Bidwell v. Beckwith

85 A. 682, 86 Conn. 462, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 85 A. 682 (Bidwell v. Beckwith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bidwell v. Beckwith, 85 A. 682, 86 Conn. 462, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 42 (Colo. 1913).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The assessments were lawfully ordered by the Minnesota court and constituted lawful claims against the estate of Mrs. Bidwell, enforceable so far as properly presented. The claim originating in the first assessment, ordered in 1902, against her estate, accrued within the time limited for presenting claims against the estate, and was not presented within that *468 period to the executor, and so the receiver became “forever debarred of his demand against said estate^” General Statutes, § 326.

The claim originating in the second assessment, ordered in 1907, was duly presented against the estate by the receiver, and is a valid obligation of the estate unless, as the defendant insists, Mrs. Bidwell’s coverture prior to April 20th, 1877, prevents its collection. Mrs. Bidwell’s status, as a woman married in 1872, differed largely from the status attached to that relationship by the common law. Her rights and obligations were in part the same as now expressed in General Statutes, § 591. She was liable upon her contract made for the benefit of herself, or her separate or joint estate. Her acceptance of the bequest of this stock created a contract between her and the company. By force of this contractual relation she became, on the one hand, a joint owner with the other stockholders of the company, and entitled to share in its dividends, when declared, and, on the other hand, she became liable for any part of her share of the capital stock unpaid, upon the faith of which the company conducted its business, and also for the. amount of an assessment thereafter arising through an obligation created by law existent at the date of her acquisition of stock imposing upon stockholders a liability equal to the par value of their holding. Bernheimer v. Converse, 206 U. S. 516, 27 Sup. Ct. Rep. 755. Her acquisition of the stock was for the benefit of herself and her estate. She was ready to share its benefits; her estate must bear its burdens. The claims arising out of these assessments were obligations springing from her contract and created by law, and, so far as duly presented against her estate, were valid claims. Contracts of a woman married prior to 1877, for the benefit of herself, her family, or her estate, have been frequently sustained by us, *469 and these decisions give good ground for holding these claims obligations of her estate. Shelton v. Hadlock, 62 Conn. 143, 154, 25 Atl. 483; Corr’s Appeal, 62 Conn. 403, 409, 26 Atl. 478; Williams v. King, 43 Conn. 569.

Mr. Bidwell had, by law, the life use of all of his wife’s personal property, including these shares of stock. The certificate of stock always remained in her name; her husband never took possession of it nor saw it, thus indicating that he had not, in her lifetime, secured its possession or the right to its income. As executor he never caused it to be inventoried, and never accounted for it; it was in fact worthless, and he, as executor, treated it as such. He administered the property as though it had been held to her sole and separate use. We have not before us the terms of the bequest to Mrs. Bidwell, and do not know whether it was made to her sole and separate use or not. The disposition made by her qf this stock, and the failure of the husband to assert his statutory right to its possession and income, and the manner in which he administered his trust, unmistakably indicate that she and he regarded and treated these shares of stock as though owned by a feme sole. As a consequence he must be deemed, in law, to have divested himself of his marital statutory rights over this stock, and to have invested her with it as her sole and separate estate. Coe’s Appeal, 64 Conn. 352, 357, 30 Atl. 140; State v. French, 60 Conn. 478, 481, 23 Atl. 153; Williams v. King, 43 Conn. 569, 574. The trial judge in his memorandum says: “But this property was clearly held by her as her own.” Obviously he draws his conclusion from the course of conduct of the parties in interest toward these shares of stock, and not from the terms of the bequest to Mrs. Bidwell, as the defendant seems to think.

If coverture had been a defense to these claims and available to the defendant in spite of his failure *470 to plead it, the fact that the. Court of Probate had, upon due application, after actual notice to the defendant, authorized their settlement, and from its order made within its jurisdiction no appeal had been taken, would preclude the defendant from now making this defense. The claims were within the class of “doubtful or disputed claims ” (General Statutes, § 347), and the court had authority to order their compromise. The defendant cannot now attack the jurisdiction of the Court of Probate, or question the validity of the claims ordered compromised. Johnson's Appeal, 71 Conn. 590, 595, 42 Atl. 662; Seymour v. Seymour, 22 Conn. 272, 280.

When the court has found that an executor has, without knowledge of an existing claim, distributed a testate estate, or the parties in interest have divided it among themselves in accordance with law, and thereafter an accruing claim is presented against the estate, at least two courses are open to the executor by which to secure his release from this claim. He may, after due defense, await judgment and then compel the beneficiaries to repay into the estate a sufficient amount to satisfy the judgment, or he may compel the beneficiaries to repay a sufficient amount to satisfy the claim and his own legitimate expenses in its settlement. Davis v. Vansand, 45 Conn. 600, 604; Mathewson v. Wakelee, 83 Conn. 75, 75 Atl. 93.

Conceding these positions, the defendant asserts that the trial court erred in holding the transaction between him and the plaintiff, as to the disposition of this estate, to be a distribution and not a sale, and hence did not relieve the defendant from liability for after-accruing claims arising out of these assessments. Our statutes, §§ 310, 395, furnish the necessary legal machinery for making a distribution in testate and intestate estates when the law requires it and the *471 property is other than cash and there be more than one beneficiary, and they also provide the machinery for a mutual division between the parties. These methods, if followed, secure a legal division and protect the administrator or executor against the invalidity and inequity of their making. If the parties make a division which they approve of, and the executor or administrator is willing to take the risk of having the property in his hands so divided, it is as valid as one made under the sanction of the statute. The aim of the law has been attained and a fair division had. Merwin’s Appeal, 75 Conn. 33, 40, 52 Atl. 484; Dickinson’s Appeal, 54 Conn. 224, 6 Atl. 422.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 682, 86 Conn. 462, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bidwell-v-beckwith-conn-1913.