Bishop v. Harrison's Adm'r
Bishop v. Harrison's Adm'r
Opinion of the Court
The first question is, whether in this action of assumpsit against the administrator de bonis non, to recover a debt due from the testator, it was competent to the plaintiff to join counts on promises by the executor as executor, with counts on promises by the testator, in order to save the statute of limitations ?
It is perfectly clear, that in an action against an executor or administrator (I mean an original administrator) such counts may be joined ; and that that is the proper mode of declaring against executors, or administrators, to save the statute of limitations ; 2 Wms. Saund. 117, e; 1 H. Black. 102; Epes’s adm’r v. Dudley’s adm’r, 5 Rand. 436. This position being admitted or established, it seems to me, that it must follow, as a necessary consequence, that such counts *may also be joined, where the 'action is brought against the administrator de bonis non. It is clearly competent to an executor, by his promise to pay a debt of the testator, to exempt the case from the operation of the statute of limitations; and it is no devastavit in him to do so. If the executor die or be removed before he has paid the debt, it still remains a debt due from the testator; and the obligation to pay it devolves on the administrator be bonis non, who comes in the place of the executor, and is the representative of the testator. Why, then, may not the creditor, in an action against the administrator de bonis non, avail himself of the promise by the executor in the same manner as he might have done, if the action had been brought against _ the executor himself ? It is said, there is no privity between the administrator de bonis non and the executor. Even if this were so, I do not see that it would affect the question under consideration. The right of the plaintiff to proceed against the administrator de bonis non, for a debt due from the testator, and which has been saved from the operation of the statute of limitations by a promise of the executor, depends, as I conceive, not so much on the idea of a privity between the administrator de bonis non and the executor, as on the right of the creditor to the debt due from the testator, and the obligation of the administrator as the representative of the testator, to pay all his debts, so far as the unadminis-tered assets will extend. But, I am of
Upon the whole I am decidedly of opinion, that, if the two counts founded on the promises of the displaced executor, *in this case, had been properly framed, the demurrers to them ought to have been overruled.
But there is a fatal objection to them. The promises laid in them, are not stated to have been made by the executor as executor ; which is absolutely necessary to justify their being joined with counts on promises made by the testator ; Brigden v. Parks & al. ex’rs &c., 2 Bos. & Pul. 424 ; 1 Chit, plead. 205, 6. The reason of this is obvious : the judgment on promises by the testator, would be de bonis testatoris ; the judgment on promises by the executor not stated to have been made by him as executor, would be de bonis propriis. On this ground, I think the judgment should be affirmed.
Agreeing with my brother Cabell in the view he has taken of this subject, I should not have said a word but for the purpose of correcting or rather explaining a proposition of mine, too broadly stated, in Wernick v. M’Murdo.
The demurrer to the counts in the declaration founded on the promises of the displaced executor, presents two questions : Whether the assumpsit of the executor can bind the administrator de bonis non? and if it can, Whether the executor’s assumpsit be well laid in those counts ?
That the promise of an executor, or of an administrator to whom full administration is committed, will bind the estate of the testator or intestate, so far at least as to take the case
As to the other point, the counts in question are fatally defective. The promises of the executor on which they are founded, are not laid, as they ought to have been, as promises made by the executor as executor.
Concurring Opinion
I concur in affirming the judgment upon the demurrer upon the defect of the counts in question, in stating the character of the assumpsit by the executor of Harrison. Upon the general question, whether in an action against an administrator de bonis non for a debt originally due by the decedent, the plaintiff can avail himself to any purpose of the assumpsit of the executor or former administrator, I refrain from giving any opinion, having formed no decided one, as the question does not arise in the cause. My impression is, however, that he cannot: and that there is a difference in principle, between the case of a suit by an administrator de bonis non and that of a suit against him, and between the effect of an assumpsit by a debtor of the decedent, made to the former administrator, and an assumpsit by a former administrator to a creditor of Ihe estate.
said, his impressions upon the general ‘question which had been discussed, concurred with the opinion of Judge Cabell upon it; but it was not
Equity Jurisdiction — Determination of Property Rights. — In Bush v. Martins, 7 Leigh 320, it was held that a party in possession of slaves, and claiming them by the former owner’s absolute gift in his lifetime, cannot come into equity to be quieted in his title against the donor’s executory legatee, to whom the slaves are bequeathed in the event of the claim ant’s death without leaving issue. Carr. J., in delivering, the opinion of the court, said; ‘ T think there can be no sound distinction taken between this case and that of Randolph v. Randolph. The principle there decided, is, that the court has no jurisdiction to call before it a remainderman whose right may never come in esse, at the instance of a person in possession, and claiming a right adverse to his.”- Tucker, P„ in his concurring opinion, said: “The case of Randolph v. Randolph is, I think, conclusive of this; and it was decided, not only upon express authority, but in strict conformity with the general principles of the court of chancery, which disclaims any interference with legal titles. In this case, though the interest of the remaindermen is but contingent, yet their title, such as it is, is a legal title, and cannot be drawn in question in equity. The decision of that court upon the naked question of title, in a case where there is not, and never may be, a subsisting dispute with respect to the right of property, would indeed be an anomaly.”
See further, monographic note on Jurisdiction” appended to Phippen v. Durham, 8 Gratt. 457.
Reference
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- Bishop v. Harrison's Adm'r &c.
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