Webbers' Executors v. Underhill

19 Wend. 447 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1838

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The main question presented by this demurrer, seems to be rendered difficult rather by the apparent conflict of positive authority than upon principle. In Keite v. Boyd, 16 Serg. & Rawle, 300, it was held, in so many words, that replevin does not abate by the death of the defendant even before plea or avowry. The defendant’s administrator was received, and himself pleaded to the action ; whereas, in Cutfield v. Corney, 2 Wils. 83, the death even of the plaintiff before avowry, (a much stronger case, we shall see, for continuing the action,) was held to work an abatement. Duke of Ormond v. Bierly, Carth. 519, S. P. The death of the defendant was said to have that effect in Pitts v. Hale, 3 Mass. R. 321, and this was distinctly adjudged as the sole point in Mellen v. Baldwin, 4 Mass. R. 480, and in effect by Badlam v. Tucker, 1 Pick. 284. These cases were acted upon and adopted as law in Merritt v. Humbert, 8 Greenl. 128. It will be perceived that they bring replevin distinctly within the general rule of the common law, actio personalis moritur cum persona, as explainéd by Serjeant Williams in his note (1) to Wheatly v. Lane, 1 Saund. 216. This is emphatically so in respect to the person by whom the injury is committed ; for though replevin will lie by the personal representatives of the party injured, Gilb., Replev. 156, Lond. ed. 1794; Pitts v. Hale, 3 Mass. R. 321; Wilkins, on Replev. 5; and see Fister v. Beall's adm'rs, 1 Harr. & Johns. 31; yet it cannot be brought *450even originally against those of the party who did the wrong, Mellen v. Baldwin, 4 Mass. R. 482, per Parsons, Ch. J. though doubtless his representatives would be liable individua^Y f°r a wrongful detention of the specific goods which come to their hands. 2 Wms. Ex’r, 1065.

It is said the action of replevin is a proceeding in rem, and indeed it was so held in Fletcher v. Wilkins, 6 East, 283, more fully reported 2 Smith, 365. The court there denied the proceeding to be within a statute providing that no action should be brought against a constable, &c. until certain steps should be taken. Milward v. Caffin, 2 Wm. Black. 1330, and Pearson v. Roberts, Willes, 668, though the latter was questioned by a dictum of Lord Kenyon in Harper v. Carr, 7 T. R. 270, are cited as sustaining that view of the proceeding. It sounds strange to hear it said that replevin is not an action, but such is the course of English decisions. Willes, Ch. J. contended, in Pearson v- Roberts, that it was an action when commenced by writ, and so the court held. He showed that it has all the characteristics of an action, parties, pleadings, damages, costs, &c. and was so called in several statutes. He admitted that in case of a mandatory writ to the sheriff, or a plaint in the sheriff’s court, which were merely to have the goods again, but no damages, the proceeding was in rem, and not an action. In Milward v. Caffin, the court, speaking of a writ say, this is an action of replevin, an action in rem. In Fletcher v. Wilkins, the distinction taken by Willes, Ch. J. was denied by Lord Ellenborough, Ch. J. and all replevins are declared to be proceedings in rem: for, says the chief justice, replevin is never brought for the damages only, but always goes for the thing. It is not necessary, for the purposes of the question before us, to decide whether replevin be an action for all purposes, though according to the common notion I should have thought it so, even within the words- of the statute under consideration in the cases cited. The cases themselves, we have seen, call it an action in rem, and clearly it is so to a certain extent; but it never stops with that character. It has parties, as remarked by Willes, Ch. J.; and with us it uniformly seeks damages and costs for the wrongful taking *451or detention. In the latter sense it comes directly within the principle laid down by _Serjeant Williams in the book before cited. Damages and costs for a tort, as such, could never be recovered against the executors or administrators of a wrong-doer, at the common law. As was well said by Stevens, J. in Daggett v. Robbins, 2 Blackf. 416, replevin “ is in part a proceeding in rem, to regain possession of the goods and chattels, and in part a proceeding in personam, to recover damages.” See also Snedeker v. Quick, 6 Halst. 178.

The consequence sought to be deduced from the character of replevin as a proceeding in rem, is that it never abates by the death of the defendant. This is said on the authority of Penhallow v. Doane’s adm'rs, 3 Dall. 54, 86, 101, 118; but that doctrine holds only of a proceeding properly and solely in rem. The rule was laid down of a suit in admiralty against the brigantine Susanna and her cargo, seeking condemnation as prize of war. In such cases the vessel and goods are named and described as defendants. They are the parties, and the sentence binds all the world; and such is the reason assigned by Patterson, J. in the case cited, why the death of the claimant (not the defendant) did not work an abatement. The question turned upon the form and nature of the proceeding. On a like principle the old action of ejectment was said not to abate by the death of the plaintiff’s lessor; for though he was the real party, there was yet a nominal party on the record, who by fiction had an interest in virtue of the supposed lease yet unexpired. The amount of the rule in Penhallow v. Doane's adm’rs is, that where the proceeding is simply in rem, the reason which abates a common law suit by death does not apply. A common law suit is never thus limited—the party tenant - or defendant is always named on the record; and on his death, as well as on that of the plaintiff, at any time before final judgment, the suit abated by the common law. 2 Sell. Pr. 191. A real action at common law comes nearest to an unmixed proceeding in rem. Yet where there was but one tenant, his death necessarily abated the suit; “ because *452neither the heir nor the executor can prosecute or defend in a real action, where the demandant or tenant dies pending the suit.” Stearns on Real Actions, 199. A suit in partition abated at the common law. Thomas v. Smith, 2 Mass. R. 479. The action or writ of right is probably the most striking instance. The action was there brought for the mere land on the mere right. Neither damages nor costs were ever recoverable by either party; and yet, because the parties were named on the record, the law would not take the case out of the general rule. On the mise joined, it is well known that the issue might be decided by battle instead of the grand assize, at the election of the tenant. He-might offer to prove his right by the body of his cham~ pión. The reason why battle must be waged by champion, says Coke, and after him Blackstone, is because, if any party to the suit dies, the writ must abate and be at an end for the present; and therefore no judgment could be given for the lands in question, if either of the parties were slain in battle. Co. Litt. 294, b. 3 Black. Comm. 339. Indeed the case of Keite v. Boyd, which is the plaintiffs’ chief reliance in the case at bar, does not deny that replevin is within the common law rule. Rogers, J. who delivered the opinion of the court, on the contrary, said, that at common law all personal actions died with the party. He admitted that the court in which he sat had decided that the death of the defendant in trover abated the suit, but said he was unwilling to extend the cases further than he was bound to do by the principle of state decisions. We at least are required to look farther. Our constitution adopts the common law. It is, therefore, our duty, from all the evidence within our reach, to inquire what is the common law, and if the case in hand be open to its application, the plaintiffs must stand or fall accordingly as we shall find it to be for or against them.

I am entirely satisfied that at common law the suit in replevin abated by' the death of Webbers, the original defendant, and that it cannot be revived or continued by this proceeding, unless we have some statute which reaches the case.

*453Our statute provides that where either plaintiff or defendant shall die after interlocutory and before final judgment, the action shall not abate if, in the first case, it might be originally prosecuted by the plaintiff’s executors or administrators, or if in the second case it might be originally brought against the defendant’s executors or administrators. 2 R. S. 308, § 2, 3, 2d ed. In the first case the plaintiff’s executors or administrators, and in the second he himself may revive and continue the suit by scire facias. According to the cases we have considered, if there had been interlocutory judgment against Webbers, and he had survived the plaintiff R. M. Underhill, the personal representatives of the latter might still have proceeded ; for we have seen, by authority, that they could have prosecuted originally. But not so of this case, because no action would have lain against Webbers’ executors as such. Here is neither an action which survives, nor an interlocutory judgment; and it would have been the same, if, according to the theory of replevin, we were to consider Webbers himself to have been an actor or plaintiff. Yet his executors could not revive the suit, because, admitting Webbers to have had interlocutory judgment on his avowry against Underhill, and the now plaintiffs, therefore, so far within the statute, they would stand without its provisions for want of any surviving right on their side. 0

But the statute mainly relied upon as comprehending this case, is the 2 R. S. 477, § 2, 2d ed. This is a part of the article “of scire facias,” under the title “ of proceedings by scire facias,” and in several other cases, and after providing for a sci.fa. in cases where execution has been delayed between parties who are alive, it enacts generally, that “writs of scire facias shall also be issued, in cases not otherwise provided for by law, to revive a judgment against the personal representatives of any deceased defendant; or in favor of the personal representatives of any deceased plaintiff; or where the situation of either party is changed by marriage ; or to continue a suit by or against the representatives of either party who shall have died in the progress thereof. But such writs against personal representatives of any party *454shall be issued within one year after the cause for issuing the same shall arise.”

It is contended that, under this statute, the executors or administrators of a deceased party, either plaintiff or defendant, may revive any suit in their own favor, without limitation of time, and that they are liable to have any suit revived against them within one year, whether the nature of the action be such as would have lain originally by or against them or not. All this is undoubtedly true, provided the statute intended to enlarge and extend the right of reviving and continuing suits, and not to confine itself to the mere recognition or assertion of the remedies already existing. Indeed the words giving a scire facias “to continue a suit by or against the representatives of either party,” would sweep out of existence all ideas of absolute abatement by death, at any stage of any action, real, personal or mixed, sounding in contract or tort. Such a construction would carry the statute not only beyond what the revisers intended, as declared by their note, 3 R. S. 786, 2d ed.: “ Conformable to the existing law except the last clause, which is new,” (i. e. the limitation to one year;) but would lead to the grossest legal absurdities. The estates of decedents might be subverted by lawsuits of a purely vindictive character. Executors might proceed for slanderous words uttered against their testator, or be visited by smart money for slanders uttered by him, and so of a thousand like cases. If the statute intended to continue actions in such cases, why did it not also give the right.to commence them ? Each case is in pari ratione.

It is clear to my mind that the statute intended no such pernicious extravagance as has been imputed to it; and that it is, mainly, as the revisers declare, a mere declaration that writs 'of scire facias may issue as theretofore they had done, in pursuance of the statute or common law. We have already noticed instances under the statute in which representatives may come in; there are also various cases at the common law in which the writ lies, several of which are repeated specifically in the section relied on. Such were writs to revive final judgments in cases of death or marriage. The *455clause which has been claimed as subverting the maxim actio personalis, &c. therefore, in effect, is little or nothing more than declaratory, in a more general way, of what the two sections we have cited from 2 R. S. 306, had specially enacted. At any rate, it added nothing to the law. The true method with the clause is to consider it as stricken out, and search for the particular provisions which it intended to leave unaffected.

The statute of Massachusetts provides generally, that when either party dies pending the suit, the executor or administrator may come in and prosecute or defend, if the cause of action survive; at least such was the statute when Mellen v. Baldwin was decided, which we have seen was replevin. The defendant having died pending the suit, the court refused to continue it, on the ground that the cause of action did not survive against the administrator. The case at bar is still farther without the provisions of any statute, and must be disposed of accordingly. The decision may operate harshly against the estate of Webbers, as probably all remedy upon the replevin bond is lost, Badlam v. Tucker, before cited from 1 Pick. 285, to save which, was I suppose, the main object of this suit. Probably the remedy lies in another form. Merritt v. Lumbert, 8 Greenl. 128.

Judgment must be for the defendant on the demurrer.

The Chief Justice dissented on the first point.

Judgment for defendant.