10 Ohio Law. Abs. 148 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1931
We conclude that the facts stated above show a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff administrator and that under many authorities the plaintiff administrator has a right of action against the defendant administrator in the latter’s representative capacity. This right of action rests upon the principal that when the property of a third person is taken by an administrator in his representative capacity he holds it as assets of the estate and he is liable in such capacity to the party whose property was so taken." One of the leading cases adopting this principle is DeValengin, Admr. v Duffy, 14 Peters 290, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in an opinion written by Chief Justcie Taney. That eminent judge in discussing the question before us said:
“There are, doubtless, decisions which countenance the doctrine that no action will lié against an executor or administrator in his representative character, except upon some claim or demand which existed against the testator or intestate in his lifetime, and that if the claim or demand wholly accrued in the time of the executor or administrator he is liable therefor only in his personal character. But upon a full consideration of the nature and of the various decisions on the subject, we are of opinion that whatever property or money is lawfully recovered or received by- the executor or administrator after the death of his testator or intestate, in virtue of his representative character, he holds as assets of the estate1; and he is liable therefor in such representative capacity to the party who has a good title thereto. In our judgment this, upon principle, must be the true doctrine.”
Many other authorities might be cited in support of the same principle but this court is persuaded that in the case of Conger, Admr. v Atwood, 28 Oh St 134, in the fourth .paragraph of the syllabus our Supreme Court announces a rule which is decisive of the question in this case. That paragraph reads as follows:
“An administrator, who without authority collects rents of his intestate’s real estate and uses them as assets in paying the debts of the estate, is liable to the party entitled to such rents and he may recover the amount thereof of the administrator in his representative character.”
If there was any question in respect to what the court intended to adopt as a rule of procedure in the paragraph quoted it would seem that the interpretation of that paragraph by the court itself as made in the case of Lucht, Admr. v Behrens, in the same volume of its report at page 240, leaves no room for doubt. The court in the last mentioned opinion referred to the case of Conger v Atwoqd, supra, with this observation:
“In Conger v Atwood, decided by us at the last term, it was held that when there was a controversy between the widow and the administrator as to her title to the rents of the mansion house due from the tenant within the year, and the administrator acting in good faith collects these rents and applies them to the payment of debts of a solvent estate, he was liable in his Representative capacity to refund to the person entitled to collect them.”
It is manifest in the instant case from the petition that if the mother preceeded her son in death her administrator was without any legal right to the proceeds of the insurance policies. This being so, we are unable to distinguish, in principle the facts of the instant case from the facts in
The special demurrer complains that there are defects apparent in the petition for the reason that the insurance companies are not made parties to this proceeding. We do ndt undertake to say that if the insurance companies had wrongfully paid to another the principal of said policies that the plaintiff administrator would not have a right of action against them for the money so paid. The plaintiff administrator has elected to prosecute thg- claim against the defendant administrator alone, and that was his right, of which the defendant administrator can not complain. On the contrary, the proceeding is one which should be commended under the rule that the courts always favor an action which avoids a multiplicity of suits.
It is the conclusion of this court that the trial coúrt erred in sustaining the demurrer • to the,petition and that its judgment in that behalf must be reversed.
, Judgment reversed and cause remanded to the Court of Common Pleas for further proceedings according to law.