Dillaby v. Wilcox

13 L.R.A. 643, 22 A. 491, 60 Conn. 71, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 19, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 L.R.A. 643 (Dillaby v. Wilcox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillaby v. Wilcox, 13 L.R.A. 643, 22 A. 491, 60 Conn. 71, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 11 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

Seymouk, J.

The plaintiff in this ease was collector of taxes for the town, city and central school district of Norwich, and had in his hands warrants for the collection of taxes assessed in favor of each of them upon property of one Gordon Wilcox. The defendant and her mother were the administrators of the estate of William Wilcox, deceased, *74 and, as such, held a mortgage on certain personal property of Gordon Wilcox, consisting of printing presses and material in the possession of and used by him in Norwich..

The plaintiff was unable to procure payment of the taxes from Gordon Wilcox, and applied to the defendant for the payment thereof, and threatened to levy upon said mortgaged property unless they were paid. The defendant promised the plaintiff that if he would forbéar to levy upon the property she would pay the taxes as soon as the property should be sold under the judgment of foreclosure which she and her mother, as administrators aforesaid, had obtained upon the mortgage. The plaintiff, in consideration of this promise of the defendant, promised to forbear, and did forbear to levy upon the property, and the same was sold under the judgment of foreclosure and was bid in for the defendant.

The defendant, after the sale, refused to pay the amount of the taxes to the plaintiff and they have not been paid.

The suit, it will be observed, is against Mrs. Wilcox personally. No pleadings subsequent to the complaint appear to have been filed, but the finding shows that the defendant denied that she made the promise upon which the action was brought. She also claimed that the promise declared on was within the statute of frauds, and, not being in writing, no recovery could be had upon it; and further that there was no consideration for the promise; and asked the court so to rule; but the court refused so to do and rendered judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals.

Was the promise, which the court finds was made, within the statute of frauds ?

The statute provides that “ no civil action shall be maintained upon any agreement whereby to charge any executor or administrator upon a special promise to answer damages out of his own estate, or against any person upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another, * * * unless such agreement or some memorandum thereof be made in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or his agent.” General Statutes, § 1366.

*75 The first clause has reference to promises by an executor • or administrator to answer out of his own estate for a claim against his decedent — some liability resting upon the executor or administrator strictly in his representative character and which, but for the promise, he would have been liable to discharge only in due course of the administration of the estate. To change the expression — this clause of the statute covers a special promise made by the executor or administrator to pay, out of his own estate, what, (being the legal representative of the party originally liable) he is already, in that representative capacity, under a liability to pay to the extent of the property which has come into his hands.

“ The particular object of this provision,” says a recent writer upon the statute, “ was evidently to guard executors and administrators against being held to a personal liability to pay debts, legacies or distributive shares in consequence of a wilful or mistaken perversion of expressions of encouragement which they may have used in conversation with claimants and which were not justified by the ultimate result of administration of the assets in their hands.” Throop’s Treatise on the Validity of Verbal Agreements, p. 87. However that may be, the suggestion illustrates the nature of the promise referred to in this section. The promise proved, in the ease before us, was to answer for the debt or default of Gordon Wilcox, a third party, and is a promise to which that clause has no reference. The suggestion that the defendant, if compelled to pay the judgment, can repay herself out of the assets of the estate, does not tend to bring the promise within the clause. Most of the personal obligations of an executor contracted in the course of his administration, says the court in Chambers v. Robbins, 28 Conn., 550, are proper charges against the estate in the final settlement of his account, but they are none the less his private debts for which he is alone liable in his private capacity. In Pratt v. Humphrey, 22 Conn., 317, a leading case upon this clause, the promise was to pay a debt due from the estate of which the defendants were administrators — an entirely different case from the one at bar.

*76 The second clause of the statute relates to the special promise of any person to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another. An immense amount of litigation has arisen over its construction. It is impossible to reconcile the decisions which have been made under it. Almost any theory of its scope and meaning can find some case to support it. The most careful text-writers have acknowledged their inability to find anything like uniform rules of construction in the conflicting decisions which have been rendered. It has even been stated that the law upon it is in a state of hopeless confusion. It is all the more satisfactory, therefore, that our own court seems, so far at least as the points involved in this case are concerned, to have found and adopted a rule which has proved satisfactory — a rule which, we think, substantially settles the question before us.

The promisor, to briefly re-state the facts, was one of the administrators of William Wilcox’s estate; a fact, as we have seen, of no significance unless to show a motive for her promise, founded on a fancied advantage to the estate of her decedent. The promisee was the collector of taxes, threatening to levy on personal property upon which he had no lien and on which William Wilcox’s estate held a mortgage. The levy, if made, would of course have been subject to such mortgage. The party for whose debt or default the promise to answer was made was a delinquent tax-payer who, after the promise, continued liable for the taxes until paid. The suit, then, is by a tax-collector against a defendant who, in consideration of the plaintiff’s forbearance to levy for a third person’s tax on personal property on which an estate of which she was one of the administrators had a mortgage, promised to pay taxes due to Norwich town and city and a school district of the town from said tax-payer, the mortgagor of the property.

In Packer v. Benton, 35 Conn., 343, it is held that “where a person, not before liable, agrees to pay the debt of a third person, and, as a part of the arrangement, the original debtor is discharged from his indebtedness, the agreement is not *77 within the statute of frauds. Otherwise, if the original debtor continues liable.”

We shall quote somewhat extensively from that case, as the rule therein established has subsequently been applied in Pratt's Appeal from Probate, 41 Conn., 191, and in Gridley v. Sumner, 43 id.; 16, and is, as already suggested, decisive of the case now before us.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bigelow v. Estate of Edward Lathrop
13 Conn. Super. Ct. 400 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1945)
Fitzsimmons v. International Assn. of MacHinists
7 A.2d 448 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1939)
Sadd v. Siegelbaum
200 A. 346 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1938)
Bartolotta v. Calvo
152 A. 306 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
Plumb v. Curtis
33 A. 998 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1895)
Smith v. Delaney
29 A. 496 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1894)
Forbes v. Board of Health
28 Fla. 26 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 L.R.A. 643, 22 A. 491, 60 Conn. 71, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillaby-v-wilcox-conn-1891.