Chatfield v. Faran

1 Disney (Ohio) 488
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedNovember 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 488 (Chatfield v. Faran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatfield v. Faran, 1 Disney (Ohio) 488 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

Petition sets forth that in 1848, James II. Ewing was appointed administrator of the estate of Isaac L. Clark, deceased, and entered into .bond, with Spader & ■Carey as his sureties in the sum of $8,000, for the faithful .performance of his duties as such; that said Ewing, as -such administrator, received assets belonging to said estate, [489]*489amounting to $4,750.79 in all, of which he only accounted for $3.978.84, leaving a balance in his hands unadministered, of $771.95, and interest since January 1, 1847; that said Ewing afterward died, and said Earan was appointed administrator on his estate; that on November 22,1856, plaintiff was .appointed administrator de bonis non, of the estate of said Clark, deceased, and has demanded from said Earan, as administrator aforesaid, the said balance of assets unadministered by said Ewing, which said Earan refuses to pay over; wherefore plaintiff claims judgment therefor against the sureties and said Earan, jointly.

To this petition defendants have demurred:

1. Because plaintiff has no capacity or right to sue.

2. Because of a misjoinder of defendants.

3. Because this court has no jurisdiction of the cause of action.

I. As to the right of plaintiff to sue.

At the time when this bond was executed, there was no provision of law authorizing an administrator de bonis non to bring an action on the bond of a deceased administrator, to recover unadministered assets which had come into his hands; and there was no such right at common law; 20 Ohio, 480, Blizzard v. Filler, et al. Because an administrator represents only the decedent himself, and is only authorized to administer upon such of his goods as have not been previously administered by some other representative of the estate. "Whatever right, therefore, the plaintiff may have, is dependent upon subsequent legislation. That legislation took place in 1854, when it was enacted: “That in all cases where the powers of an executor or administrator heretofore or hereafter appointed under any law of this State, have ceased, by death, removal, resignation, or in any other manner, any succeeding administrator, or co-executor, or co-administrator may maintain an action on the bond of such executor or administrator whose powers have ceased, against any of the obligors thereof, or their legal representatives, for any breach of the conditions of said bond;” 52 O. L. 31. [490]*490The terms of this law clearly embrace the case before us, and are decisive of the plaintiff’s right to sue, if the law can be constitutionally so applied. It is objected by the demurrants, that this law does not merely give the plaintiff a remedy to enforce a right previously existing, but that it creates a right and title in the plaintiff where none existed before, and is obnoxious to that provision of the constitution which declares that “ the general assembly shall have no power to pass retroactive laws, or laws impairing the obligation of contracts.”

Without deciding the important and difficult question, whether, as claimed by plaintiff’s counsel, and as has been decided with regard to a similar clause of the constitution of a sister State, 1 Peck Tenn. 17, Townsend v. Townsend, the term retroactive laws, must be taken in connection with the other clause of the section, and read as though it were written, “retroactive laws impairing the validity of contracts,” or whether it was intended to prevent retroactive legislation generally, so as to preclude the legislature, in any event, from cutting off' an existing right, or vesting it in another person, it certainly can not be successfully maintained that either the spirit or the letter of such prohibition applies to a case like the present. The condition of the bond here is, that Ewing will faithfully perform his duties as such administrator; i. e., such duties as may be devolved upon him by law. Among the duties thus declared are: “that he shall administer, according to law, all the moneys, goods, chattels, rights, and credits of the deceased, and the proceeds of all his real estate, that may be sold for the payment of his debts, which shall at any time come into his possession, or the possession of another for him, and upon the settlement of his accounts, shall pay any balance remaining in his hands to such persons as the court or law shall direct.” The goods, moneys, and other property of the deceased, thus taken possession of, are to be administered according to law, or in other words, the property and estate is held by him to be disposed of to such uses as the law may direct; this is what is termed [491]*491administration. If called upon to render up the trust entirely, and he does so, he has properly administered the estate according to his obligation; and if he refuse, it would be a breach of his official duty. This is but a new appointment of the trust, or direction given to it not only perfectly consistent with the original obligation, but in direct pursuance of it. So if he dies, leaving the estate unadministered, it remains in the hands of his representatives, subject to the same duties and trusts. They can acquire no better right to it than he had while living, and the law which assumes to appoint a successor and clothe him with a right to take possession, divests the representative of no legal right, and as to him, is not retroactive, but prospective; while it confers not a past, but a present right only, upon the appointee. It seems to me, therefore, that the present law is nothing more than a new appointment of the trust, which the legislature had a right to make, and is in entire harmony with the condition of the bond, and in no sense obnoxious as a retroactive exercise of power.

II. The second ground of demurrer is, that the defendants are improperly joined as parties.

It is undoubtedly true that before the adoption of the code, a joint action at law could not be sustained against surviving co-obligors and the representatives of a deceased obligor, because there could not be a joint judgment and execution, there being no personal liability on the part of the representative; nor would equity interfere against the representatives until the survivors had been prosecuted, at law to insolvency. Because, otherwise, the remedy at law against the survivors was complete. But no such objection exists under the code to a joinder of parties as existed in former actions at law. It is now within the power of the court to render such judgment, whether joint or several, or both, against the parties, as the exigency of the case requires, and to enforce such j udgment, by execution. The question which determines the propriety of a joinder of parties in any case is, whether they have a common or several interest [492]*492in the controversy, Code, §35, or whether the presence of either of them be necessary to a complete settlement of all the questions involved in the action. Now, undoubtedly, the administrator of Ewing has an interest in the controversy in this case, since the estate of Ewing must be ultimately liable to pay the judgment rendered, and his co-defendants are interested in having him brought in as a party, in order that their own rights may be vindicated.

III. The third ground of demurrer is, “ the want of jurisdiction in the court over the subject of the action.”

To my mind this objection to the action is fatal.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatfield-v-faran-ohsuperctcinci-1857.