Hicks v. Wilbur

94 A. 872, 38 R.I. 268, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 94 A. 872 (Hicks v. Wilbur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Wilbur, 94 A. 872, 38 R.I. 268, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 61 (R.I. 1915).

Opinions

Sweetland, J.

The above entitled case is an appeal from the decree of the probate court of Scituate denying the. petition of said William A. Hicks asking that the respondent as executrix of the will of her late husband, Frank H. Wilbur, be declared guilty of unfaithful administration of .said estate.

It appears that the said Frank H. Wilbur died on February 19, 1913; that his will was proved and letters testamentary issued to this respondent as executrix of said will April 10, 1913; that said respondent first published notice of her .appointment as such executrix on April 28, 1913. On October 23,1913, the petitioner filed the following statement •of his claim against the estate of Frank H. Wilbur in the office of the clerk of the probate court of Scituate.

“To the Honorable Probate Court of the Town of Scituate. In re Estate of Frank H. Wilbur, Dr.

“The undersigned hereby files this his claim against the •estate of Frank H. Wilbur, Mary E. Wilbur, executrix, which was a valid and legal claim in the life time of said Frank H. Wilbur, deceased.

To damages to the real estate and property of William A. Hicks, of Scituate, by reason of breaking and ¿ntering the close of said William A. Flicks by Frank H. Wilbur, late *270 of Scituate, and trespasses committed therein and thereon by-said Frank H. Wilbur in his life time,- One Thousand Dollars,.

William A. Hicks

By his attorneys

Cooney & Cahill

Claimant’s address

William A. Hicks Hope, R. I.

R. F. D. No. 1

Filed October 23, 1913.”

The respondent as such executrix did not disallow said claim of the petitioner within thirty days after the expiration of six months after the first publication of notice of her appointment as executrix. The respondent has not paid said claim of the petitioner. On March 26, 1914, the petitioner preferred his petition to said probate court setting out that he had filed said claim; that the respondent had failed to disallow the same and had not paid the same; that the continuance of the respondent in her office of executrix would be prejudicial to the petitioner as a creditor of said estate and concluding with the following as the sole prayer of' the petition:

“Wherefore he prays that a citation issue from this. Honorable Court directed to said Mary E. Wilbur, commanding her at a time therein to be stated, to be and appear before your Honorable Body and show cause why she should not be adjudged guilty of unfaithful administration of the personal estate of the said Frank H. Wilbur. ”

The probate court of Scituate entered its decree denying said petition; and the petitioner appealed from said decree to the Superior Court. Said petition was heard before a justice-of the Superior Court without a jury. Said justice filed his decision sustaining said appeal. To said decision the respondent excepted; and the case is before us upon said exception.

*271 (1) *270 In support of said exception the respondent urges, among-other things, that no testimony was offered by the petitioner- *271 ■ to show that before the filing of said petition the respondent had sufficient assets to pay in full all creditors who had filed their claims within six months after said first publication of notice. She bases this contention on the language of Chapter 314, § 7, Gen. Laws, 1909, which is as follows: “After the expiration of said six months and filing a statement of claims disallowed, if anj^ there be, as provided in the preceding section, the executor or administrator, if he have sufficient assets to pay in full all creditors who have filed their claims within six months, shall pay claims not disallowed, and shall pay claims so filed and disallowed when proved.”

Whether or not the respondent had sufficient funds as set out in said section is a matter within her knowledge and not the knowledge of the petitioner. If by reason of lack of funds she would excuse her failure to pay the claim of the petitioner, she should present that matter in defence to the petition. In Fitz-Simon v. Fitz-Simon, 28 R. I. 555, at 560, this court places the burden upon executors or administrators to show “any necessity as to the assets of the estate which would require further time for payment. ”

*272 (2) *271 The respondent also urges that said claim of the petitioner is not one which the statute required the petitioner to file and hence it is not one as to which her failure to disallow amounts to an allowance thereof, under the construction of the statute adopted in Fitz-Simon v. Fitz-Simon, 28 R. I. 555. The respondent’s contention is that as said claim was merely an unliquidated claim for damages for trespasses upon the petitioner’s land, stated to have been committed by the deceased during his lifetime, it was not a claim which could, at the time of the filing thereof “be proved as a debt” against the estate of the deceased. For this reason the respondent maintains that said claim is a contingent claim and need not be filed or disallowed. She takes this position because of certain language in Section 42 of Chapter 314, with reference to “a contingent claim against a deceased person which cannot be proved as a debt within the time allowed for filing claims.” Most, if not all, contingent *272 claims arise out of some form of contract or covenant and hence may be proved as debts after the happening of the contingency on which they depend. Some by reason of the earlier happening of the contingency may be proved as debts within the time allowed for filing claims. Section 42 of said Chapter 314 and the following sections deal with contingent claims which cannot be proved as debts within the time allowed for filing claims. ' Because the statute uses the language: “a contingent claim against a deceased person which cannot be proved as a debt,” the argument is by no means warranted that all claims which cannot be proved as debts are therefore contingent claims. A claim in tort, as to which a right of action arose immediately upon the doing of the wrong, may not be proved as a debt, but it is by no means a contingent claim. Whether the claimant in tort will recover is uncertain; but this is true of all claimants, whatever be the nature of their claims, whether for liquidated or unliquidated damages, or whether the claim arises in tort or in contract; and, if such claimants are allowed to recover, the amount of the damages which may be awarded is uncertain, but these circumstances do not render their claims contingent. A contingent claim within the meaning of the statute is one that depends for its effect upon some future event which may or may not happen. Until that event happens a right of action upon said claim does not arise.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 872, 38 R.I. 268, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-wilbur-ri-1915.