Hannum v. Curtis

13 Ind. 206
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 13 Ind. 206 (Hannum v. Curtis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannum v. Curtis, 13 Ind. 206 (Ind. 1859).

Opinion

Davison, J.

This was an action founded upon a claim on file in the Court of Common Pleas, against the estate of John Curtis, deceased.

Hannum was the plaintiff below.

The claim is for various items of carriage work, amounting to 33 dollars; also for 350 dollars, money placed in the decedent’s hands to pay taxes. As evidence of the receipt of the money, two instruments in writing were filed with the claim. They read thus:

Springfield, June 21, 1844. Received of Leonard Hcmnum fifty dollars, to apply on amount paid for taxes, and to be paid in the states of Indiana and Illinois, and which I am to forward full statement of amount soon as I can get the receipt for taxes of 1844. John Curtis.”
Received of Leonard Hcrnnum 300 dollars, which I am to pay taxes on his land in Illinois, and the balance to be applied on amount due me. Albany, December 5,1849.
“John Curtis.”

Appended to the claim, there is an affidavit, alleging that payments, from time to time, had been made on the claim; that a balance was due to the plaintiff, but the decedent having rendered no account, he was unable to state how much was due.

To this claim, so far as it relates to the receipts and several amounts therein set forth, the defendant demurred, on the ground that it did not show that the decedent had [208]*208failed to comply with his undertakings as stated in the receipts, or to what extent he had failed.

The Court sustained the demurrer; and the plaintiff then amended his affidavit, setting up that Curtis, the decedent, was his agent for the payment of taxes in Indiana and Illinois; that when the moneys specified in the receipts were placed in the hands of Curtis, he represented that he had advanced money in the payment of plaintiff’s taxes, and that he needed the money so placed in his hands to be applied on the sum by him advanced, and also on future taxes; that Curtis promised to furnish the receipts taken by him for money paid on taxes; but he has never rendered any account whatever of such payments, &c.

A demurrer to the claim, as supported by the amended affidavit, was also sustained. And the plaintiff filed an additional amendment to the same affidavit, whereby it is alleged that, having made diligent inquiry, by letter, relative to payments made by Curtis on account of taxes in the state of Illinois, he could find no payments made by him entered on the tax duplicates; that he has been compelled to redeem his lands—they having been, through the negligence of Curlis, sold for taxes; and that, during the time he acted as plaintiff’s agent, he has not, so far as plaintiff can ascertain, paid more than 74 dollars; that he, plaintiff, believes that, in addition to his account for carriage work, there is due to him 276 dollars, with interest from the date of said receipt; and that since he has been compelled to redeem his lands sold for taxes, he does not believe that his agent is entitled to commission, &c.

Upon the filing of this additional amendment, the defendant again demurred, and the Court sustained his demurrer. And thereupon the plaintiff further amended by alleging that he believed that the estate of John Curtis was indebted to him in the sum of 276 dollars, with interest from the 5th of December, 1849, the date of the last receipt, and also in the sum stated in his account for carriage work; and that he knew of no claim in favor of that [209]*209estate, and against him, except the 74 dollars, as above stated, &c.

To the claim thus supported by the affidavit as amended, ihe defendant answered—

1. By a general denial.

2. That the decedent, in his lifetime, paid over and accounted for all the moneys specified in said receipts.

Reply in denial of the second paragraph of the answer.

The issues were submitted to a jury, who found for the plaintiff 22 dollars, 50 cents. And, over a motion for a new trial, there was judgment, &c.

The plaintiff appeals to this Court.

The errors assigned, so far as they are noticed in the appellant’s brief, réjate to the action of the Common Pleas in sustaining the demurrers, in refusing instructions moved by the plaintiff, and in giving instructions asked for by the defendant.

As we have seen, the ground of demurrer is, that the claim does not show that the decedent had not failed to comply with his undertakings, &c., or to what extent he had failed.

The statute relative to the settlement of decedents’ estates, provides that a succinct statement of the nature and amount of every claim against the estate of any decedent must be filed in the office of the clerk of the Court .of Common Pleas; that such clerk shall enter upon the appearance docket of that Court a list of all such claims'; and that whenever any claim against such estate shall have been so placed on the appearance docket of said Court ten days before the first day of the next ensuing term thereof, the administrator shall admit, or refuse to admit, the claim, &c.; and if the same is not admitted before the last day of that term, it shall be transferred to the issue docket of said Court, and shall stand for trial at the next term thereof, as other civil actions, &c. It is further provided, that unless such claim shall have the affidavit of the claimant thereto attached, to the effect that the same is justly due and wholly unpaid, no cost shall be recovered by said claimant in any suit for the recovery of such claim, [210]*210&c. 2 R. S. p. 260,, § 62.—Acts of 1855, pp. 81, 82, §§ 1, and 5.

Thus it will be seen that the claimant, unless he files an affidavit in the mode prescribed by the statute, cannot recover his costs of suit. Still, however, without such affidavit, the claim as filed may constitute a cause of action. The statute to which we have referred, does not require a regular complaint under the ordinary rules of pleading, but merely a succinct statement of the claim, which, it seems to us, will be sufficient when it apprises the defendant of the nature of the claim, of the amount demanded, and shows enough to bar another action for the same demand. These have been ruled to be the requirements of what the law denominates a concise statement of a cause of action in justices’ Courts, and we perceive no reason why they may not be effective as the proper elements of the statement of a claim against a decedent’s estate. R. S. 1843, p. 870, § 39.—4 Blackf. 12.— 5 id. 40.—11 Ind. R. 203.

But it is insisted that the claim, in this case, fails to show how much was due, or what sum the plaintiff demanded. This position is not well taken. The several amounts of the account for carriage work, and of the money placed in the decedent’s hands, are distinctly stated, and it was the duty of his administratrix, while the statement remained on the appearance docket, to admit or refuse to admit the claim. It is true, the claim, as stated, does not show that the money so placed in the hands of the decedent had not been used as stipulated in the receipts.. Nor was such a showing essential to its validity.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ind. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannum-v-curtis-ind-1859.