Crawford v. Commonwealth

1 Watts 480
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Watts 480 (Crawford v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Commonwealth, 1 Watts 480 (Pa. 1833).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

On the trial of this cause in the court below, several bills of exception were taken by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, to the opinion of the court, admitting evidence offered by the defendant in error and objected to by the plaintiffs in error, which have been assigned among other matters for error here. We however perceive no error in them. The court below was so obviously right in admitting the evidence, that it requires no reasoning in order to make it more palpable,

The other matters involved in the errors assigned, which seem to be worthy of notice, may be reduced to two questions.

First. Are the commonwealth and her informer entitled to maintain a writ of scire facias upon a judgment had upon an administration bond, to recover the value of the personal estate of the intestate, which came into the hands and possession of the administrators, and to which she has a right by escheat?

Second. If she has a right to maintain a writ of scire facias for such purpose, can she do it without first having her right established by means of an inquest; and if after that, a bond and security be given to her by the administrators to traverse the inquisition, can she maintain such suit before that the inquisition shall be confirmed?

In respect to the first question, it may be premised, that it has never been questioned, but that the next of kin to the intestate might maintain an action on the administration bond against the administrators and their sureties, to recover their respective proportions or purparts of the intestate’s personal estate, which came into the hands of the administrators. Although it was at one time held in England that the creditors of the intestate could not sue and recover upon the administration bond given there, of which ours is a copy, even in the case of a devastavit by the administrator; yet it was ever considered, that the bond was given especially, and at this time exclusively for the benefit of the next of kin or those entitled to have the personal estate of the intestate, which remained after paying his debts and the expenses of the administration. It has however been adjudged since, that in England, as also in this state, that a creditor, in case [484]*484of his being unable to collect his debt of the administrator on account of his having committed a devastavit, may have an action upon the administration bond against the sureties by way of redress. This being the settled law, where there are next of kin, it must be obvious to every one, that where there are none, that the commonwealth comes in lieu of them; and why shall she not be entitled to the same security and the same remedy, having asserted and established her right to the estate by escheat, in the manner prescribed by law, that are given to the next of kin ? I must confess that I am unable to perceive any. The commonwealth in such case may well be considered the ultima hares, and as succeeding to all the rights and all the remedies of the heirs or next of kin in ordinary cases. The application of this principle may perhaps appear more striking in the case of a bastard’s dying intestate, than that of any' other. ‘ According to the common law, which remains unaltered in this particular by statute, he has no heir or next of kin. He is nullius filius, and in England the king is considered to be his heir, ultimus hares. By the civil law a bastard was deemed filius populi; aird here I see no good reason why he may not be denominated filius reipublica, and upon his dying intestate, the commonwealth be looked upon as his next of kin, under our acts of assembly regulating and declaring in what cases the estates of intestates shall escheat. But it has been argued that as the act of the 29th of September. 1787, entitled “an act to declare and regulate escheats,” directs, by the fourth section thereof, a course of proceeding against the party himself directly, in. whose hands or possession the estate shall be found, that that is the only remedy which the commonwealth has or can resort to. This section declares that immediately “upon the finding of the inquisition, the escheator-general [now the auditor-general or his deputy, by the act of the 2d of April 1821, sec. 1] shall issue his writ, directed to the sheriff or coroner of the county, as the case shall require, commanding him to seize, attach and secure the goods and chattels so found to be escheated as aforesaid, in whose hands soever the same shall be found; or if it be found by the said inquest that the said goods and chatters be eloigned, then to seize and attach so much of the goods and chattels of the person or persons who shall have eloigned the same, as shall be equal in value to the goods and chattels which he eloigned, unless the person or persons in whose hands or possession such goods and chattels be found, give bond to the commonwealth, with sufficient security, to appear at the next supreme court [but, since the act of the 2d of April 1821, at the next court of common pleas] thereafter, to traverse the said inquisition, and likewise, in case the same be confirmed, to render to the commonwealth the same goods and chattels found to be in his or her hands; which writ, so to be issued, shall be duly returned to the escheator [now auditor] general, together with an inventory and appraisement of the goods and chattels, if any, which he seized and attached by virtue thereof; and the said sheriff or coroner shall there[485]*485upon sell the same goods and chattels at public auction, after ten days public notice of such sale, and shall, without delay, pay over the moneys therefrom arising, to the treasurer of the commonwealth, &c.” In answer to this, it is sufficient to observe, that although a very summary remedy is given by this act to the commonwealth to obtain possession of the personal estate of which the intestate died possessed, or otherwise an adequate compensation for it in case it should be eloigned, yet there are no words in the act which seem to indicate the slightest intention, upon the part of the legislature, to confine the commonwealth to that course of proceeding alone, or to prevent her from pursuing any other that another party interested in the estate, and having aright to it, would be entitled to select and adopt. The commonwealth being once invested with the right to the estate, the law will afford her, as incident to such right, every remedy provided generally for the recovery of it; whether it be a remedy existing at common law, or be given by statute; and the remedy furnished to the commonwealth in this particular case by the act of assembly, must be considered cumulative, which she may pursue, in proper cases, as often as it is likely to prove effectual, at pleasure.

I come now to the consideration of the second question. It appears to me, that wherever the commonwealth intends to assert her right by escheat to the estate of an intestate, that it must be done by means of an inquest, as directed by the acts of 1787 and 1821 already referred to, and in part recited; and that until her right shall be established by the report of the inquest in her favour, she can maintain no action, nor cause any writ to be issued, for the recovery of the possession of the property.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Naile
88 Pa. 429 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1879)
In re the Inquisition of escheat of the estate of Desilver
5 Rawle 111 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1835)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Watts 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-commonwealth-pa-1833.