6 Blackf. 74 | Ind. | 1841
Cantrall filed in the office of the clerk of the Probate Court of Warren county, during a session, an accounl against the administrators of Stewart, claiming a balance due him by the intestate of $532. He, at the same time, moved the Court that a “notice” issue to the administrators, inform
These proceedings, except the filing of the claim in the clerk’s office, are all wrong. There is nothing in the statute organizing Probate Courts, and defining the powers and duties of executors and administrators, &c., which requires the personal representative of a deceased person, against his consent, to appear and plead to a mere account, or statement of the demand of a creditor of the estate, filed in the clerk’s office or in the Probate Court. There is, indeed, a provision in that statute pointing out the manner in which a creditor shall file a statement of his demand in the clerk’s office, and give notice thereof, for the purpose of securing a priority over other claims of less dignity, or of insuring its final payment. R. Stat., 1838, p. 182. But the law does not ’^contemplate that a claim thus filed, shall stand for a declaration to which the administrator or executor shall be compelled to plead, or, on failure to do so, be liable to have a judgment rendered against'him by default. "We do not mean to say, that if the parties consent to consider such a statement as a cause of action sufficiently set out. they may not do so, and proceed
Per Curiam.—The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.