Conley v. Huntoon
Conley v. Huntoon
Opinion of the Court
The above entitled bill in equity was brought against William C. Huntoon, Harrison B. Huntoon and John S. Murdock, of the city of Providence, in this state, and Edwin Milner, of the town of Moosup, in the State of Connecticut. The amended bill alleges that the complainants recovered judgment against the Babcock Oil Company, a corporation, which judgment remains unsatisfied; that the complainants have brought an action at law against said Edwin Milner as a stockholder of said Babcock Oil Company to recover from said Milner the amount due upon said judgment; and that the first three respondents named above have possession of the books and papers of said company, ,as officers of said Babcock Oil Company. It is not alleged that the respondent, Milner, has possession of any of said books and papers. The sole prayer of the bill is that the respondents be enjoined from removing the books and papers of said corporation from and out of the jurisdiction of the Superior Court. The respondent, Harrison B. Huntoon, demurred to the amended bill. The Superior Court by its decree entered February 24, 1914, sustained said demurrer and dismissed said bill as to the respondent, Harrison B. Huntoon. The complainants have appealed to this court from said decree. In this court amicus curiae has suggested the death of said Edwin Milner, at Plainfield, in the State of Connecticut, on February 19th, 1914, five days before the entry of said decree appealed from, and has further represented to this court that said Edwin Milner at the time of his death was a resident of the State of Connecticut; and that he left a will which has been probated in the probate court of said town of Plainfield.
The cause is now before us upon the complainants’ motion that Horatio A. Hunt, Harry R. Milner and Frank *345 W. Tillinghast, executors of the will of Edwin Milner, deceased, appointed by said probate court of Plainfield, be notified by this court to appear and take upon themselves the defence of this cause.
The question argued before us at the hearing on said motion was as to the right of a foreign executor or administrator to defend an action in this state in his representative capacity, and as to the power of the courts of this state to compel a foreign executor or administrator to take upon himself the defence of a suit commenced in this state against his testator or intestate in the lifetime of such testator or intestate.
*346
This court in Connor v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co., 28 R. I. 560, at 563, although considering a question relating to executors and administrators different from the one now before us, uses the following general language: “We are constrained to hold that a statute when it names an official must be construed to refer to one appointed by the same sovereignty which enacts and enforces the statute unless such construction manifestly violates the context.” The complainants present as an authority for their contention the case of Vaughn v. Sturtevant, 7 R. I. 372. • In the statement of that case it appears that the defendant Sturtevant was a resident of Massachusetts; that he died wjhile the suit was pending; and that his administrator appeared and was permitted to take upon himself the defence of said suit under a statutory provision identical with that contained in Sec. 5, Chap. 318, Gen. Laws, 1909. The question then before the court was different from that before us; but the complainants argue that the action of the court in permitting the defendant’s administrator to take upon himself the defence of the suit was a recognition of the power and the duty of a foreign executor or administrator to defend a pending suit commenced in this state, against his decedent in the decedent’s lifetime. The reported case is silent as to the place of the appointment of the administrator of Sturtevant;. the complainants infer from the other facts stated in the reported case that said administrator was appointed in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It appears, however, by reference to the papers in the case on file in the clerk’s *348 office of this court, in the statement of facts agreed to by the plaintiff and the administrator, that the defendant died while the action against him was pending and that “On the 29th day of November, 1862, letters of administration on the deft’s estate in R. I. were issued by the court of probate of Cranston to Daniel W. Vaughn of Providence, R. I., and on the 26th day of December following he appeared and took upon himself the defence of this suit.” Vaughn v. Sturtevant therefore fails to support the complainants as an authority.
From these considerations we are of the opinion that the provisions of Chapter 318, §§ 6 and 6 do not apply to executors and administrators appointed in other jurisdictions.
Whatever we might have held as to the construction of these sections in regard to the point we have been considering, said sections would not apply to the matter before us as the cause of action against said Milner in the suit at bar does not survive. The prayer of the bill is that the respondents may be enjoined from removing the books and papers of said corporation out of the jurisdiction of the Superior Court. If said Milner, in his lifetime, had been in possession of any such books or papers, which fact is not averred in the bill, the same would not pass to the custody of his executors in their representative character. The act which the complainants seek to enjoin is of such, a personal character that it does not survive against the executors of the will of said Milner.
Furthermore, whatever view we might have taken as to the matters already considered herein, we would not grant the complainants’ motion, as the executors of said Milner are not necessary parties to the appeal before us. The appeal is from the decree of the Superior Court sustaining the demurrer of the respondent, Harrison B. Huntoon, and dismissing the bill as to him. Said decree does not affect the estate of said Milner; and said appeal can proceed in this court without requiring the appearance of his executors. If the representatives of the estate of said Milner are necessary parties to the proceedings involved in this appeal, the *349 death of said Milner should have been suggested in the Superior Court and the attempt made to bring in the proper parties to represent his estate previous to the hearing on said demurrer and the entry of said decree in the Superior Court each of which appears from the record to have been subsequent to his death.
The complainants ’ motion is denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Conley Et Al. vs. William C. Huntoon Et Al.
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