McBeth v. Smith
McBeth v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
This Court has in one or two instan- ... . . ces decided this principle before, that an administrator cannot contract a debt to bind the estate of his intestate. It has been settled, and on the fairest principle in the world, that the estate of the intestate can only be liable for the contracts of the intestate himself; but it would be a paradox, not to be solved by legal rules, to say that an administrator should contract a debt himself, and then he should be sued, and this debt... recovered as one contracted by his intestate. But it appears still more illegal that the administrator should contract a debt himself, for the estate of his intestate, and then make the administrator de bonis non liable in an action, * and recover it against him as a debt contracted by his intestate, when the whole transaction was long after the intestate was in his grave. This is precisely the case in the present action. I would not pretend to say that an administrator should in no case be allowed to contract debts that should bind the estate of his intestate; but if he does so, and, in many instances it is necessary he should do so, he. alone will be liable to the creditor; and his only indemnity is by retaining so much from the profits of the estate, or by applying to the ordinary, who has power to allow him. compensation for any fair counts contracted for the benefit of the estate. I therefore, of opinion that the rule should be granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James McBeth, Survivor of John Paisly, & Co. v. Savage Smith, Administrator de bonis non of William Goddard
- Status
- Published