French v. Peters

59 N.E. 449, 177 Mass. 568, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 699
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 59 N.E. 449 (French v. Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. Peters, 59 N.E. 449, 177 Mass. 568, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 699 (Mass. 1901).

Opinion

Barker, J.

This suit in equity was begun on June 12, 1895, by a writ in which Harriet C. Patch was joined as defendant with Peters, administrator of the estate of Peaslee, and with the Second National Bank of Haverhill. The relief sought was in substance to compel the payment to the plaintiff of a non-negotiable promissory note given by the defendant Patch to the intestate Peaslee in 1889, and also of a deposit of his in the defendant bank, both the note** and the deposit book having been delivered to the plaintiff by Peaslee in his lifetime in consideration of services rendered to him and in pursuance of a contract made by him. The suit was brought in equity because both the note and the deposit were transferred to the plaintiff by one act of Peaslee and the plaintiff’s right was denied by Peaslee’s administrator as well as by the defendant Patch and by the bank.

General appearances were entered by different counsel for each of the defendants. The defendants Peters and Patch filed separate answers, the defendant bank filing none. The cause was sent to a special master to hear the parties and their evidence, and witnesses, examine their vouchers, find the facts, and report the same to the court, with such portions of the evidence as either party might request. During the hearings before the master the death of the defendant Harriet C. Patch occurred and was suggested, and the master finds that on the closing day of the proceedings before him one of the counsel who had filed her answer appeared at the hearing before the master and represented her estate as counsel for the administrator. No formal appearance was filed, nor was any entered on the docket of the court, for the administrators of Patch or for either one of them. While the proceedings before the master were going on Arthur D. Patch and George D. Whitten were [571]*571appointed administrators of her estate, and were such administrators when the counsel who had filed her answer appeared at the hearing before the master and represented her estate as counsel for her administrator.

The master found and reported that the deposit and the note were the property of the plaintiff, that the note was a valid and subsisting obligation against the estate of Harriet C. Patch, that the complainant was entitled to a decree that the defendant Peters as administrator of Peaslee’s estate should assign the deposit and the note to the plaintiff, and that the bank should pay to the plaintiff the amount of the deposit, and that Harriet C. Patch should pay to the plaintiff the amount of the note.

The defendant Peters alone filed objections and exceptions to the master’s report. These exceptions not being insisted upon the master’s report was confirmed by the court and a decree entered in favor of the plaintiff, which decree among other things not now material required Peters as administrator of the estate of Peaslee to assign the note of Patch to the plaintiff and required “the defendants, Arthur D. Patch and George W. Whitten, administrators of the estate of the defendant, Harriet C. Patch ” to pay to the plaintiff the amount of that note and interest.

The decree was entered on March 9, 1900. On March 13, 1900, Whitten as administrator of Patch moved the court to vacate the decree. On April 6, 1900, he filed in the cause, in his own name as administrator and without mention of Patch his co-administrator, an appeal to this court from the decree of March 9,1900. On May 10, 1900, Arthur D. Patch as one of the administrators of Harriet C. Patch filed his written objection to the further prosecution of the appeal of Whitten, alleging that he was a co-administrator with Whitten and that the appeal was taken without Patch’s knowledge or consent. On the same day the plaintiff moved that Whitten’s appeal be dismissed because he had no right to appeal, because he did not file objections or exceptions to the master’s report, and because Arthur D. Patch was co-administrator with Whitten and did not join in or authorize the appeal.

The right of appeal to the full court is given by our statutes to [572]*572any party aggrieved.” Pub. Sts. c. 151, § 13. St. 1883, c. 223, § 2. The fact that such a party has filed no exceptions to the master’s report, while it may preclude him from raising certain questions in the appellate court, is not a reason for dismissing his appeal from a final decree. Upon such an appeal the question is open to him whether upon the facts found by the master the decree is justified by the bill and the record.

It is said to be the general rule that the appeal of a party aggrieved may be dismissed because other parties with whom he is joined as defendant have not appealed also. Owings v. Kineannon, 7 Pet. 399. Lovejoy v. Irelan, 17 Md. 525. Masterson v. Herndon, 10 Wall. 416. See also Clifton v. Sheldon, 23 How. 481, and 2 Encyc. of Pl. & Pr. 182 et seq. But it is otherwise when the co-defendants have separate interests. Todd v. Daniel, 16 Pet. 521. Brewster v. Wakefield, 22 How. 118. Day v. Washburn, 23 How. 309. Under our own practice, from a very early time, independent parties joined in an action have had the right without joining their co-defendants to have reversed so much of an erroneous judgment as affected themselves. Whiting v. Cochran, 9 Mass. 532. Shirley v. Lunenburg, 11 Mass. 379, 384. The plaintiff in the present case does not contend that Whitten’s appeal must be dismissed because the bank and Peaslee’s administrator have not joined in the appeal. The only ground of dismissal urged is the non-joinder of Patch who is Whitten’s co-administrator.

The doctrine of the common law is that a suit in favor of the estate of a person deceased must be brought in the name of all living executors or administrators, and that if either of them is unwilling to have the suit prosecuted in his name, the one who has instituted it may, upon a summons, have a judgment of severance and continue the suit in his own name alone. Hensloe's case, 9 Co. 36 b. Brookes v. Straod, 1 Salk. 3. Com. Dig. Abatement, E. 13; Pleader, 2 D. 1, 3, 10. But when executors or administrators are joined as defendants they may plead different pleas and that plea which is most for the advantage of the testator or the intestate shall be received. Eiwell v. Quash, 1 Stra. 20, citing Baldwin v. Church, 10 Mod. 323. Foster v. Jackson, Hob. 52 a, 61. App v. Dreisbach, 2 Rawle, 287, 301. Geddis v. Irvine, 5 Penn. St. 508, 512.

[573]*573In Lyon v. Allison, 1 Watts, 161, the appeal of one of two co-administrators, his associate dissenting from the appeal, was quashed. The appellant had given no recognizance or bail as required by statute. The judgment appealed from relieved the estate and the administrators from all liability. The court in holding that the appeal was-, rightly quashed say that when executors sever in pleading the court will take that plea which is better for the estate and that it clearly was best for the estate to have the judgment stand.

When Harriet C. Patch the original defendant died her estate as such was not a party to the suit. When counsel representing that estate took part in the hearing of the cause before the master as counsel for the administrator, this taking part in the proceedings was enough to make both administrators of the estate parties defendant to the suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 449, 177 Mass. 568, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-peters-mass-1901.