Reed v. Commonwealth
Reed v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Most of the points which have been made in this cause have so little to do with the merits, that I shall confine the opinion of the court to the only one which goes to the root of the liability of the defendants below.
The action is brought on an administration bond, giyen by an administrator and his surety; and the breach of the condition, as assigned, is a devastavit, by paying debts out of their order. It was admitted at the trial, that the administrator had paid, in discharge of debts in their proper order, a considerable sum over and above the amount of the personal estate; and that there had been a devastavit of the personal assets was not pretended. It appeared, however,- that the intestate was indebted at his death in a large sum to the Westmoreland Bank, on three promissory notes, for which the administrator was personally liable as an indorser; and for these, he confessed two judgments, (specially saving his own personal liability,) on which the real estate of the intestate was sold, and the proceeds were paid over to the bank, which would have received nothing if this part of the estate had been brought into a course of administration, and applied to the payment of the debts in their order. It will, therefore, be perceived, that the point for consideration is, the liability of an administrator and his surety on their bond, for the ac.t of the former, in confessing a judgment, on which the real estate of the intestate is sold, and applied to the payment of debts which are posterior in order to those which would have been paid, had the property been brought into a course of administration.
At the common law, there is a plain and a substantial distinction between assets in the hands of the executor, and assets in the hands of the heir. The first consist of all the chattels of which the testator died possessed, whether real or personal; the second consist of the lands, and other real estate, in respect of which the heir -is, in particular cases, liable for the.debt of his ancestor, but liable only where the lands have been expressly charged by the ancestor, and then the remedy is by action against the heir, without having recourse in any shape to the executor. In Pennsylvania, lands are, in all cases without distinction, assets for the payment of debts; and the remedy, instead of being against the heir, is exclusively against the executor; under a judgment against whom the lands are levied and sold, jiigt as if they were in the hands of the executor; but they are nevertheless still assets in the hands of the heir. The plea of plene administravit is as fully made out here as in England, by proof that the executor has administered all the personal assets; and where that plea is found against the plaintiff, he may, nevertheless, take judgment against the land as of course, being a matter with which the executor has nothing to do. This would show conclusively (if anything were wanting to show it,) that the real estate is not, in the first instance, under the control of the executor. He is not entitled to the possession of it; he cannot bfe
To the case of a sale by decree of the Orphans’ Court, they undoubtedly cannot; for the legislature has by subsequent enactment, declared exactly what it meant; and this subsequent enactment was doubtless produced by the actual state of the practice under the original act, as settled by the common opinion of the profession.
This then being the nature of real assets in Pennsylvania, and the mode of getting at them as they exist in the hands of the heir, and also the extent of the security afforded by an administration bond, — on what ground is it to be supposed that the confession of a judgment on which the land is afterwards sold, and the price applied to the payment of a debt out of its order, is a forfeiture of the penalty? That the confession is voluntary, cannot, if the debt be a just one, vary the legal consequences of the act, as the administrator could not by a resort to fair means, prevent a judgment from being rendered adversely: he could but plead plene cidministravif, and that being found for him, the adverse party would have a right to call for a judgment de terris. I think it clear then that those who prosecute this suit in the name of the Commonwealth, have no remedy on the administration bond. Whether they have any other remedy, I pretend not to determine. One remedy they undoubtedly had, but of which they neglected to avail themselves at the proper season. An application to the Common Pleas at the return of the execution w ould have produced a detention of the money in court, till judgments de terris should have been obtained by the other creditors, in case they had not been obtained before; after which it would have been distributed according to the grade of the several debts, as established by the act of assembly. But the matter in hand is, not whether they have any, or what remedy, but whether they can for this cause, maintain an action on the administration bond; and the court below having put the case to the jury, as if the real estate were personal assets, and therefore within the security of the bond, - fell into an error which-is fatal to the judgment.
Judgment reversed..
Reference
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- REED and another against The COMMONWEALTH
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