Lazarus v. Carter
Lazarus v. Carter
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an appeal oh points of law from a judgment of the District Magistrate of Honolulu in an action of replevin. De
Plaintiff appeals to this court from this judgment on the points of law “that the defendant is liable if at all in his individual capacity to the plaintiff and not as executor” and “that the claim of the plaintiff is against the defendant as an individual and not against the estate for which the defendant is the executor.”
Defendant’s plea is unverified, and the record shows no evidence given before the District Magistrate nor any admission of fact by counsel upon which the judgment for defendant could be based, but as no objection to the judgment is made on this ground and the facts are admitted by counsel for plaintiff except the lawfulness of the possession of the defendant as stated in the plea, we will treat the plea as though proved.
The suit is properly brought against the defendant in his private capacity. Wells on Replevin, Sec. 276; Cobbey on Replevin, Sec. 432. As executor he has rights only over what belongs to the estate and the fact that Eleazar Lazarus treated the property as his own in his will is not conclusive that it is part of the assets of his estate in defendant’s hands as executor. If the property did not belong to Eleazar Lazarus, the executor has no right to it, and his right as executor to be in no case liable to suit until the expiration of six calendar months after probate, except in causes of rejected claims, gives him no rights over property not belonging to the estate.
It follows that in this suit against defendant personally, before he can have exemption from suit as an executor of the will of Eleazar Lazarus, it must be shown that this property is part of the testator’s estate. The plea of defendant does not deny that plaintiff is owner of the property sued for and as such entitled to possession, but relies entirely on the statute (Act 37, Sec. 3, Laws of 1898) providing that “Executors * * * shall in no case be liable to suit until the expiration of six calendar months after probate * * * except in cases of rejected claims. * * ” By not denying these facts the defendant admits the same. The unlawful detention is a wrong and he cannot set up that he did such unlawful act in his capacity as executor and thus avoid being sued in an individual capacity. See Martz v. Putnam, 117 Ind. 394.
The judgment of the District Magistrate' is set aside and the case remitted to him with directions to overrule defendant’s plea.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KAUIMAKAOLE LAZARUS v. JOSEPH O. CARTER
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published