Burdyne v. Mackey

7 Mo. 374
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 Mo. 374 (Burdyne v. Mackey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burdyne v. Mackey, 7 Mo. 374 (Mo. 1842).

Opinion

'Opinion of the Court, delivered by

Scott, Judge.

J. Mackey as executrix of James Mackey, deceased, instituted an action of ejectment in the St. Charles circuit court against Amos Burdyne, who, it was proved, was in possession of the tract of land in controversy. Mackey obtained a verdict and judgment below, and the cause is brought here by writ of error. James Mackey, it seems, claimed a large tract of land, partly situated in St. Charles county, by virtue of a Spanish concession and survey, of which the lot in dispute is a parcel. This claim was presented to the first board of commissioners appointed to determine the validity of French and Spanish claims to land in the then District of Jjouisiana, now State of Missouri, and was rejected ; after-wards it was reported for confirmation by the board of commissioners cieated by an act of congress of July 9th, 1832, and was confirmed by a law of the 4th July, 1836, to James Mackey, or his legal representatives. During the interval between the first rejection and the ultimate confirmation of this claim in 1822, James Mackey departed this life, leaving a will, dated 16 th March, 1822, by which, after some special bequests, he devised his lands to his wife, J. Mackey, the defendant in error, and his seven children, to be equally divided among them ; and conferred on his wife a control of the land devised to his children, until they should marry, or attain the age of twenty-one years. Under the will, letters [375]*375testamentary were granted to J. Mackey and Antoine Sou-lard, the executrix and executor named in the same. suit was commenced by J. Mackey, as surviving executrix of the last will and testament of James Mackey, Burdyne, the defendant, attempted to show an outstanding title in others, by the production of evidence of a grant of the same land to one Clamorgan, by lieutenant governor Trudeau; and also relied on the length of his possession, which commenced, as it appears from the evidence,intheyear 1816.

The principal question arising from the facts here set forth and presented to the court for its determination, is, whether an executor or administrator, as such, can maintain an action of ejectment for lands of which his testator or intestatedied siezed: or, in other words, whether, upon the death of an individual, the lands of which he was seized will descend to his executor or administrator, or to his heirs? It is not pretended that such a claim for the executor or administrator has any countenance from the common law. By that law the executor or administrator was only entrusted with the personal estate. This included leases of terms of years : and for them he might maintain an ejectment: But the executor or administrator, as such, had nothing to do with freehold estates. This right must be derived from statute, and it must be supposed thatsuch an innovation, so much at war with the opinion of all those instructed in the science of the common law, the introduction of which into our code must unsettle and disturb so many principles heretofore established, should derive its existence, not from mere implication,but from express enactment. Reference has been made to laws which regulate the administration of the real estate of a deceased person, at a period prior to the introduction of the common law into this State, in order to lay some foundation for the right of the executor or administrator to maintain an ejectment. But it must be obvious, that since the introduction of the common law, an event which took place jn the year 1816, this question must be determined by reference to its principles, and the statute laws now in force, and not by any laws, usages, or customs which may have prevailed here before that time. The phraseology of the sta[376]*376tute regulating descents, so far from favoring this right,', á rather against it, as it casts the descent of the lands on the heirs, subject to the payment of debts. The provisions of the administration law, authorising the administrator to take possession of the title papers relating to lands, and requiring him to inventory the real estate, and give a bond, whose penalty shall cover both the personal and real estate, are not sufficient to warrant the implication that the title to the land vests in him. The lands of a deceased person may, under certain circumstances, be sold by the administrator or executor ; hence, it would seem proper that his bond should cover the land, as the proceeds arising from the sale of it would go into his hands. The authority of the executor or administrator to lease the lands of the testator or intestate, under the direction of the county court, and to repair buildings, fences, &c., has been mostly relied on by the appellee, as sustaining her position. But is not the argument in favor of this power derived from these provisions, more than countervailed by the 11th section of the act concerning judgments and decrees, which declares that when the plaintiff in a judgment shall die, if it concern the personalty, it shall survive to his executors or administrators : if real estate, then it shall survive to his heirs or devisees. In this instance, the legislature seems to have had this matter before it, and its language is equivalent to an express declaration that on the death of an individual, his lands descend to his heirs, or pass to his devisees, and not to his executors or administrators. Again, has not the legislature in view the distinction between real and personal actions, in the second section of the fifth article of the act regulating practice atlaw, and does it not contemplate that the former shall be carried on by the heirs and devisees, and the latter by the executors and administrators, when it is declared that if “there is but one plaintiff in an action, and he shall die before final judgment, such action shall not be thereby abated, if it might be originally prosecuted by the heirs, devisees, executors, or administrators of such plaintiff, but such of them as might prosecute the same cause of action originally, may continue such suit upon the order of the court, substituting them as [377]*377plaintiffs therein?” It has well been asked, what interest in the land does the executor or administrator take? Is it freehold estate, or is it less than a freehold? When does it determine? Is there any rule to ascertain its precise duration,or is it dependant on the varying circumstances of the administration of each individual’s estate? We cannot but think so great an encroachment on the rules of the common law, must have an express legislative sanction, or an acquiescence in it must be rendered necessary, in order to give effect to plain and obvious legal enactments. No such necessity is conceived to exist, and it may well be questioned J . . . whether the convenience of prosecuting an action of ejectment in the name of the executor or administrator, is'so rnuch superior to the accustomed mode, as to the objection to the introduction of a principle in our jurisprudence, whose consequences cannot be foreseen.

An executor ^ ™aUCh, cannot main-tam an action of ejectment his tes-seized. ^ an ministvator ativecapacity, cover by vir. ayy“-dividual inter-coB_ troversy.

From the view we have taken of this subject, we do not deem it necessary to determine the question whether the lands confirmed to Mackey, or his legal representatives, by the act of July 4th, 1836, passed by his will, which was executed in 1822. Even admitting that the land did pass, yet as the appellee in her declaration has claimed the land as executrix,

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mo. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burdyne-v-mackey-mo-1842.