McNally v. Kerswell
McNally v. Kerswell
Opinion of the Court
— This was an action of the case against • the defendant, a deputy sheriff, for neglecting to serve a writ in favor of the plaintiff against Peter S. Ellis, administrator. '
The officer in the writ, was commanded to attach the goods and estate of Joseph Ellis and Benjamin H. Ellis, late of said Madison, now deceased, in the hands and possession of Peter S. Ellis, of said Madison, administrator on the estate of said Joseph and said Benj. H. Ellis.” Both of
The defendant was described as the administrator on the estate of Joseph and Benjamin H. Ellis. No joint action can be'maintained against the several administrators of deceased partners. Neither can it be against the same individual in his double capacity as administrator on the estates of each partner. The estates are separate. The duties of the administrator in regard to each, and the bonds given for the performance of those duties, are several and distinct. The demand, which was joint, is severed by death and all remedies for the enforcement of claims must be against the several administrators upon each, or if the same individual be administrator upon both estates, against him in each case as he is administrator upon ■ the estate sought to be charged.
The law is well settled that upon the issuing of a commission of insolvency, all attachments are dissolved. It is obvious that what is to be distributed should be freed from attachment. Martin v. Abbott, 1 Greenl. 333. If the estate is represented insolvent a creditor cannot sue the administrator, unless his claim has been filed before the commissioners, though the estate finally prove to be actually solvent. Paine v. Nichols, 15 Mass. 264; Dillingham v. Weston, 21 Maine, 263.
If the plaintiff was entitled to bring his claim within the provisions of the Act of 1851, c. 216, and by maintaining an action against the administrator, to enforce his lien on the logs by virtue of its provisions, the writ should have
The plaintiff does not show how, or in what way he has sustained any loss, and without such proof the action cannot be sustained. Plaintiff nonsuit.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- McNally versus Kerswell
- Status
- Published