Brown v. Forsche

5 N.W. 1011, 43 Mich. 492, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 855
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 5 N.W. 1011 (Brown v. Forsche) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Forsche, 5 N.W. 1011, 43 Mich. 492, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 855 (Mich. 1880).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The record in this case presents the following state of facts:

John Miller, a resident of Washtenaw county, died intestate November 7,1872, leaving a widow and children, and real and personal estate to be administered. April 8, 1873, on petition of one of the children, and after due publication of notice, Jacob Brown the plaintiff in error was duly appointed administrator on the estate of said intestate, and gave bond and took upon himself the trust. On the same day commissioners were appointed by the judge of probate for the county of Washtenaw to examine and adjust the claims against said estate. The commissioners took the oath required by law, and gave the requisite notice for the presentation of claims, and on July 31, 1874, filed their report in the probate court, showing the allowance by them of claims to the amount of $350 and no more.

The estate was duly inventoried by the administrator, and was appraised as follows: real estate, $22,100; personal estate, $2,158. The real estate appears to have been subject to very large encumbrances.

After the time for the presentation of claims to the commissioners had expired, the administrator, having no knowledge or notice of further demands, allowed the widow and children of the intestate to take possession and dispose of the assets belonging to the estate, and before the proceedings hereinafter mentioned had be«n begun, the whole of said assets had been exhausted by the widow and children, in the payment of the claims, and in their own support. The administrator, however, had filed no account, and taken no steps to be discharged from his trust until December 5, 1876, when he applied to the probate court for the settlement of his final account, and January 9th following was assigned by the court for the hearing thereon.

[495]*495The day before this hearing was to take place, namely, January 8, 1877, Ignatz Forsehe presented to the probate court his petition, setting forth that he had a claim of $750 against said estate, and praying that the commission be revived for the purpose of hearing it, or that instead thereof it be heard and allowed by the judge of probate. The prayer of this petition was denied by the probate court, but on appeal to the circuit court, the claim of Forsehe was heard and allowed at the sum of $902.15, with $65.10 costs.

No proceedings were had for the settlement of the administrator’s account on January 9,1877, the day fixed for a hearing thereon, and on May 29, 1878, the probate court made an order reciting that it appeared from the inventory that the personal property of the estate amounted to $2158, and that the claims allowed were $1317.25; and thereupon the administrator was directed to pay said claims within twenty days. As all the claims except that of Forsehe had been previously paid, this order would apply to that claim only. The administrator appealed from the order to the circuit court, assigning various reasons for the appeal; the one chiefly relied upon being that there was no property or money belonging to the estate from which the Forsehe claim could be paid.

In the circuit court the administrator was held to have the affirmative of the issue, and the trial proceeded after the usual course of common-law suits. The facts above recited appeared in proof, and the court gave judgment affirming the order of the probate court. The administrator thereupon brought error.

I. Motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, on' the ground that certiorari was the proper remedy. Holbrook v. Cook, 5 Mich. 225; Conrad v. Button 28 Mich. 365. But we think the case is properly here. The substance of the issue in the circuit court was plene administravit, and the trial proceeded as it might have done on that issue in an original suit in the circuit court.

[496]*496II. The case upon its merits requires a careful examination of the statutory provisions respecting the settlement of estates.

By section 4450 of Compiled Laws, the probate court is required, at the time of granting letters of administration, to make an order allowing to the administrator a time for disposing of the estate, and paying the debts, which in the first instance shall not exceed one year and six months. The next section permits extensions, but not so that the whole time allowed to the original administrator shall exceed four years. It does not appear that there was any extension in this case, and the one year and six months expired October 8, 1874.

By section 4424 of Compiled Laws the probate court is required,- when appointing commissioners for the examination and allowance of claims, to determine the time within which claims shall be presented to them; and this in the first instance shall not exceed eighteen months, but may be extended (§ 4425), but not so that the whole time shall exceed two years. The time in this case was limited to six months. If extended to the extreme limit allowed by law it would have expired April 8, 1875.

By section 4433 of Compiled Laws, it is declared that when a claim is not presented to the commissioners within the time allowed for their action, the claimant shall be forever barred from recovering it, or from setting off the same in any action whatever. Another section nevertheless provides that on the application of a creditor who has failed to present his claim, “if made at any time before the estate is closed,” the judge of probate may revive the commission for the purpose of hearing the claim. Comp. L. § 4426. Or instead of doing this, he ■may himself hear and adjudicate upon the claim, as was done in this instance.

From the foregoing it will appear that long before Forsche presented his claim, or notified the administrator that he had.one, the time had not only expired for the presentation of claims to the commissioners, but for the [497]*497settlement of the estate also. As early as October 8, 1874, the administrator should have paid off all the claims allowed against the estate, and delivered the remaining assets to the widow and next of kin, and obtained his discharge. Had he done so, it is not pretended that any claim could afterwards have been made against him by reason of' a debt owing by the estate but not until afterwards presented and allowed. If the creditor could have any remedy in such a case, he must find it in following the property into the hands of the distributees.

Section 4407 of Compiled Laws provides that “the executor or administrator shall be entitled to the possession of the personal estate of the deceased until assignment or distribution of the same to heirs, legatees, or other parsons entitled thereto, by order of the probate court, or until the estate is finally settled.” This section does not render it imperative that the personal representative should take possession of the personal estate; it only empowers him to do so; and it is not expected that he will disturb the possession of the family except so far as the proper discharge of his duties may require it. Howard v. Patrick 38 Mich. 795.

Under section 4496 of Compiled Laws the judge of probate, after the debts are paid or provided for, may assign the residue of the estate to the persons entitled without awaiting the presentation of a final account by the administrator. There is no room for doubt that such an assignment would protect the administrator as against any claim subsequently presented and allowed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.W. 1011, 43 Mich. 492, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-forsche-mich-1880.