de Paris v. Wilmington Trust Co.

104 A. 691, 30 Del. 178, 7 Boyce 178, 1 A.L.R. 1352, 1918 Del. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 5, 1918
DocketNo. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 104 A. 691 (de Paris v. Wilmington Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
de Paris v. Wilmington Trust Co., 104 A. 691, 30 Del. 178, 7 Boyce 178, 1 A.L.R. 1352, 1918 Del. LEXIS 41 (Del. 1918).

Opinion

The motion was refused,

Heisel, J.,

delivering the following opinion:

The testimony introduced by the plaintiff shows that during the year 1911, Joseph J. Paris, son of the defendant, was the maker of several instruments of writing in the nature of promissory notes and an account current wherein he obligated himself to pay to certain banks in Maracaibo, Venezuela, the several sums of money mentioned in said instruments of writing.

At the same time the plaintiff’s intestate Federico Evaristo Schemel, and the defendant, Isabel M. R. de Paris guaranteed the payment of the sums of money mentioned in the said several instruments of writing in the following language, or language to the same effect:

“The undersigned bind themselves jointly with the grantor to the fulfillment of this obligation under the same terms and conditions above stipulated. Dated as above.”

That under such guaranty and the law of Venezuela, Schemel and Mrs. De Paris, as such joint guarantors, were each liable for the total unpaid balance of each of said unstruments of writing so guaranteed by them; but should either of them be obliged to pay any sum by reason of such guaranty, the other would be liable to the one so paying for one-half of the amount so paid, with interest from the time of such payment.

Said notes and account current being overdue and unpaid by the said Joseph J. Paris, the holders thereof on the sixth of July, 1912, duly and properly notified Schemel to that effect, and demanded that he pay the several amounts due under his contract of guaranty with Mrs. De Paris thereon.

Schemel died intestate on the fifteenth of the same July without having made any payment on said notes or account current, but on the fifth of September following, the estate, or represent[181]*181atives of the estate of Schemel paid to the holders of said notes and account current the sum of 72,426.58 bolivars in money of the United States of Venezuela.

That under the Laws of Venezuela, upon the death of a person intestate no administrator is appointed to administer the estate as is provided under our law, but the estate is represented by those heirs of the intestate who elect to take the inheritance, and administered by them collectively until all the debts of the estate are paid and the estate divided amongst them.

That all the parties heretofore mentioned resided in the United States of Venezuela and the transactions described took place in that country.

That letters of administration on said Schemel’s estate were granted to the Wilmington Trust Company in this state, September eleventh, 1913.

Upon this evidence counsel for defendant moves for a non-suit on two grounds:

First: For reasons fully set out by defendant in her second plea, being the first special plea, to the declaration, and which is briefly, that all the parties to the notes and account current sued upon, being residents of Venezuela and the debts in question contracted in that country, they constitute no portion of Schemel’s estate, rights or credits within the State of Delaware, and therefore the Wilmington Trust Company, as administrator in this State, acquired no claim, right, title or interest in said notes and account current, and had no right to maintain this action. This same question was decided by this Court at an earlier stage of this case upon demurrer and there determined contrary to defendant’s contention, so without repeating here the reasons stated there, we decline to grant the motion on this first ground.

Defendant’s second ground for his motion is that the representatives of Schemel’s estate in Venezuela are the only parties who can properly maintain this action for the reason that the cause of action resulted from, or arose out of, something done by them, after the death of Schemel, and not because of anything done, or contract entered into, by Schemel during his lifetime.

[182]*182In other words that no action could be brought by Schemel’s estate anywhere against this defendant for contribution under the contract of guaranty, until some amount of money had been paid by Schemel in his lifetime or by representatives of his estate after his death.

That the evidence shows no payment by Schemel in his lifetime, but does show payments by representatives of his estate in Venezuela after his death; therefore such representatives only could maintain the action, because the cause of action accrued by reason of the payment of money by them, which conferred upon them, or fixed in them, the exclusive right to maintain the action, either in their representative capacity or personally; and there being no privity between representatives of estates in different states or countries, the right to maintain this action could not pass from them to the plaintiff, the administrator of Schemel in this state. Citing among others the following authorities: Story on Conflict of Laws 518, 522; 8 A. & E. Ency. of Laws, 427; 19 A. & E. Ency of Law, 156 Stacy v. Thrasher, 6 How. 44, 58, 12 L. Ed. 337; 18 Cyc. 874, 878; McCord v. Thompson, 92 Ind. 565; Talmage v. Chapel, 16 Mass. 71.

These authorities as we view the evidence in this case do not touch the point. It is not a question of privity between administrators of an estate in different jurisdictions, or what authority if any, one administrator may acquire by reason of some act of another administrator in a foreign jurisdiction, but the question is the right of an administrator to enforce the provisions of a contract made by his intestate.

When Schemel and Mrs. Paris signed the obligations in evidence, as joint guarantors, they agreed that should the maker of those obligations not satisfy them according to their provisions, the guarantors would; and they further agreed, under the provisions of the law of Venezuela, that should either be obliged to pay all or any part of said obligations, the other or his heirs or representatives, would repay to the one so paying, one-half the amount paid, with interest from the date of such payment.

[183]*183That, we think, was the cause of action as between Schemel or his estate and Mrs. Paris.

True the right of Schemel or his estate to bring an action against the defendant was not complete until Schemel or his estate had paid out some amount as a consequence of his joint guarantyship with defendant. His obligation to pay, however, was complete before his death, because the maker of the notes and account guaranteed had failed to pay, and demand had been made upon Schemel; so that the representatives of his estate in Venezuela in discharging this obligation, did nothing more than carry out the provisions of the contract made by Schemel with the defendant. This we think c'ould have no other effect upon the right of his administrator in this jurisdiction to maintain an action upon such contracts, than if Schemel had paid it himself.

Whereupon the following was stated upon the record:

Mr. Morris:—I understand it is admitted by Mr. Gray that the Wilmington Trust Company did not make payment of these obligations and account current to the payees or obligees of those promissory notes or account current.

Mr. Gray:—Yes, they did not actually make any payments.

Mr. Morris:—Is it also admitted that Isabel M. R.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 691, 30 Del. 178, 7 Boyce 178, 1 A.L.R. 1352, 1918 Del. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-paris-v-wilmington-trust-co-del-1918.