Harrington v. La Rocque

10 P. 498, 13 Or. 344, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 26
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 10 P. 498 (Harrington v. La Rocque) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. La Rocque, 10 P. 498, 13 Or. 344, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 26 (Or. 1886).

Opinion

Lord, J.

This was a proceeding in garnishment to' reach certain moneys, alleged to be in the hands of the: [345]*345defendant Apperson, as executor, belonging to the defendant La Rocque, under an order of distribution of the Probate Court. In substance, the facts are that on the eighth day of November, 1883, the plaintiff Harrington recovered a judgment against the defendant La Rocque for the sum of $2,443.48, and costs, taxed at fifteen dollars, which judgment, on the twenty-third day of November, 1883, he sold and assigned to the plaintiffs, Marx & Jorgenson. On the eighteenth day of April, 1875, an execution was issued upon said judgment, and the defendant Apperson garnished; and he certified that he had no moneys or property of the defendant La Rocquein his hands, or subject to his control. The certificate of the garnishee not being satisfactory, allegations and interrogatories were exhibited against him, and he was required to answer. The record discloses that the defendant Apperson is the executor of the estate of George La Rocque, deceased, and that under such will the defendant La Rocque is a devisee, and entitled to a distributive share of said estate; that prior to the garnishment proceedings herein, and to an order of distribution of the Probate Court, to which we shall presently refer, the-defendant La Rocque had assigned to D. P. Thompson,, in consideration of money advanced and future advances, the amount due him upon distribution of said estate; that on the sixth day of April, 1885, it was ascertained that the defendant La Rocque was entitled to $23, 079.08-as his distributive share of said estate; and among other things, the Probate Court directed and ordered that the-defendant Apperson, as such executor, distribute the said. “ sum of $23,079.08 to the defendant La Rocque, and to-his assigns and order, in cash, that is to say, to David P. Thompson, his assigns, the whole thereof, to be appropriated as follows: a. To the satisfaction of the debt due said Thompson from said La Rocque, in the sum of [346]*346$11,494.51; b. To the lawful assigns of the said G-eorge La Eocque.”

It will be observed that the defendant Apperson was nerved in the garnishment proceeding several days subsequently to the order of distribution. Money credits and other property are almost universally conceded to be in the custody of the law when held by executors and administrators in their representative capacity. In administering the estate, they are accountable to the court, and the same reason exists that moneys or credits in their hands should not be disturbed, but considered to be in the custody of the law, as is applied to such prop- • erty in the hands of the sheriff or other officer.

Mr. Freeman says:

„ “Moneys and other chattels, in the possession of administrators, ' executors, or guardians, in their official capacity, are almost universally conceded to be in the custody of the law, and are therefore neither subject to levy under execution nor to any process of garnishment.” “No person deriving his authority from the law, and obliged to execute it according to the rules of law, can be holden by process of this kind.’

And again:

“When the share of a creditor, heir, legatee, etc., entitled to moneys in the hands of an administrator or guardian, has been settled by the court, and ordered to be paid, it is no longer regarded as in the custody of the law. The right to it has become fixed, absolute, and capable of enforcement by action at law. It may, therefore, be garnished.” (Freeman on Executions, sec. 131, and notes; Drake on Attachment, sec. 499.)

In considering the same subject, Mr. Waples says:

“So soon as the funds held by the executor, etc., ceases to be in the custody of the law, and become recoverable as belonging to some person, legatee, heir, etc., the rule [347]*347ceases to be applicable. There is sometimes a nice question as to the time when an administrator’s relation to a fund, or to property, is so changed as to render him amenable to garnishment; but it is certain that he is liable when his custody ceases to 'be ‘the custody of the law,’ in its technical signification.” (Waples on Attachment, 224, and note 1 of authorities cited.)
“After an estate has been settled, and suit has been brought by attachment against one whose share therein has been ascertained, and garnishment of the executor in his personal capacity has been made, the garnishee will be held chargeable. The administrator'will not be allowed to hold the fund in his hands in his official capacity, under such circumstances, to shield the heir from a payment of a just debt, to hinder the attaching creditor from making his money. The case is very different from that where the estate remains unsettled, debts due by the succession unpaid, and legacies not distributed. In the latter case, the executor cannot be compelled to pay, by process of garnishment sued out, even by a judgment of an heir whose portion still remains unseparated from the mass of the estate. Until there has been a settlement of the estate, at least, so far as the judgment of distribution, the executor or administrator cannot be reached by garnishment. It is not till the executor is ready to pay over to the heir that he is liable to garnishment in an attachment suit against the heir.” (Id. 225, 226.)

It may be considered clear, then, when the distributive share of an heir has been ascertained and ordered to be paid by the court, it is no longer regarded as in the custody of the law. The right to it has become fixed, and the executor ceases to hold it in his representative but in his personal capacity. After distribution has [348]*348been decreed, it may, therefore, be garnished in the hands of the executor; and if the heir has assigned his interest or distributive share, the assignee may notify the executor of his assignment for the purpose of requiring payment to him, or intercepting payment to the heir after the order of distribution has been decreed by the court. But the assignee of an heir is not entitled to have a decree that the distributive share of the assignor shall be paid to him. He is a-stranger to the jurisdiction. For the court to assume jurisdiction in such matters would necessarily involve the validity of the assignment — matters not relating to the acts of the intestate, but to contracts of the heirs after his decease. And just here is where the chief contention arises, counsel for the plaintiffs claiming that the Probate Court has no authority to make an order for distribution to the assignee of a distributee’s share, and that so much at least of the order of distribution as purports to do it is void; while counsel for the defendants claim that such order is not void, but if there was error, it cannot be reached collaterally. The court below acted upon the contention maintained in the last view. In this we think there was error which cannot be sustained, either upon principle or authority.

In Portevant v. Neylaus, 38 Miss. 106, a similar question was raised, but the court held the decree' of the Probate Court in favor of an assignee of a distributive share void, Handy, J., saying:

“It is well settled by numerous decisions of this court that the Probate Court has no jurisdiction to decree a payment by the executor to an assignee of the distributees. (Hill v. Hardy, 34 Miss. 289; Dixon v. Houston, 35 Id. 636; Houston v. Williams,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 P. 498, 13 Or. 344, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-la-rocque-or-1886.