Harter, Trump, Wikidal & Co. v. Taggart's Executors

14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 122
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 122 (Harter, Trump, Wikidal & Co. v. Taggart's Executors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harter, Trump, Wikidal & Co. v. Taggart's Executors, 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 122 (Ohio 1862).

Opinion

Puck, C.J.

The refusal to charge as requested and the charge delivered to the jury, preseñt a question of much difficulty and importance arising under sections 90 and 98, of the act to provide for the settlement of the estates of deceased persons,” passed March 23,1840. 1 S. & C. 566.

Section 98 provides, in substance, that no suit shall be instituted against the executor or administrator of an estate not declared insolvent, until after the expiration of eighteen months from the date of the administration bond, unless the claim has been exhibited to and disputed or rejected by such executor or administrator.

Section 90 requires a creditor whose claim has been thus exhibited to and disputed or rejected by the executor or administrator, to commence suit thereon against such personal representative within six months after such dispute or rejection, if the claim is due, or be forever barred fr"m maintaining any such suit thereafter.

The obvious policy of these sections, aided by other portions [124]*124of the statute, is, to secure the speedy settlement of such estates, and at the same time to prevent a wasting of the assets by the payment of unnecessary costs.

The defendants, executors of Samuel Taggart, one of thfc makers of the note in suit, were sued jointly with the other makers, but, severing in their defense, set up by way of bar to the action against them, under section 90 above referred to, that said note was exhibited to them as such executors by the plaintiffs, for allowance as a valid claim against the estate, which had not been represented as insolvent, and that the defendants upon such exhibition by the plaintiffs, more than six months prior to the commencement of the present suit, disputed and rejected said claim, and refused to allow it as a valid claim against the estate and have ever since continued so to dispute and reject the same.

The bill of exceptions taken upon the trial in the district court, excluding the commencement and conclusion reads as follows: ’

“Evidence having been given tending to show that the plaintiffs on the 18th day of April A. D. 1856, exhibited the note on which this action is founded, to the executors of Samuel Taggart, deceased, and requested them to allow it as a valid claim against said estate, which said executors distinctly refused and told the plaintiffs to consider the same as rejected; but no other evidence was introduced tending to prove, that, at the time the note was so exhibited by the plaintiffs to the executors, they demanded of said executors that they should indorse thereon their allowance of the same as a valid claim against the estate of Samuel Taggart, deceased,' whereupon the plaintiffs’ attorneys requested the court to charge the jury: ’

“ * That, in order to make the transaction a presentment of the note for allowance or rejection, the plaintiffs must, at the time, have requested the executors, to indorse thereon their allowance of the claim, and the executors must have refused to so indorse their allowance, to make it a rejection of the claim under the statute, so as to allow the six months’ limitation to commence running.’ Which instructions the court refused to give, but did charge the jury, among other things:

[125]*125“ That if they found from the evidence, that the plaintiffs exhibited said note to said executors, for the purpose distinctly of having the same allowed and accepted as a valid claim against the estate, and that the executors thereupon distinctly refused to allow or accept the same as a valid claim against said estate, and told said plaintiffs that they, said plaintiffs, should consider the same rejected, it was a sufficient rejection of the claim under the statute, so as to lay a foundation for the application of the limitation of six months prescribed by the statute; and that for the plaintiffs to go further, and formally demand the indorsement of an allowance of the claim after this, would be in law a work of supererogation,” etc.

The charge refused and that given to the jury are based upon section 90 above referred to, and the correctness of the one or the other, must depend upon the construction to be given to that section which reads as follows:

“ Sec. 90. If a claim against the estate of any deceased person, be exhibited to the executor or administrator, before the estate is represented insolvent, and be disputed or rejected by him, and the same shall not' have been referred, the claimant shall, within six months after such dispute or rejection, if the debt, or .any part thereof, be then due, commence a suit for the recovery thereof, or be forever barred from maintaining any action thereon; and no action shall be maintained thereon after the said period, by any other person deriving title thereto from such claimant; and any executor or administrator may, on the trial of any action founded upon such demand, give in evidence,- in bar thereof, under a notice annexed to the general issue, the facts of such refusal and neglect to commence a suit. A claim shall be deemed disputed or rejected, if the executor or administrator shall, on presentation of the vouchers thereof, refuse, on demand made for that purpose, to indorse thereon his allowance of the same as a valid claim against the estate.”

The charge asked by the plaintiffs, is based upon the last clause of the section, and assumes, that the peculiar office of that clause is to define the meaning of the words “ disputed or rejected,” as used in the first; while the instruction given is [126]*126founded upon the first clause, and proceeds upon the assumption, that the last is an enlargement rather than a restriction of the first, enabling the holder of a claim to compel a decision from a reluctant or equivocating executor.

The question is not free from difficulty; but we think it can be satisfactorily settled, by a recurrence to the general policy of the statute, and a more critical analysis .of the section itself. The general policy of the statute is, undoubtedly, to effect a speedy settlement of the estates of deceased persons, at the least possible expense. This obvious policy would be in part defeated if, as is contended, the holder of a doubtful • claim can not be compelled to sue and test its legal validity, until he formally demands a written indorsement of allowance. The real or pretended creditor may talk freely with the executor, show him his claims, demand payment, and indeed so fix the executor with notice, that any subsequent voluntary payments to others would be at his peril; and if he only abstains from demanding an indorsement of allowance, he may delay until the last hour, and then, when all else is ready for final distribution, he may institute legal proceedings and delay it indefinitely. A construction which carries with it such consequences, illy accords with the obvious policy of the statute. The object of the first clause was clearly to benefit the estate and hasten a final distribution of its assets, and it seems to us that it fully protects the estate, and also its personal representative.

If the executor or administrator is not satisfied of the justness of the claim, he may, under section-85, require all vouchers, and an affidavit that it is just, and not subject to any offsets; and if he still doubts, but does not desire to invite a suit, he mav abstain from an allowance or rejection, and thus leave it rbr the creditor, if he desire it, to demand definitive action under the last clause of the section.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harter-trump-wikidal-co-v-taggarts-executors-ohio-1862.