Succession of Hays
Succession of Hays
Opinion of the Court
Mrs. Adele Rodriguez, widow of Harry D. Hays, dative testamentary executrix of the succession of her husband, filed in the Civil District Court a provisional account of the administration, praying that it be approved and homologated. The account showed a balance of eight thousand two hundred and seventy-eight dollars to the credit of the estate. E. Howard McCaleb and George F. Lapeyre opposed the account. They averred that they were the holders and owners of certain promissory notes of Harry D. Hays of the aggregate face value of nineteen thousand four hundred and seventy-two dollars, and of another note of two thousand one hundred and thirteen dollars, of which a description would be found in a list annexed to their opposition; that said notes had been paid in part by the proceeds of the pledge of a certain policy on the life of H. D. Hays, and that there still remained due on said notes the sum of six thousand five hundred dollars; that they had not been put down on the account as creditors of said succession; they prayed that they be recognized as creditors of the succession for said sum (the unpaid balance still due on said notes), with interest, and that the account be amended by placing them thereon as creditors for said sum, and that they be decreed to be paid in due course of administration.
Mrs. Adele Rodriguez answered, as testamentary executrix and as tutrix of her minor children. She averred that the assets of the succession consisted exclusively of the avails of a policy of insurance for fifty thousand dollars, issued by the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, on the life of Harry D. Hays, which policy had been pledged by said Hays to opponents; that after the death of Hays, opponents collected all that said policy called for, to-wit, fifty thousand dollars, and retained the whole of said sum, except three thousand four hundred and twenty-eight dollars, which sum opponents voluntarily deposited in the registry of the court to the credit of the estate; that opponents claimed the balance of the avails of said policy, to-wit, forty-six thousand seven hundred and twenty-one dollars and forty-three cents, as privileged creditors of the estate; that after said three thousand four hundred and twenty-eight dollars had been thus deposited by opponents, accountant as widow in community, as dative testamentary executrix and as tutrix of her minor children, brought suit in the
The District Court sustained the plea of res judicata and dismissed the opposition. Opponents appealed.
The judgment of the Supreme Court referred to in the pleadings will be found reported in 48 An. 749 (Adele R. Hays, widow, dative executrix of the late Harry D. Hays, vs. G. F. Lapeyre and E. H. McCaleb).
Opponents contend that the thing demanded and passed upon in the suit just referred to is not the same as that which is involved in the present opposition. Their position is thus stated by their counsel:
“ In the former case Mrs. Adele Hays claimed the amount of a policy on the life of her husband for fifty thousand dollars, which
At the time Mrs. Hays instituted the suit which terminated in the judgment in the 48th Annual, Messrs. McCaleb & Lapeyre had collected the amount of the life policy, and they had, after applying the proceeds to the payment of all claims which they conceived they then legally held against the succession of Hays, deposited the amount which they admitted as being the final balance due by them in the registry of the court to the estate. In striking this balance the full amount of the notes which figure in the present opposition was deducted. When the insurance was paid the policy ceased as between the succession and Messrs. Lapeyre & McCaleb to be collateral, and the money in the hands of the latter operated directly as a payment of the claims they held.
' The executrix was aware of the theory on which the balance was reached. She disputed the correctness of the payment in full which Messrs. Lapeyre & McCaleb had made of these notes to themselves, and therefore she attacked by direct action the position which they had taken as to the extent of their rights as holders of the notes and sought to recover from them the balance which she asserted would be due by reducing their claim as so based down to what was really and legally due.
In her petition she made a statement of the proceedings connected with all the notes which Hays had given — those which were originally held by Judge Lazarus for his client, and those which were held by Mr. Kernan. She claimed that although both sets of notes appeared on their face to represent a general personal indebtedness of Hays, and would, but for explanation, be payable generally out of any and all funds or property which he then had or might thereafter have, yet in fact they represented no such indebtedness; that from the very commencement it was understood and agreed that the notes were to be, and should be, payable out of the special fund to be collected after Hays’ death from the policy; that the “ debt” (if such it was to be called) was a debt due by the fund, and not by
The present plaintiffs resisted the pretensions set up by Mrs. Hays' as executrix. Referring to themselves as being holders of the Kernan and Darton notes they insisted in their pleadings that they had. acquired all of the same ih good faith, believing them to be validi obligations of Hays and enforceable to their full amount. They denied that there was any understanding to the contrary; they averred that they would never have purchased them had they supposed that Hays had any idea of contesting their validity and-declared that they were the legal third holders for value, and that it-was immaterial for what price they acquired the same; that they had collected fifty thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars for the insurance company in payment of the life policy, and that of this amount they had deposited three thousand four hundred and* twenty-eight dollars in the registry of the court to the credit of the-succession of Hays as the true and just balance due his successioni after paying themselves all of the indebtedness and obligations of: Hays held by themselves.
The prayer of their answer was “ that the court order the plaintiff in the cause to accept said balance in full payment and satisfaction
The following extracts taken from the opinion of this court on the appeal of that case will show what the court conceived to be the issues before it and what disposition was made of them.
We said: “ The complaints relate principally to the notes identified as the Kern an notes and the note held by Darton * * *
As to these, it is alleged that they were issued without consideration ; that the defendants acquired them with full knowledge of all the circumstances under which they were issued * * *
“ It appears of record that the defendants were aware of the extreme illness of the insured Hays, and of the mortal nature of his disease, and that he had no property or resource of any kind save his life policy * * * In the act of compromise annulling the first assignment of the policy by the insured there is reference to the claim here, general in terms, it is true, yet sufficient to excite and put on inquiry. Direct and express notice is not always indispensable to take notes out of the rule of the commercial law and out of the equities. When the circumstances are such as to bring a particular case under the operation of that rule the maker of the note is legally entitled to insist upon its application regardless of actual knowledge on the part of the purchaser of the note.” * * * We pass to the next point: “The defendants can not take more than their investments from the life policy. * * * They claim that they were creditors for the whole amount for which the assignment was made and plead the face value of their notes, but, in our opinion, while they had a right to their fee, advances and interest, they are without the benefit of the law applying to negotiable instruments. When a note is made for a special purpose or taken to be collected exclusively from a policy of insurance as under the circumstances of this case, we think it is taken out of the rule which governs negotiable instruments, in so far as relates to the equities.
“The defendants are entitled to their fee, and to all they have advanced, and all they have paid for the claim they hold and interest. Their demand for the remainder after these will have been paid is rejected.” The judgment of the court was as follows: “It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be*749 reversed, annulled and avoided. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff recover judgment for the sum of fifty thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars, less all amounts paid as transferees of the notes and fee, and that the case be remanded to the District Court, and a judgment be entered in accordance with this decree.”
It is apparent that the policy of insurance, the notes, and the relations of parties were so closely connected with each other that we were forced, for the purposes of reaching a conclusion as to the rights and involved obligations, to enter into an examination of and to pass upon each of those subjects. At the point which matters had reached, the mere question as to whether the present plaintiffs had aright of “pledge” or “ right of detention” upon the proceeds of the life policy then in their hands played no part except incidentally and indirectly. The real matter at issue was on the one hand the extent of the rights of the succession of Hays in the funds which the plaintiffs here had collected, and on the other, the extent of the claims which Messrs. McCaleb & Lapeyre held against the succession. The parties were directly at issue touching their respective rights and obligations to each other and not merely as to the security for payment which the one or the other might hold. It is very apparent that we adopted the contention made in the former ease by the executrix that the notes did not represent a personal indebtedness due to the holders of the same by Hays or his succession, but that they were really obligations due by and payable out of a special fund; that they were obligations which, by reason of the subject matter of the contract from which they resulted and the relations to that contract of the parties to the suit, were not as broad as they appeared to be on the face of the papers which were presented as evidencing them, but reducible to the amount actually advanced by Messrs. McCaleb & Lapeyre to purchase them. When the insurance was collected by those gentlemen their claims upon the notes and the money in their hands merged into each other and became identical to the extent that the fund was liable for the payment of the notes. Had the fund been insufficient to have met this liability and had there been other property in the succession, this property, under the view, we took of the situation, it would not have been subject to be drawn against to meet the deficiency. With the disappearance of the fund would have disappeared all liability upon the notes.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Succession of Harry D. Hays
- Status
- Published