Thornton v. Winston
Thornton v. Winston
Opinion of the Court
The first point made for the appellant, was, that her assent to her daughter’s taking administration being
It was next insisted, that this renunciation, though it might for the time authorize the grant of administration to the daughter, was no peremptory renunciation, but that on the death of her daughter, the widow still had a right to qualify as executrix. The passage cited from Toller’s Law of ex’ors, 42. certainly supports the proposition ; but that passage itself is not only wholly unsupported, but seems directly in opposition to the books there referred to. Toller says, “ After refusal by the executor and administration granted, the party is incapable of assuming the executorship during the lifetime of such administrator, but after the death of the administrator, he may retract his renunciationand Wentw. Off. Ex’or, Swinburne, and 3 Bac. Abr. are cited in the margin. Now, in Wentw. Off. Ex’or, 38. I find this passage—“ After refusal, and administration committed, the executor cannot go hack, to prove the will, and assume the executorship”—almost the words used by Toller in the first part of the sentence, but unqualified by his assertion that the executor may retract after the death of the administrator. And (p. 41.) Wentworth gives the reason why there can be no such power of retraction : “ It is clear, he says, that if there be but one executor, and he refuse, or being many, if they do all refuse, then is the party dead intestate, and administration is to be committed with the will annexed. JYor can any after meddle as executors.” Certainly, the party could never be said to be dead intestate, if there were a person living who might, under any circumstances, still claim to qualify as executor. So, in Swinburne, part 6. § 12. it is said—“ But after refusal, and administration committed to another, the executor cannot recede from it, and go back to prove the will, and assume the executorship.”
It was contended, in the last place, that the wife has the best right to administration under our statute; and this, though it be clear (as in the case before us it is) that she has no interest in the residuum; nothing to do with the personalty beyond the provision made for her by the will. But this is a question concluded, as I conceive, by our own decisions, and these decisions founded on the law and reason of the case. In Cutchin v. Wilkinson, Hendren v. Colgin, and Bray v. Dudgeon (cited at the bar), this court has decided, that the person entitled to the estate, is entitled to the administration, and, in the last case, this was so adjudged against a husband seeking administration on his wife’s estate,—a case in point. I am of opinion, on the whole, that the sentence must be affirmed.
Tucker, P. The attempt to sustain the claim of the appellant, in this case, to the administration of the estate of her husband, rests upon three grounds—1. that she was the executrix named in the will, and has never refused the executorship ; 2. that if her verbal declaration could be considered a refusal, she had a right to retract it after the death of the first administratrix; and 3. that if that be not so, she had as widow the preferable right to the administration.
As to the first proposition, it rests upon the assumption that a verbal declaration in pais does not amount to a refusal, but that a valid renunciation can only be by act done before the court of probat. Whatever may have been the former doctrines of the ecclesiastical courts, it seems to have been admitted in the case of Broker v. Charter, Cro. Eliz. 92. that a letter written by the executors declaring their inability to attend to the duties of executor, was held a valid renunciation; and upon that occasion, Dr. Ford declared before the justices, that by the civil law, a renouncing may be by a matter in fact as well as by judicial act, and that a refusal might even be by parol. This case seems to have been not only unquestioned, but it is also set forth by the various elementary writers as containing the law of the subject. In our courts too, it has been repeatedly adjudged, that the renunciation of an executorship may be by act in pais ; and, in like manner, our statute makes the refusal or failure of all the executors to give security, equivalent to a refusal of the executorship. In the present case, it appears that when Frances Thornton, the first person who administered on the estate, was appointed, Mrs. Thornton declared her agreement that Frances should qualify, but at the same time reserved her right to qualify after her death. Now this agreement by an executor, that another shall qualify as administrator, amounts of course to a refusal of the executorship j because the executor thereby consents, that his
• 2nd Inquiry; whether she had a right to retract her renunciation after Frances Thornton's death? This rests upon a mere question of law: for the reservation of her subsequent right to qualify, can only have effect if it should appear she had such subsequent right. The passages which have been cited from Toller's treatise, go fully to the point, that if an executor renounces, and an administrator is appointed, though the executor cannot retract in his lifetime, •he may after his death, however formally the renunciation may have been made. Upon examination, however, this particular proposition seems wholly unfounded in authority. The editor of the new edition of the Office of Executors, seems to have considered it as sustained by Bacon's abridgement and by Swinburne, part 6. § 12. but in neither of those is-there the slightest intimation of any such opinion. -The case of Broker v. Charter moreover ccmtains the declaration of Dr. Ford, very explicitly, that the renunciation of the executor cannot be partial, or only for a time, but is absolute and perpetual; and though the case itself is not in point here, since in that case the administrator was yet living when the act occurred retracting the renunciation, yet this declaration of a doctor of the civil law (who was, I presume, of the prerogative court) cannot be of less authority than the unsupported dictum of Toller. The proposition, indeed, seems ■ at variance with fundamental principles. By the common law, he who made a will without naming an executor, was technically considered as dying intestate; and if an executor was appointed, and he refused, the testator was then considered intestate. By the common law, also, the appointment of an executor gave him a right to the residuum
Then, 3rdly, upon the death of Frances Thornton, when it became necessary to appoint an administrator de bonis non, had Mrs. Thornton a preferable right to the appointment? Admitting, that, in the appointment of an adminis
Sentence affirmed.
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