Castor v. Pace
Castor v. Pace
Opinion of the Court
By the Court delivering the opinion.
This was an action suggesting a devastavit oil a judgment
If the cause of action survives against the defendant, Pace, the decision is erroneous; otherwise, it is right. “ Executors or administrators of executors or administrators were not, at common law, liable for the devastavits of those they represented, because they could not be supposed to know how their testators or intestates had disposed of the goods; and therefore, this was esteemed actio personalis quae moritur €um persona. Bar. Al. Ex. and Ad., p. 3. By the statute of 4 and 5 Will, and Mary, it is enacted that all and every the executor and executors, admininistrator or administrators ofsuch executor or administrator of right, who shall waste or convert to his own use goods, chattels or estate of his testator or intestate, shall from thenceforth be liable and chargeable in the same manner as his or their testator or intestate should or might have been. Schley's Digest, 287.
An action for a devastavit does not now die with the person, and therefore, may be revived against the executor or administrator of a deceased executor or administrator. But because it may be revived against the executor or administrator of Spicer, the deceased co-administrator with Pace, does the suit abate as to Pace, or must its progress be arrested until the representatives of Spicer can be made a party? We think not. Each administrator is liable for his own devastavit. If the devastavit is joint, and both are. equally culpable, each one is liable for the whole; and under special circumstances, an administrator may be liable for the devastavit of his co-administrator. Before the enactment of these statutes and the one which I now proceed to refer to,
We think the action survived against Pace, and that the Court ought to have allowed the motion of plaintiff’s counsel, to suggest the death of Spicer of record, and to proceed to trial.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.