Allen v. Leach

7 Del. Ch. 232
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Del. Ch. 232 (Allen v. Leach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Leach, 7 Del. Ch. 232 (Del. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Wolcott, Chancellor.

This case is founded on a bill filed by certain of the legatees under the last will and testament of William Allen, deceased, to- recover from James Leach, his administrator, de bonis non with the will annexed, their respective legacies or distributive shares of the funds shown to be in his hands by a corrected account on file in the register’s office in and for Hew Castle County.

The bill sets forth the will of the deceased in extenso, and the subsequent granting of letters of administration to the respondent in due form of law. It also states that the said administrator afterwards passed two accounts before the said register, to which the parties in interest excepted on the ground of error and fraud on the part -of the administrator, and the said accounts were corrected by the Orphans’ Court of Hew Castle County pursuant to the "prayers of the exceptants. It also states that by this proceeding the greater portion of the estate, after deducting debts and legitimate expenses, was found to be in the hands of the administrator, whereas the accounts passed by him showed it to be almost entirely extinguished. The bill, by reference to the corrected account and the proceedings in the Orphans’ Court that led up to it, are expressly made a part of the complainant’s ground of complaint, which show that the moneys represented by the corrected account were lost by the administrator by depositing the same with private banks to his own credit, and which subsequently failed. It is also alleged in the bill that repeated demands had been made upon the respondent for payment and that he had repeatedly refused to comply therewith.

The respondent pleaded the Statute of Limitations, [238]*238loches and a pending right of appeal, but he did not. under the rule accompany the pleas with an affidavit that they were not .filed for delay, etc., whereupon the solicitors for the complainants moved for a decree pro oonfesso for want of the required affidavit. On the. 18th day of February, the motion was granted and a decree entered ordering the payment of the amounts due to the respective complainants according to the prayer of the bill or attachment in thirty days.

At the expiration of the time limited for the performance of the decree, a motion was made for and a rule granted on the respondent to show cause why the decree had not been performed or attachment should not issue* returnable the 25th day of March, A. D. 1895.

Upon the hearing, it appearing that James Leach, though he had valuable real estate, was so embarrassed financially that he could not raise money to satisfy the decree, the court declined to issue a writ of attachment, and thereupon the solicitors for the complainants moved for a writ of sequestration de bonis propriis.

The question to be decided now is, whether this writ can issue.

I have not been able to find any reported cases in equity, either in this country or in England, that shed much light on this subject. We are, therefore, compelled to fall back upon general principles as the source of light and guidance in the effort to arrive at a wise and sound conclusion.

The decree now sought to be enforced is a decree against James Leach, administrator, de bonis non with the will annexed, of William Allen, deceased. In form it is, therefore, a decree de bonis testatoris, and if there [239]*239were tangible assets in his hands sufficient to respond to its requirements, then process appropriate to the enforcement thereof could alone be employed; but if, by reason of a devastavit committed by the administrator, there are no available assets in his hands, then recourse may be had to him in his individual capacity. Can it, however, be done in the way proposed? Why not?

It certainly cannot be objected to on the ground that the defendant administrator has not had full opportunity to establish his innocence and the consequent absence of personal responsibility, if he could so do. The bill contained a clear statement of the complainants’ ground of complaint, to which he had the right either to make answer or plead. He elected to plead. The result was a decree pro confessa, which was equivalent to a confession of his individual liability. How, in a suit against an executor or administrator, when he has been guilty of neglect or waste, he necessarily appears in a double role, as a defender of himself in both his representative and individual character. If his liability as the representative of the deceased is established, it would be conclusive as to his liability as an individual co-extensive with that as administrator. His liability as an administrator is the exact measure of his liability as an individual. The latter is the concomitant or inevitable result of the former. Liability in either case is ascertained in the same way and by the same degree of proof. The defenses that he may interpose in a suit either against himself as administrator or as an individual, are also the same, and if he fails to make good his defense in a suit against himself as administrator, he will also fail in a suit against himself as an individual when the cause [240]*240of action is the same. Hence, if a decree against an executor or administrator, as such, is sought to be enforced against him by process de bonis propriis, because he has wasted the assets of .his decedent, he cannot complain that he has not had his day in court, for he has had it just as much so as if a suit had been brought against him as an individual, and a decree entered upon an express allegation of devastavit.

Suppose an executor or administrator, in a suit against himself in his representative capacity, sets up the plea of plene administravit, and upon issue joined, it is found against him, his liability to the extent of assets found in his hands is fixed, and if they be not forthcoming upon proper demand made, he must answer out of his own property, and there is no plea that he could plead in this or any other tribunal by which he might escape the effect of such finding.

What is the object of our system of pleading and modes of procedure? It is that all parties may be in court, so that each shall have full opportunity to prepare for trial — to present, in a clear and logical form, fully as possible, all the grounds of defense as well as of action. This being done, the end of pleading and of the preliminary or initial process is served or accomplished. How, if an executor or administrator has had his day in court in both his representative and individual capacity, as has been shown, what good purpose could be served, or how could the ends of justice be better promoted by the institution of another suit or the commencement of a new proceeding with the sole view of fixing his personal responsibility? He could do no more than he has already done. He would be estopped at any stage of its progress [241]*241except as to matters arising subsequent to the entry and enrollment of the decree. He could show in the individual suit only a performance of the decree in whole or in part. An entire performance would be a complete defense, a partial performance would be a defense pro tanto.

In this case, the defendant appeared and permitted a decree pro confessa to be entered against him, thereby admitting all the allegations contained in the bill to be true. His lips are, therefore, closed.

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Related

Perrine v. Pennroad Corp.
168 A. 196 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Del. Ch. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-leach-delch-1895.