John E. Lynch Co. v. Farnell
John E. Lynch Co. v. Farnell
Opinion of the Court
The agreed statement of facts shows that Mary G. Oomstock died June 27, 1898 ; that George F. Corn-stock was appointed executor of her will August 9, 1898 ; he gave no notice of his appointment as executor ; he continued as executor until December 12, 1899 ; the plaintiffs presented to him their bill for the funeral expenses of the testatrix, on which he paid them, on account, the sum of forty dollars August 12, 1898 ; on December 12, 1899, the defendant was appointed administrator de bonis non with the will annexed ; the plaintiffs presented their bill to the defendant within six months after the first advertisement of his appointment. This suit was brought November 9, 1901.
This limitation differs materially from the previous law, in which the limitation was within three years after the will shall be proved or administration granted. See Pub. Stat. cap. 205, § 9. Decisions under former statutes do not apply to the present law, except so far as they determine that the general statute of limitations is reduced by the special statute in favor of executors and administrators when these officers comply with the terms of the law which fixes the time from which their exemption is to run. Knowles v. Whaley, 15 R. I. 97 ; In re Johnson, 15 R. I. 438 ; Bosworth v. Smith, 9 R. I. 67.
The facts in the present case show that the executor gave no notice of his appointment, as required by law. While, as said in the cases last cited, this is not a condition precedent to his qualification, it is held in those cases that the giving of the *498 notice fixes the time from which the special limitation begins to run. This must be so from the terms of the statute.
The defendant suggests that by the payment of money to the plaintiffs on account of their bill they had actual irotice that the executor had qualified, and therefore the published notice was unnecessary as to them. Doubtless for some purposes/this might be so ; but in this case the fact could not alter the terms of the statute, for without the notice no time is fixed for the statute to run at all. Moreover, actual knowledge that one 'is acting as an, executor is not legally or equitably incompatible with the presumption that the plaintiffs were forbearing to bring a suit, because they had ample time so long as the statutory notice was not given. Their conduct indicates this. We do not think that the fact of a part payment affects the operation of the statute.
The action having been brought within two years after the first notice given, it is brought in time, even though it is a notice by an administrator de bonis non instead of the executor.
The plaintiffs are entitled to judgment.
Case remitted to District Court of Sixth Judicial District, with direction to enter judgment for plaintiffs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John E. Lynch & Co. vs. George Farnell, Admr.
- Status
- Published