Dickerson v. Robinson

6 N.J.L. 237
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1822
StatusPublished

This text of 6 N.J.L. 237 (Dickerson v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerson v. Robinson, 6 N.J.L. 237 (N.J. 1822).

Opinion

Kirkpatrick, C. J.

This is a case settled by the parties, and has been twice argued. The facts stated are these, that is to say :

1. Nov. 3, 1807, Ann Robinson and Henry Freas, having been appointed administrators of Samuel Robinson, deceased, together with Robert Van Mater and Howell Powell, as their sureties, executed this bond to the Ordinary in the penal sum of ten thousand dollars, conditioned for .the due administration of the estate in the usual form.

2. March 11, 1807, Samuel Robinson, the intestate, and Joseph Robinson, had give their joint and several bond to Ebenezer Gaskill and John Jones, in the penalty of one thousand dollars, conditioned for the payment of five hundred dollars, with interest.

3. In December term, 1819, Ann Robinson and Henry Freas made a settlement of their accounts, as administrators, in the Orphans’ Court of the county of Salem, upon which there was found in their hands, the sum of $2,378.59.

4. In March term, 1812, Henry Freas settled his separate account of the said administration in the same court, upon which it was found that there was due to him from the said estate, the sum of $440.19. It is supposed this is his account of the balance found' in the hands of the administrators on the settlement of 1807.

5. In September term, 1815, John Jones, who had survived Ezekiel Gaskill, having first demanded the payment of his bond from the said administrators, and the same having been refused, and having thereupon prosecuted his suit for the recovery thereof, obtained a judgment in the same court against the said Ann Robinson and Henry Freas, as administrators as aforesaid, for the sum of $382.93. This judgment was obtained and entered in this wise, that is to say, the action was commenced by summons, upon which, Henry Freas, was returned summoned, and Ann Robinson, non est inventus. Henry Freas pleaded separately for himself, plene administravit, and by the jury it was found for him, and the [239]*239sum duo to the plaintiff upon his bond, was found to be $382.93, upon which -judgment was entered against him, Freas, of goods quanclo aoeiderint, and against Ann Robinson, who had neither been summoned nor appeared, of the goods of the intestate si, et si non tune, $e., the costs of her own proper goods. Execution was duly issued upon this judgment against Ann Robinson, and returned nvlla, §e.

6. Then this action is brought by Jones, by the permission of the Ordinary, upon the administration bond, to recover the amount of this judgment; and the only breach assigned, to which the facts admitted have any relation, is, that the said administrators have not paid the said judgment.

Upon this case I observe, that the course of proceeding has been altogether misconceived, for

1. In the first place, though it is well settled that co-exccutors are not liable for the waste of each other, and that, therefore, each may plead separately and specially to shew this matter and to exonerate himself, yet it is not so with co-administrators; their power is joint only, and not joint and several, like that of co-executors ; they must act jointly, they must sue and be sued jointly, they must appear and plead jointly; or if one only be summoned, and the other returned non est inventus, he that is summoned may, and indeed must, by statute, plead for both, but the plea must be joint, and, therefore, the judgment 'for or against them, must be their joint capacity. The waste of one is the waste of all, so far at least as relates to creditors and next of kin ; their remedies against one another is a different thing.

It has been insisted, with some degree of zeal, in the argument, that though this may be the ancient principle contained in the books, yet that principle is altered by our act of March 2, 1795, entitled “ an act concerning executors, and the administration and distribution of intestate’s estates.” In the eighth section of that act it is said, “ that all administrators, of whatever kind or description they may be, shall have actions to recover, as executors, the debts due to the [240]*240person deceased, and shall answer to others, to whom, such deceased person was. holden or bound, in the same manner as executors shall answer, and shall be accountable, as executors be in case of testament, as well of the time past as of the time to come.” And it is insisted, that this -section places administrators upon the same footing as executors, as to their appearing and pleading severally, and having several judgments against them. But I incline to think this is a total misapprehension of the true intent of that section.

It is well known that the office of administrator, as it is now understood, did not exist in the ancient common law. It was introduced by the 31 Edward III. which makes it obligatory upon the ordinary to depute the next and most lawful friends of the deceased to' administer his goods, and in order to enable them to do so, gives them the same actions as executors have, and makes them accountable as executors are. Without this last provision in their favor, the administrators could neither have sued nor been sued touching the intestate’s estate; for, as we are told, all the actions which an. administrator can have are given by statute, for the common law took no notice of administrators. How the section of our act under consideration, is intended merely to supply the place of that ancient statute in this respect, and is expressed in nearly the same words. But, unless all lawyers, from the time of Edward III. down till this day, have been mistaken, the statute of Edward never intended to enable administrators to appear and plead severally and to have several judgments-against them. And by all right rules of reason, as our act is made to supply the place of that statute, and nothing more, it ought to have the same construction. It'introduces no new law; it changes no ancient principles. It may fairly be assumed, therefore, that there is nothing in this topic of the plaintiff’s argument. The sixth section of the same act, which is also pressed into the service of this argument, says, that in actions against-divers executors, they shall all be considered as one person [241]*241representing the testator, and that such as shall be summoned, &c., shall answer the plaintiff, and, if judgment be for him, it shall be against those summoned, and also against all the others, of the goods of the testator, as well as if they had been summoned and appeared.” This is but a re-enactment, in substance, of the 9 Edward III. on that subject; and though it be extended to administrators by the section wo have considered, yet it does not at all affect this case; for it is readily admitted, that if Ereas had put in a joint plea, as well he might, or even suffered judgment to pass by default, that judgment might, and indeed must, have been against both himself and his co-administrator. But the question here is. not, whether, upon one being summoned, judgment can be entered against both? but, whether they can plead severally, and have several j udgments; and I think they certainly cannot. I do not now speak of costs.

2. In the second place, if co-administrators like co-executors, could plead separately and specially, each for himself, and one should be returned summoned, and the other non est inventus,

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.J.L. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-v-robinson-nj-1822.