Horrall v. Scudder
Horrall v. Scudder
Opinion of the Court
Horrall, the appellant, and his wife, Elvira, disagreed and separated, but were not divorced. Elvira, while living separate and apart from her husband, sickened and died, possessed of an estate, both real and personal, to which she became entitled on the death of a former husband. Horrall, her husband, became administrator of her estate, and Scudder, who is a physician, filed a claim against the estate in the Court of Common Pleas for $2t> 65, for medical services rendered said Elvira during her last sickness. The administrator appeared and filed an answer. The court also permitted the children of the decedent, by her former husband, to become parties defendants. Issues were made and submitted to the court for trial. The
The judgment cannot be sustained. Horrall, personally, was not a pai’ty to the suit. The claim of the plaintiff' was not filed against him, but against the estate of Elvira, of which he ivas the representative. The plaintiff, therefore, could only recover by showing a valid claim due him from the decedent, and then the judgment should have been against Horrall as administrator, and not a personal judgment. The finding of the court is for the estate, and no question is presented on that finding by the appellee.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the court below to render judgment for Horrall, as administrator, against the plaintiff below for costs.
Reference
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