Choate v. Jacobs

136 Mass. 297, 1884 Mass. LEXIS 89
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 136 Mass. 297 (Choate v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Choate v. Jacobs, 136 Mass. 297, 1884 Mass. LEXIS 89 (Mass. 1884).

Opinion

Devens, J.

The defendant Clark, the surety on the bond in suit, objects, in regard to both these actions, that, when the order of the Probate Court was made, authorizing the bringing these suits upon the bond, the whole matter had been transferred to this court; and that, although a decision had been rendered affirming the decree of the Probate Court reforming the account of the administrator, and remitting the case for further proceedings, the certificate thereof not having then been filed in the Probate Court, it had at the time no jurisdiction to make such an order. The decree of the Probate Court appealed from having been affirmed, it was in full force when the order was granted, even if the proper certification of such affirmance had not been made. It was competent to supply this deficiency in the records of the Probate Court- at any time, so as to show thereby that the original decree had been affirmed when the order was made. Again, as the administrator has no such interest in the matter of granting leave to bring an action on the bond as to give a right to resist the application therefor, or to be heard thereon, it follows that, when a suit has been brought thereon, neither he nor his sureties are entitled to contest the validity of the order of the court authorizing it. Fay v. Rogers, 2 Gray, 175. Richardsons v. Oakman, 15 Gray, 57. Richardson v. Hazelton, 101 Mass. 108. Bennett v. Woodman, 116 Mass. 518. The ruling requested, that the order of the judge of probate permitting the suits to be brought was unauthorized, was therefore rightfully refused.

The decree of the Probate Court making an allowance to the widow and ordering the same to be paid, and the failure and refusal of the administrator to pay according to the decree, was a breach of his bond for which his sureties were liable. Pub. Sts. c. 135, § 2. Nor were the sureties entitled to impeach the decree collaterally, and to show that the settlement of the accounts of the administrator, as made by the Probate Court, was erroneous. Their obligation is that their principal shall pay the moneys in his hands in such manner and to such persons as the Probate Court shall direct. His failure to make payment according to such decree is the breach of the administration [299]*299bond. White v. Weatherbee, 126 Mass. 450. The evidence of gross negligence on the. part of their principal, offered by the sureties as tending to show that the decree should not have been made, was therefore incompetent.

In the second action, without reference to the question whether the surety on the bond would be liable for the rents of the real estate received by the administrator, it was correctly ruled that the action could not be maintained. If the executor or administrator uses or occupies any part of the real estate, he is to account for the same as ordered by the Probate Court, and provision is made for determining the amount thus to be accounted for by him. Pub. Sts. c. 144, § 5. Rents received by the ad ministrator are governed by the same rule. Brooks v. Jackson, 125 Mass. 307. He is to account for them to the heirs and devisees only, unless they, either expressly, or by implication from assenting to his accounts in which he has charged himself with rents as part of the general assets, have agreed that they shall be applied to the payment of legacies and expenses of administration, in which case he is chargeable accordingly. Stearns v. Stearns, 1 Pick. 157. Newcomb v. Stebbins, 9 Met. 540, 544. Palmer v. Palmer, 13 Gray, 326, 328. Alden v. Stebbins, 99 Mass. 616. Almy v. Crapo, 100 Mass. 218. Towle v. Swasey, 106 Mass. 100. Choate v. Arrington, 116 Mass. 552. Brooks v. Jackson, ubi supra. As therefore the administrator might have received these rents with the consent of the heirs, and for the benefit of the parties interested in the estate, that he might thereby pay the debts of the intestate, a decree was necessary to determine whether the administrator was to account for them to heirs only, as well as to determine their rights inter sese. Until this decree was made, the failure to pay the same to the heirs on demand did not make a breach of the bond.

In conformity with the terms of the report, judgment in the first case is to be entered for the penal sum in the bond; and, in the second, the plaintiff is to become nonsuit.

Judgments accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 Mass. 297, 1884 Mass. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choate-v-jacobs-mass-1884.