Ferguson v. Broome

1 Bradf. 10
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1 Bradf. 10 (Ferguson v. Broome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Broome, 1 Bradf. 10 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

The will of John L. Broome was admitted to Prohate, January 16,1836, and letters testa[12]*12mentary were issued to William Van Hook, the executor, February the 15th, 1836. On the 28th March, 1848, John T. Ferguson, administrator of John Ferguson, deceased, presented his petition to the Sm*rogate, claiming to be a creditor of John L. Broome, deceased, and praying for an order on Van Hook, the executor, to show cause why he should not be required to mortgage, lease, or sell the real estate of his testator for the payment of his debts. Such proceedings were had on this petition, that on April 17, 1848, the executor was ordered to make application to sell the real estate pursuant to the prayer of the petition. The executor presented his petition in obedience to such direction, on the 12th September, 1848,- and obtained an order thereon, requiring the widow and heirs to show cause why authority should not be granted him to mortgage, lease, or sell the real estate of the deceased for the payment of his debts. On the return of that order, the widow, and children, heirs of the deceased, appeared before me to show cause against granting the application. On such hearing the only debt claimed was that of John T. Ferguson, the original petitioner. To establish this debt, the counsel produced the record of a judgment recovered in the Hew-York Common Fleas, December 30,1841, against William Van Hook, executor of John I,. Broome, deceased, by John T. Ferguson, administrator of John Ferguson, deceased, for the sum of $446 88. From an inspection of the' record, which is the only evidence offered, there appears to have been a trial upon the merits in that case.

By the original rule of the civil law, the heir was chargeable with the debts of the deceased, not only to the extent of the assets, but to the extent of all the other property of the heir, provided he accepted the inheritance. By a provision of Justinian, however, he might protect himself from responsibility beyond the assets descended, by making an inventory. By the Common Law, the heir was liable for the debts of the ancestor to the value only [13]*13of the property descended, and he held the land subject to the payment of the debts. The debts, however, must be of a certain quality, viz., those due on bonds, covenants, or other specialties, where the party bound himself, and his heirs by expressly naming them. (Kent's Com., 4. 379. 420; Williams on Executors, 1436.) The same remedy in favor of creditors did not exist against the devisees of the debtor, and to obviate this mischief, the statute of 3 Wm. and M., c. 14, was passed, and more recently the statutes 11 George IV. and 1 Wm. IV., c. 47, 3 and 4 Wm. IV, c. 104, which latter act reaches the case of simple contract debts.

The rule of the Common Law was modified at an early period in this State, and by a provision in the act of April 4,1786, Greenleaf, 1, y. 237, which has been continued in the subsequent revisions, heirs and devisees are made liable for all the debts of the ancestor to the extent of the assets descended, provided the personal estate of the deceased be insufficient, or has been previously exhausted. The statutes' now contain ample directions how this liability is to be enforced, and the claims of creditors of the ancestor against lands descended to the heirs or devisees, can only be pursued in strict conformity to the provisions of the statute. (Pierce vs. Alsop, legal Observer, February, 1846, p. 52.)

A more convenient mode of reaching the real estate was provided by the act of 1786, through the intervention of the personal representatives ; the executor or administrator being authorized, on discovering or suspecting that the personal assets would be insufficient for the payment of the debts, as soon as conveniently might be, to present a true and just account to the Judge of Probate, and request his aid in the premises. It thereupon became the duty of the Judge to cite the parties in interest before him, to show cause why the real estate should not be sold, and the proper proceedings then followed to the termination of the matter. It will be perceived that this applica[14]*14tion on the part of the executor or administrator, was in substance a voluntary one ; that is, no means were directly provided by which creditors could compel the executor or administrator to institute such proceedings. This statute was subsequently modified in some of its features (1 Revised Laws, 1813, p. 450), but substantially, the law stood in this position until the revision of the statutes, when, by Section 48, Title 4, Pa/rt 2. c. 6. of the R. S., creditors were ' for the first time enabled to cite the executor or administrator before the Surrogate, to show cause why their claims should not be paid by a mortgage, lease, or sale of the real estate. The revisers in the note to this section, say, that instead of compelling creditors to bring suits against heirs and devisees, which are very expensive and tedious, they proposed by this new enactment, to allow them to compel the executor or administrator to proceed under this title. (3 R. S., 2d ed. p. 648.) As the statute previously stood, no certain period was designated within which the executor or administrator was bound to make application; but now the law was altered, in this respect, and the right to apply to the Surrogate was limited to three years after the granting of letters testamentary or of administration; and in harmony with this new feature, creditors were restrained from bringing suits against the heirs or devisees within the three years. (2 R. S., 3d ed. p. 163 et seep § 1. 57.) This power in the hands of the personal representatives, is in the nature of a trust to be exercised in behalf of creditors only, and is a substitute for the remedy of creditors against heirs and devisees, who for the period of three years are not liable to be sued for the debts of the ancestor. (Brevoort vs. McJimsey, 1 Ed. Ch. R., 553; 2 R. S., 3d ed. p. 548.)

Having thus briefly reviewed the nature and the history of the relative rights of creditors, and those who represent the personal and real estate of the deceased, and the mode of enforcing those rights, it remains to consider whether there is sufficient ground in the present case to [15]*15direct the mortgage, lease, or sale of the real estate of which John L. Broome died seized. The only proof offered of any debt fine by the deceased, consists in the record of the judgment against his executor, recovered by Ferguson in the Court of Common Pleas. It has not been the intention of the Legislature, in securing to the creditor a substitute for the more “ expensive and tedious” process of a suit, to deprive the heirs of any legal defence to the claim, which they might set up before another Court. This has been expressly guarded against by the 13th section of the Statute (original section 10, 2 P. S., 3d ed. p. 165). But independently of the statute, it has always been held, that in this proceeding the heirs might make the.same defence here as they could before another tribunal. How both at law and in equity, a judgment against the executor or administrator never was evidence against the heir. There is no privity between the executor or administrator and the heir. The acknowledgment of one does not hind the other. (Mooers vs. White, 6 Johnson's Ch. R., 360; Mason's Devisees vs. Peter's Administrators, 1 Munf. R., 437; Fitch vs.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Bradf. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-broome-nysurct-1849.