Hayes v. Briggs

76 A. 905, 106 Me. 423, 1910 Me. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 A. 905 (Hayes v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Briggs, 76 A. 905, 106 Me. 423, 1910 Me. LEXIS 16 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This is an action of debt upon a probate bond brought in the name of the Judge of Probate for the benefit of the estate of Orlando M. Briggs, late of Parkman, in the county of Piscataquis. The writ was entered at the September term of court, 1909. At this term a demurrer to the declaration was filed and sustained. To this ruling the plaintiff excepted. The declaration and demurrer make up the case. It is conceded in argument that this action was brought against the principal and sureties on an administrator’s bond given in the estate of Orlando M. Briggs, late of Parkman, deceased, and that Francis W. Briggs, mentioned in the declaration, is a grandson of Orlando M. Briggs and claims to be interested in the estate. R. S., chap. 74, prescribed two methods of procedure by virtue of which an action may be brought against the principal and surety upon a probate bond. Section 10 provides- "Any [425]*425person interested personally, or in any official capacity, in a probate bond, or in a judgment rendered thereon, whose interest has been specifically ascertained by a decree of the Judge of Probate, or by judgment of law, as hereinafter provided, may originate a suit on such bond, or scire facias on such judgment, without applying to the judge whose name was used in the bond or judgment, or to his successor.” Section 16 provides: "The Judge of Probate may expressly authorize or instruct an administrator or administrator de bonis non on a petition of himself or any party interested to commence suit on a probate bond for the benefit of the estate, or any party interested therein, and such authority shall be alleged in the process.” Under section 10 a party who has complied with the requirements therein prescribed, may institute an action in the name of the Judge of Probate in his own behalf and recover judgment for his individual benefit. The remedy under this section is based upon the theory that when an interest in an estate in his favor has been ascertained and the administrator has failed to adjust it, the party interested has a personal remedy against the bond.

Under section 16 the procedure is for the benefit of the estate and not for that of the person interested. Although authorized to petition for the commencement of the suit, and become the agency to set the process in motion, yet he has no direct benefit in the result, not common to all interested in the settlement of the estate. For any failure on the part of the administrator to perform the duties required of him in the administration of the estate the latter remedy may be invoked.

Therefore it will be observed that the remedies prescribed by these two sections of the statute are entirely distinct and that an attempt to proceed under one section cannot possibly be sustained under the provisions of the other. It is not in controversy that this action is brought for the benefit of the estate, but under sec. 16 of the old statute. But this section of the statute as it stood in 1897, when the bond was given, was repealed in 1903, Repealing Act, R. S., page 1018, and the present section enacted. The case at bar could have been maintained under the old statute, but it is admitted by the plaintiff in his brief that it cannot be sustained under the present [426]*426statute, inasmuch as it would require the administrator to institute a suit against himself, a procedure absurd upon its face.

Therefore two questions arise : 1. Is the statute of 1903 retroactive? 2. If retroactive, is it constitutional? The general repealing act made necessary by the adoption of the revision of 1903 reads : "The public acts, passed during the years hereafter named and herein designated, are repealed, except so far as they are preserved or excepted in the following sections; ” Under this section "An act to amend Section 16 of chap. 72 of the Revised Statutes relating to suits on probate bonds is expressly repealed.” From this course of legislation it is manifest that the legislature intended to repeal the old section as amended, and substitute therefor the present section as it appears in the statute. By this repeal, if no new legislation had been enacted, no procedure whatever, for the benefit of the estate could have been instituted, as, without statutory authority such procedure could not be maintained. Therefore it is apparent that, by enacting section 16 as it now stands, the legislature did not intend to take away all remedy that had existed under the section repealed, but to make the process prescribed in the new enactment retroactive.

But the plaintiff contends that this section of the statute, if construed to be retroactive, is unconstitutional, as the remedy existing at the time the bond was given has been so changed by the new statute as to impair the obligation of the contract, evidenced by the bond. We think the contention untenable. "There is ho vested right to a particular form of remedy.” Poor v. Chapin, 97 Maine, 295. In Oriental Bank v. Freese, 18 Maine, 109, the court holds, "While the constitution carefully guards the rights of private property, it does not prohibit the legislature from passing such laws as act retrospectively if they affect only the remedy.” In this case the statute when the debt was contracted authorized the creditor to arrest the body of the debtor. The authority to arrest was repealed after the debt had been contracted. It was contended that the new statute acted retroactively and was therefore unconstitutional: but the court said; "The legislature must necessarily possess the power ... of making such alterations and such laws as the [427]*427change of circumstances, for the public good, may require. And in doing this he may be deprived of the right which he has by the existing laws to arrest the body or to attach or seize certain descriptions of property without infringing any constitutional provision.” In the same case it was held that the legislature "possessed the power to take away by statute, what was given by statute, except vested rights.”

In Bangor v. Goding, 35 Maine, 73, it was held, as appears from the head note which fairly states the case: "The repeal of the statutory provision, giving a lien upon property, defeats the lien remedy, although, at the time of the repeal, the proceedings, prescribed by the statute for enforcing the lien, had been instituted and were rightfully pending in court. A lien created by the provisions of a statute in favor of a contract creditor is but a part of the remedy afforded for collecting the debt. The repeal of such a provision, is merely a change in the remedy and does not impair the obligation of the contract.” The general doctrine laid down in these cases is too thoroughly established to require further citation.

The plaintiff, in support of his contention, cites several authorities, but a fair analysis of the case at bar shows that they do not apply. The principle upon which these cases proceed seems to be fairly stated in Phinney v. Phinney, cited by plaintiff, 81 Maine, 450, in which the court say that when "a subsequent statute so changes the nature and extent of existing remedies as materially to impair the rights and interests of a party in a contract,” it is unconstitutional. We think the rule here enunciated is in full accord with that stated in Banks v. Freese and Bangor v. Goding, supra.

Upon examination it will appear that all the cases supporting the plaintiff’s contention are predicated upon the existence of privity of contract on the part of the person claiming that his contractual rights have been impaired. Phinney

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 905, 106 Me. 423, 1910 Me. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-briggs-me-1910.