Dokus v. Lawrence
This text of 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 72 (Dokus v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The question raised by the defendant's demurrer *Page 73 to the complaint is whether real estate, allegedly conveyed by the plaintiff's decedent while he was mentally incompetent, and as a result of fraud practiced by the defendant, may be recovered in an action by the plaintiff administrator, in the absence of an allegation that the property is required for the payment of debts.
The real estate of an intestate decedent vests at once, at death, in his heirs. An administrator has no title to it, although he may bring it within the scope of his administration if a proper administration of the estate requires it. Bowen vs.Morgillo,
Whether the personal representative of a decedent may maintain an action like the instant one in the absence of a showing that the property is required for a proper administration of the estate is a question as to which the authorities are not in accord. In considering the divergent holdings, it should be noted that the common-law rule governing the devolution of the title to real estate, as it obtains in our own State, has been almost entirely abrogated in a number of jurisdictions. See 2 Woerner, American Law of Administration
(3d ed. 1923) § 337, p. 1118. In jurisdictions which adhere more closely to the common-law rule, the right of the personal representative to maintain the action, without a showing that the property is needed for the payment of debts, is denied.Reed vs. Brown,
The effect upon this question of section 4956 of the General Statutes, revision of 1930, under which an executor or administrator *Page 74
is entitled to the possession, care and control of a decedent's real estate during the administration of the estate, does not appear to have been directly passed upon by our Supreme Court. In Bowen vs. Morgillo, supra, p. 168, it was held unnecessary to determine the question since there the heirs of the decedent joined with the administrator as parties plaintiff. In Munger vs. Doolan,
With respect to the power of the personal representative over real estate under such statutes, in jurisdictions like our own, Woerner, supra, p. 1123, says that it is "a mere statutory power, given only for the benefit of creditors, and properly to be exercised only when the exigencies of the estate require; hence it is said that, where there are no debts or legacies to be paid, or where it appears that the personalty is sufficient for that purpose, there is no valid reason why the executor or administrator should have the possession of the real estate...." These views find support in the decisions of our Supreme Court. In State ex rel Moriarty vs. Donahue,
In the light of the foregoing, it is concluded that the plaintiff administrator is entitled to recover the real estate involved only if the same is required for the payment of creditors or for some other purpose incident to a proper administration of the estate, and that the complaint is insufficient in the absence of an allegation that the property is so required.
It may be pertinent to note that in Haussman vs. Burnham, *Page 75
The demurrer is sustained on the grounds assigned therein in par. 1(b)(c).
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11 Conn. Super. Ct. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dokus-v-lawrence-connsuperct-1942.