39 So. 653 | Ala. | 1905
The will of Lucy A. Hopper was duly .probated in the probate court of Bulloclc’ county on the 7th day of September, 1888, and letters testamentary ■thereon were on that day issued by said court to J. 0. Stakely as the executor of the will. W. M. Stakely, Sr., was one of the sureties on J. (). Stakeley’s bond as such executor. YT. M. Stakely died testate in 1898, his will was duly probated in the probate . court of Bullock county, and on the 33th day of September, 1898, letters testamentary were regularly issued to J. O. Stakely as one of the executors named in the will to execute the same, and lie was at the trial of this cause in the discharge of the duties of such executorship. Mrs. Lucy A. Stopper devised and bequeathed to her stepdaughter, Sarah Ellen Hopper, a life estate in all her property, and by other iteras in her will she directed the disposition of the property that might .remain at the death of Sarah Ellen, and by the terms of the will the plaintiff in this case was made a residuary legatee. Sarah Ellen Hopper the life tenant under Mrs. Hopper’s will, died on the 29th day of May, 1901. J. O. Stakely, as the executor of Mrs. Hopper’s will, made a final settlement of
The question presented by the record for our determination is the sufficiency, vel non, of the defense of the statute of nonclaim, Code 1896, §§ 129, 130. To correctly solve the question, it is necessary to determine when the claim of the plaintiff accrued against the estate of W. M. Stakely, Sr., deceased. The insistence of the, defendant with respect of the defense is: First, that the legacy in favor of the plaintiff under Mrs. Hopper’s will vested on the death of the testatrix, and therefore that the plaintiff’s claim accrued on the death of the testatrix; second, that if the legacy did not vest on the death of the testatrix it did on the death of the life tenant; that, if it vested on the death of the testatrix, the claim should have, been filed within 12 months from the grant of letters of executorship on the estate of W. M. Stakely, Sr., deceased; that, if it vested on the death of the life tenant, that was the date on which the claim accrued, and it should have been filed as a claim against the estate of W. M. Stakely, Sr.,' deceased, within 6 months from the death of the life, tenant, which event occurred on the 29th day of May, 1901. The claim was not filed within either of the periods above named.
The, case of McDowell v. Brantley, 80 Ala. 173, was an equity case, in which the cestue que trust filed a bill against the trustee, one of the surviving sureties on his bond, and the administratrix of the estate of the deceased surety on his bond for an account and settlement of the trust. The bill was filed in 1884, and averred that the trustee was appointed in January, 1877, and gave bond for the faithful administration of the trust, Avith McDowell and Burford as his sureties ; that the surety Burford died in 1877, and in April, 1877, Mrs. M. M. Burford was appointed administratrix of his estate. The bill did not aver that any claim on account of any default on the part of the trustee had ever been presented against Burford’s estate, wherefore, the administratrix demurred, thus presenting the statute of nonclaim as a defense to the bill. The court, through Stonio, C. J., said: “The bond in this case, like the bonds of public officers, executors, administrators, and guardians, was an obligation to do- certain duties and execute certain trusts, which in their administration run through many years. If presentation were required in such cases before actual default committed, it could only be of the penalty of the bond — -nothing mbre definite, and nothing less in amount. In this case the, claim AArould Imre been $8,000, the penalty of the bond. This, too, at a time Avhen there Avas no known default, and, for aught that Ave can know, there was in fact no default. The bill sIioavs no default until January, 1884. The profession Ioioav well what effect the presentation of claims has on administrations. They generally tie up the assets, delay disbursements and distributions, and frequently lead — rightfully lead— to report, of insolvency, order for sale of real estate, and many other consequences not necessary to be mentioned. And in such cases as this all these consequences might be entailed on the administration, and for an unknown number of years, AAThen in fact there Avas no default, and no claim had accrued. The Legislature cannot be supposed to have, contemplated or intended such results as
It seems to us that the reasoning in the case quoted from is apposite here. What claim, we ask, for what amount, would the plaintiff have presented its claim against the administrator? The facts show no default prior to the failure to pay the decree rendered on the final settlement ascertaining thp amount of plaintiff’s legacy. It may be that the liability of the executor to the plaintiff could not have been ascertained before the day of the final settlement; at any rate, it -was not. We conclude the facts in this case do not show that the plaintiff’s claim had, within the. meaning of the statute accrued before the rendition of the decree on the final settlement. — Code, §§ 129, 130 ; McDowell v. Brantley, supra ; Neil v. Cunningham, 2 Port. 171 ; Fretwell v. McLemore, supra ; Rives v. Flinn, 47 Ala. 481 ; Ward v Yonge, 45 Ala. 474 ; Presley v. Weakley, 135 Ala. 517, 33 South. 434, 93 Am. St. Rep. 39. This suit was commenced within 12 months from the time the decree of the final settlement was rendered, and has been prosecuted without abandonment. This eliminates the question as to the sufficiency of the. presentation of the claim against the estate after the rendition of the decree. — Floyd v. Clayton, 67 Ala. 265.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.