1 Ga. 78 | Ga. | 1846
having stated the facts of the case, proceeded to deliver the opinion of the court.
We are met in limine by the assertion of the Circuit Judge — that the Act of 1845, giving by implication to an administrator de bonis non, the power to call upon a removed executor or administrator, or the representative of a deceased executor or administrator, to account for assets previously wasted or converted, was only declaratory of a right previously existing. Is this so ? We think not. It is needless to go into the history of administrators; suffice it to say that in this State, the power of appointing and superintending the conduct of them is assigned to our Courts of Ordinary; and that we have copied in the main, the statutes of 31 Edw. III., Ch. 2d; and 21 Hen. VIII., Ch. 3d.
An administrator de bonis non has not full, complete, and original jurisdiction. He is appointed to finish a business already begun, and in most cases partially performed. He is an administrator de bonis non administratis, viz., of the assets not already administered ; like all other trustees his authority is derivative, and he cannot transcend his commission. His office, therefore, ex vitermini, confers upon him no right to sue for assets which have been previously administered. An administrator de bonis non is entitled, says Bacon, (Title Exs. and Admins B. 2,) to all the goods and personal estate, such as terms for years, household goods, &c., which remain in specie, and were not administered by the first executor or administrator, as also to all debts due and owing to the first testator or intestate. (Salk. 306 ; Skinner, 143; Bos. and Pul. 310.)
Also it is holden, continues the same authority, that if an executor receives money in right of the testator, and lays it up by itself, and dies intestate, that this money shall go to the administrator de bonis non, being as easily distinguished to be part of the testator’s effects as goods in specie. But if A dies intestate, and his son takes out administration to him and receives part of a debt, being rent arrear to the intestate, and accept a promissory note for the residue, and then dies intestate, this acceptance of the note is such an alteration of the property as vests it in the son, and therefore at his death it shall go to his administrator, and not to the administrator de bonis non, (Barker vs. Talcott, Vernon, 433; 2 Vent. 362; Rol. Ab. 380.) It would seem, then, that the only question to settle is this. What constitutes an administration of the assets so far as the administrator de bonis non is concerned ? I annex this qualification to the inquiry, because to administer — so far as the administrator de bonis non is concerned — is one thing, and to administer fully, so far as creditors of the estate are interested, is quite another, and a different thing. And yet we fear that this distinction has been too often overlooked and disregarded, and has given rise to most of the misapprehensions which prevail upon this subject. To administer goods, then, is to alter, change, or convert them. Where lands and negroes are sold by order of the Court of Ordinary, or perishable property, by the act
Suppose the assets of the estate have been exhausted, and misapplied by the payment of debts of inferior degree before those of a superior, will it be pretended that an administrator de bonis non could maintain an action against his predecessor, or the estate of such predecessor, for this devastaoit ? Such a precedent or principle is not to be found.
The statute of 30 Charles II. Ch. 7, explained and perpetuated by the 4th and 5th of William and Mary, expressly declares in its preamble— that executors and administrators of executors and administrators for want of privity, were not before answerable, nor could be sued for debts due by the first testator, or intestate — notwithstanding such executors or administrators had wasted the estate of the first testator or intestate ; and, to remedy this evil, it makes such second executors or administrators chargeable. How? To the administrator de bonis non? No; but chai'geable in the same manner as the first executor or administrator should, or might have been ; that is directly to the creditors.— Wernick's admr. vs. McMurdo, 5 Ran.; 1 Sand, 219 note E. In the Virginia case from which the foregoing exposition of the British Statutes is quoted, the Court of Appeals boldly challenge the production of a singlo case— the dictum of a single Judge, or the assertion of any elementary writer —that the administrators de bonis non, either at law or in equity, can support an action, or file a bill for account against the representatives of a defaulting executor or administrator. Thus stood then the English law as adopted in this country. Let us see how far the statutes passed by the General Assembly in 1816, 1821 and 1845 have affected the doctrine.
As to the first of these acts, it is enough to say, that the case under consideration does not fall within it. It provides for one class of cases only, and that is where the administrator or administrators die, and the administrator de bonis non cannot be granted from the incapability of the persons applying to give the security required by law, or when the persons appointed refuse to give such security. To remedy this mi that act was passed. Should a question ever originate under the second section, its validity may well be doubted, under that clause in the I7th Section of the first article of the constitution which forbids the passage of any law or ordinance containing any matter different from what is expressed in the title thereof. What was the mischief intended to be redressed by the act of 1821 ? It fully explains its own object. Doubts had arisen under the previous legislation of the State as to the power of the courts of ordinary to remove executors, administrators and guardians, from their respective trusts, where the authority had not been expressly given, to the injurv of the estates of orphans and the delay of justice.
In scanning the whole of this Act, would the thought ever occur that it was designed to confer any benefit upon a trustee who had been removed by the proper authority from his office for misconduct ? To tolerate such a plea in abatement interposed by him, would be, most emphatically, to allow him to take advantage of his own wrong: Nemo allegans suam turpüudinam audiendus est. He is punished by the Ordinary for a breach of the trust confided to him, by the revocation of his letters, and he now seeks to shelter himself under that sentence of condemnation from liability already incurred ; and that, too, without pretending by his plea that since his removál he has accounted with his successor for the effects with which he is chargeable. The Act of 1821 was not passed for the protection of delinquent trustees ; it did not repeal the common law, but was intended to afford additional remedies, and especially to prevent delay in the pursuit of rights which had already accrued. It is argued that unless the proper representative is made a party to the action pending, no one else would have the means or the inclination to ascertain whether the demand sued upon was proper or not. This is true in all suits against executors de son tort, and where the attempt is made, as in the case under discussion, to charge the defendant personally, the instinct of self-preservation will be the most satisfactory guaranty against a wrongful recovery. We will not say either how far an administrator de bonis non might not make himself a party by interpleading, should it be deemed necessary for the protection of the estate.
When an improper administration has been revoked, (and the removal of an executor is strictly analagous,) a creditor may sue the displaced administrator, and he can only defend himself by showing that he has legally administered all of the assets, except those delivered over to the succeeding administrator or executor, and if any remain in his hands not delivered over, or if he has committed a devastavit by paying debts of inferior before those of a superior dignity, the creditor will recover. — 6 Rep. 18, b. Packman’s case; 11 Vin. Abr. 119, pl. 5 admr. of Wernick vs. McMurdo, 83, 84.
Such was the law previous to the Act of the General Assembly of
Clearly convinced, then, as wo are, that an administrator, de bonis non, has no right at common law to call to account the representative of a deceased executor or administrator, for a waste or misapplication of the assets ; that the Act of 1816 and 1845 do not embrace the present case; and that the right which the creditor had to proceed against a displaced executor or administrator for the goods wasted or converted, was not taken away by the Act of 1821; but that under it he might still proceed against the executor, or administrator, and reach the fund in his hands, as if his authority had not been revoked ; or substitute the administrator, de bonis non, at his election ; our judgment is that the court below erred in overruling the demurrer to the defendant’s plea — especially as the plea does not aver as it should have done — that the defendant had duly administered all of the assets which came to his hands except what he had delivered over to the succeeding administrator. It is ordered, therefore, that the judgment below be reversed, and that the plaintiff in error do recover his cost.