclusion, which is that the proceeds of the property upon which the lien or liens exist are to be marshaled in a distinct order, with
It is plain that the charges and claims alluded to in sections 1183 and 1184 are not the same as the compensation of the executor or administrator, and necessary expenses of administration, alluded to in sections 1179, 1180, and 1188, and it may be admitted that these latter expenses take precedence in order of payment over chargés and claims against the estate, but it does not follow that they constitute a lien superior in right to a mortgage of the deceased. We find some indication of the legislative intent touching the matter of marshaling the proceeds of the mortgaged property in the provisions of
Looking throughout the purview of all these sections of the statute touching the administration of the estates of deceased persons, it seems clear that it was not intended that the compensation of the executor or administrator, and the expenses of administration, should become a lien superior in right to a mortgage of the deceased, which, from the nature of things, is prior in time ; and that, in any event, only the costs of sale under the special procedure in the county court to devest the lien, and the taxes upon the property, are entitled to precedence in the order of payment. Such has been the holding under analogous statutes in Indiana and California: Ryker v. Vawter, 117 Ind. 425 (20 N. E. 294) Murray’s Estate, 18 Cal. 686. The justice of the rule is manifest. Indeed, a mortgage would be a thing of uncertain and precarious value if the costs and expenses
Affirmed.