Hancock v. Hubbard

36 Mass. 167
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 26, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Mass. 167 (Hancock v. Hubbard) 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
Hancock v. Hubbard, 36 Mass. 167 (Mass. 1837).

Opinion

The facts in this case are sufficiently set forth in the opinion of the Court, which was delivered by

Shiw C. J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Court of Probate for the county of Suffolk, allowing the fourth account of Samuel Hubbard, as guardian of Thomas Hancock, a person non compos mentis.

[168]*168By the case it appears, that John Hancock and Thomas Hancock were the sons and only heirs at law of Ebenezer Han cock deceased. J. G. Rogers, in 1821, was appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of E. Hancock. E. Hancock, at the time of his decease, stood bound as indorser and surety for his son John, to a very large amount; and these debts the administrator was called upon to pay and did pay. For the sums thus paid, and for other sums due from John to his father, the administrator commenced an action and attached certain parcels of real estate and recovered a judgment for about $ 60,000 This execution was levied upon sundry parcels of real estate and, among the rest, upon one undivided half of a store situat ed in Merchant’s Row, which had been devised to John and Thomas by their grandmother, with a provision, that if eithet should die without issue, the estate should go to the survivor. The year from this levy expired, and the estate was not redeemed. By an act of the legislature passed in February 1824, the city government of Boston were authorized to take and appropriate to public uses certain real estate therein described, for the purpose of widening and enlarging Faneuil Hall Market, with special provisions for appraising the value of such estate, with an ultimate trial by jury, if the parties should not agree. This act, § 4, provided, among other things, that in case any such real estate had belonged to a deceased person, whose estate remained unsettled, the amount awarded as damages should go to the administrator, to be accounted for, &c.

The estate in Merchants’ row, which had been levied on by Rogers as administrator, was one of the estates taken by the city government, under the provisions of the above act. Rogers, as such administrator of an unsettled estate, applied to the Supreme Judicial Court in the manner provided by law, and such proceedings were had, that commissioners Were appointed, and the damages assessed at $ 15,36!• 94 for the one half of such estate, so levied on by Rogers as administrator; and he obtained a judgment therefor, and received the money of the city. At this time all the debts due from the estate of E. Hancock were paid, and the property held by the administrator, was held for the benefit of the heirs at law. In this state of [169]*169things, Hubbard, as guardian of one of those heirs, Thomas Hancock, applied to the administrator to pay over one half of the money thus received of the city to the use of his ward as such heir, and he hesitated and denied the right of the guardi • an ; yet he did pay over the one half, and charge it in his administration account and Hubbard credited it in his guardianship account. Some delay of further proceedings was occasioned by a claim interposed by the widow, which was finally decided against her, at the March term, 1829. Soon after that decision, in April of the same year, Hubbard applied by petition to the Probate Court, setting forth, that John Hancock was still a large debtor by judgment to his father’s estate, that if this debt were paid, Thomas would be entitled, as his distributive share, to an amount larger than the whole amount of the property, real and personal, in the hands of the administrator, and praying that, on this ground, all the real and personal property in the hands of the administrator might be assigned to Thomas by way of distributive share. After various continuances, on the 26th of September, 1829, a decree was passed, reciting such indebtedness of John Hancock, and directing the whole of the real and personal estate to be assigned to Thomas as his distributive share. This decree also directed, that in case the administrator should fail to comply with this decree, the administration bond should be delivered to the guardian of Thomas, to be put in suit.

This decree also confirmed and allowed the account of the administrator, Rogers, in which he had claimed credit for $ 7500, the one half of the proceeds of the estate taken by the city, which was the share of Thomas, of the damages thus allowed, paid in advance of a decree of distribution, on the requisition of Hubbard, guardian of Thomas, the heir. Under the decree, Hubbard obtained of Rogers, at divers time, personal property to the amount of $ 1400 and no more. The bond of the administrator was not put in suit.

It further appears, that, in or about April 1829, Rogers became insolvent, and has ever since remained so, that the sureties on his administration bond for $ 10,000, were Abigail Hall, who is since deceased, and whose sole heir Rogers is, [170]*170and Daniel D. Rogers, who died in March, 1825, leaving a considerable amount of real and personal property.

In settling his guardianship account, Hubbard has credited his ward with the $7500, half of the proceeds of the land taken by the city and received of the administrator in anticipation of a decree of distribution, and also with the $ 1400 collected in small sums afterwards; but he has not credited the $ 7500 ordered by the decree of distribution to be paid, but not paid. John Hancock, as the presumptive heir at law of Thomas Hancock, insisted, in the court below, that Hubbard, the guardian, should be held to charge himself with this other sum of $7500 with interest, on the ground, that it was the duty of Rogers as such administrator to pay this sum, that if he failed to do so on demand, it was a breach of his administration bond, for which his sureties were responsible, that although Daniel D. Rogers, one of the sureties, had been dead, and the settlement of his estate closed by the lapse of four years, still a suit might have been brought within one year after a breach of the bond, against his heirs or devisees, having property sufficient to respond in this behalf, that having failed to commence such suit, he had made himself personally responsible for this amount, and ought to be decreed to charge himself with that sum accordingly. This claim was disallowed in the Probate Court, whereupon John Hancock, as the heir presumptive and prochein ami of the non compos ward, took an appeal to this Court. The first reason of appeal is; “ Because the said Hubbard, guardian as aforesaid, hath not charged himself in said account, with the sum of $7842,” &c. Several other reasons are in form assigned, setting forth somewhat more at large, the facts and grounds on which the allowance of such sum is claimed, but all resulting in a demand that this item should be allowed.

Many questions have been argued in this cause, upon which it will not be necessary for the Court to give an opinion; and I shall barely allude to them to indicate the course of the discussion.

It has been contended, that John Hancock, under the will of his grandmother, took a contingent and not an absolute estate, and that the levy on that estate did not vest the fee in the [171]

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Bluebook (online)
36 Mass. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-v-hubbard-mass-1837.