Cash v. Dickens
Cash v. Dickens
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court
This bill, filed to administer the estate of J. L
The widow and her husband demurred to the bill, and bill of revivor and supplemental bill. Their demurrer was overruled, but an appeal allowed by the Chancellor. The argument in support of the demurrer is rested mainly upon two propositions:
1st. That the suggestion of insolvency was not properly made, and not true in fact; and
2d. That the suggestion and the filing of the bill came too late. ,
The original complainant, Cash, was appointed administrator in 1865. He states in his bill that, from the best information he could obtain, he believed the estate perfectly solvent and acted accordingly, paying some debts and distributing considerable sums to the legatees upon refunding bonds. A number of suits were, however, from time to time brought against him, all of which are specified in the bill. The amounts claimed with costs and expenses, amounting to large sums; under the advice of counsel he is defending these suits, but the reason that he finally suggested the insolvency of the estate was, that on the 10th June, 1868, Sarah W. Bolton, as executrix of Washington Bolton, deceased, filed her bill against complainant and others, to settle an alleged partnership of many years’ standing, between said J. L. Bolton, Washington Bolton, Wade H. Bolton and Thomas Dickens, in which enormous amounts are claimed against the estate of J. L. Bolton, and if said bill is successful, will render the estate insolvent'. That
The argument is, that, as by the bill, the insolvency depends upon the result of the cause of Sarah W. Bolton, and as the complainant does not say that this is a valid claim, the court can see that the suggestion is in bad faith, and untrue, and the bill should be dismissed. This proposition is not sound. A personal representative, who has reasonable ground to apprehend the insolvency of the estate, has the right to protect himself against being compelled to pay the debts in full until the fact be ascertained, and for this purpose to suggest the insolvency of the estate, which operates as an injunction against creditors. If he is bound to know the fact of insolvency before he can make the suggestion, he might be ruined before the fact could be known; in this case he would have to wait the decision of the case of Mrs. Sarah W. Bolton. We think the suggestion was made in good faith and upon reasonable grounds, according to the allegations of the bill.
Nor do we think the bill should be dismissed, because not filed before the 9th of September, 1869. The delay, under the facts, is not unreasonable. In
The decree will be affirmed and remanded. The defendant, Sigler, paying the costs of the court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- F. M. Cash, Adm'r v. Samuel Dickenss.
- Status
- Published