Gilchrist v. Filyau

2 Fla. 94
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 Fla. 94 (Gilchrist v. Filyau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilchrist v. Filyau, 2 Fla. 94 (Fla. 1848).

Opinion

Hawkins, Justice:

The pleadings in this case raise the question, can an action of debt be sustained in this State by a creditor against the heir, upon the bond of his ancestor, the heir being expressly named.

If the solution of this question is to depend solely on the common law of England without reference to our statutes, the response would clearly be in the affirmative, for the principle is too well defined and settled to require comment or the sanction of authority. By that law the obligee of a bond could sue the heir, if expressly named, or the executor at his election, and have execution of the land descended to the heir, and this action being allowed against the heir no benefit could accrue to the obligee, unless he had execution of the lands descended to the heir. If the heir was not named in the bond he was not chargeable “ for by the common law only the goods and chattels of the debtor, and the annual profits of the land itself, were liable to execution for debt or damages, because these being the security the creditor depended upon, they were liable in the hands of his representative or executor, as well as in the hands of the debtor himself, and hence it was, that the executor was bound to answer the debt of the testator so far as he had chattels or assets, though he was not named in the contract; but the land was not liable to execution, because it was preserved from the personal contracts and engagements of the tenant, that he might be the better able to answer the feudal duties to the lord, and therefore the land not being originally liable to the demand in the hands of the obligor, must be much less in the hands of the heir, who was not comprehended in the contract.” 8 Bacon’s Ab., 458-9, (F.)

In England if a man died seized in fee, the descent goes to his eldest son, and the lands are not assets in the hands of the administrator for the payment of debts. By the laws of Florida there is no such thing as primogeniture, the lands descends in parcenary, and is expressly declared assets in the hands of the administrator or executor, and after the exhaustion of the personal assets may be sold to pay debts due by the estate, besides being liable with personal property to an execution existing upon any judgment against such executor or administrator. Thompson’s Digest, 202, 208.

Here we see all distinctions known to the English law between the real and personal estate, as to their being assets in the hands of [96]*96the executor or administrator entirely done away, subject to some modifications to be noticed hereafter. This distinction being once established, the same rights, duties, and liabilities, as to both would seem to be the necessary result and consequence. We will proceed further and point out some other of the alterations of the common law as created by our statutes. With us bond debts are of no higher dignity than simple contract debts. “ All promissory notes and other instruments of writing, not under seal, being declared to have the same force and effect, as' bonds and instruments under seal.” Thomp. Digest, 331.

By the law of England the title to the personal property, of the intestate devolves upon the administrator, and he can sue for, and recover it against the heir, the law throwing the duty upon him of paying the debts, the personal property being assets for that purpose.' The statutes of Florida give a more general and comprehensive power to the executor or administrator by extending and enlarging the fund with which the debts are to be paid. The statute of 1841, declares that, “ it shall be lawful for any administrator of any deceased intestate or the executor of any deceased testator who has not power by the will of the testator, to sell real estate for the purpose of paying debts, or to make more equal distribution among the heirs, devisees, or legatees, to file a petition in the Circuit Court of the County in which letters of Administration or letters testamentary, have been granted, setting forth that the personal estate of his intestate or testator, (as the case may be,) is not sufficient for the payment of the debts of such intestate or testator, or that the real estate of such testator or intestate cannot be equally, fairly, and beneficially, divided among the heirs or devisees of such intestate or testator, without the sale of the real estate,” &c. The statute then points out what proceedings shall be had upon this petition before a sale of the real estate is ordered or decreed by the Court.

The law of 1833 (Thompson’s Dig. 202) declares that “real estate shall be considered assets in the hands of the executor or administrator, and after the personal assets are exhausted may be sold under an order or decree of the Judge of Probate or officer discharging the functions of Ordinay or Judge of Probate. It is provided in this statute that no sale of real estate shall be made to any greater extent, than shall be necessary to supply the deficiency of personal assets lor the payment of the just and lawful debts of the deceased.

[97]*97We cannot see as contended, that the act of 1833 is repealed by the act of 1841 further than changing the mode by which the executor or administrator is enabled to sell the real estate for the payment of debts where there is a deficiency of personal assets. On the contrary we think the law of 1841 is a virtual affirmance of that" part of the law of 1833 which asserts that lands shall be assets, and we think that its provisions are even more extensive by enabling the administrator or executor to sell real estate to make more equal distribution among the heirs or devisees.

The object of the law of 1841 is clearly to guard more effectually the rights of the heirs by prescribing a process better calculated to produce that result than had existed by the law of 1833. The Judge of the Circuit Court is substituted in lieu of the Judge of Probate, and an issue is created for the purpose of better ascertaining the necessity of a sale of the real estate, and by making all persons interested in the lands parties to the issue their rights are necessarily more cautiously guarded. With those views wc must consider the acts of 1833 and 1841 in vari materia and the former only so far repealed as conflicts with the latter upon the principle of leges ‘posterioris prioris dbrogant.

By our statute of descent it is declared whenever any person having title to real estate of inheritance, shall die intestate as to such estate, it shall descend in parcenary to the male and female kindred. Thomp. Dig. 188. The rule of the common law in relation to ■descents is thereby clearly abrogated and annulled, and we have already seen that it is in direct conflict with our statutes. Although by our statute of descents the fee is clearly in the heir so that the inheritance may remain unbroken yet it is so cast upon him subject to the debts of the intestate and I might add the dower of the widow. If the lands are assets they must carry with them the' incidents of assets, and when the law declares them to be such the power to render them available necessarily follows as an incident.

The rents and profits of the lands constitute a fund for the payment of creditors, and as they must by our laws look to the executor or administrator for payment of their demands how could that fund be made available unless the estate from which it springs be rendered amenable for the debts ? And the law points out the mode by which it is to be accomplished.

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

Related

Lesser v. Pomin
39 P.2d 451 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
Broward v. Broward
117 So. 691 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1928)
Smith v. LeVesque
25 Fla. 464 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1889)
Merritt v. Daffin
24 Fla. 320 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1888)
Doyle v. Wade
23 Fla. 90 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1887)
Eppinger, Russell & Co. v. Canepa
20 Fla. 262 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1883)
Whitlock v. Willard
18 Fla. 156 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1881)
Emerson v. Ross'
17 Fla. 122 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1879)
Hays' Administratrix v. McNealy
16 Fla. 409 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1878)
Gibson v. Mitchell
16 Fla. 519 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1878)
Scoot v. Lloyd
16 Fla. 151 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Fla. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilchrist-v-filyau-fla-1848.