Higgins v. Breen

9 Mo. 493
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 9 Mo. 493 (Higgins v. Breen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. Breen, 9 Mo. 493 (Mo. 1845).

Opinion

Scott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by the plaintiff in error, Rosalina Higgins, against the administrator of Bernard McNally’s estate.

The declaration contained two counts. The fii’st was a special one, setting out at length the facts of the case, and alledging, that B. Mc-Nally in his lifetime, representing himself to be a widower, sole and unmarried, solicited the plaintiff to marry him, and as his wife to take charge and control of his family and domestic concerns, in consideration of which she should enjoy all the rights, interests and privileges of a married woman. That the plaintiff afterwards married McNally, and lived and cohabited with him as his wife, took charge of his affairs, and conducted herself as a dutiful wife, until the death of the said McNally. It is furthermore alleged that at the time of the said marriage, the said McNally was married and had a wife living, unknown to the plaintiff, in foreign parts, which said wife survived said McNally, and is entitled to dower in his estate; that McNally left a considerable estate, and by reason of the premises the plaintiff has been, and is debarred of her dower to the damage, &c.

[494]*494The second count is general, for work and labor, care, diligence and attention to the business and affairs of McNally, the defendant.

To the first count in the declaration there was a demurrer which was sustained by the court below. On the trial of the issue on the second count, the plaintiff offered to prove that the deceased, Bernard McNally, about the month of August, 1841, applied to the plaintiff to marry him, then representing himself as a widower, with two children, and stating that his former wife was dead, and after repeated solicitations the plaintiff consented to marry the said Bernard. On the 23d day of August, 1841, the plaintiff and said Bernard were married. The plaintiff also offered to prove that she lived with said Bernard, as his wife, from the time of their marriage until his death, which occurred on the second day of October, 1842, discharging all the duties of a wife, managing the family and household affairs of said McNally, with prudence and industry ; that said McNally was a farmer, in the possession of a comfortable house, and a farm of about forty acres in cultivation, which he owned, near Manchester, in St. Louis county, with considerable personal property$ that McNally had many laborers in his employment on his farm, and in erecting buildings, and the plaintiff cooked for the whole family, including those laborers. The plaintiff further offered to prove that said Bernard McNally, at the time of making the representations to plaintiff as aforesaid, and at the time of his marriage with the plaintiff as aforesaid, and at the time of the death of the said McNally, had a lawful wife living in foreign parts, who has, since his death, come to the State of Missouri, and claimed and obtained dower in his estate ; and that the plaintiff has been cut off from any interest or share in the estate of said deceased, and that she never received from McNally, in his life time, nor from any person since, any compensation for the services she rendered, more than her food and clothing. The bill of exceptions then states that the court decided that the proof of the foregoing facts would not support the plaintiff’s action, and that she was not entitled to recover, and the plaintiff not offering any Other evidence, the court instructed the jury to find for the defendant, to which opinions and instructions the plaintiff excepted, and the exceptions were saved. There was a verdict for the defendant. No motion was made to set aside the verdict, and grant a new trial, but the cause is brought here on the exceptions taken before the verdict was given.

At common law, actions ex constractu alone survived against an executor or administrator. But where the cause of action arise from any mis-feasapee, or mal-feasanee, was a tort, or arose ex delicto, in which the declaration imputes a wrong done to the person or property of an[495]*495other, and in which the plea was not guilty, and damages were cover-ered, then the rule actio personalis moritur cum, persona prevailed, and no action could be sustained by or against an executor or administrator. The statute of 4th Edward the Third, de bonis asportatis in vita tes 'utoris, reciting that in times past executors have not had actions for trespasses done to their testators, as of the goods and chattels of their testator carried away in his life time, and so as such trespasses have remained unpunished, enacts that the executor in such cases shall have an action against the trespassers, and recover their damages in like manner as they, whose executors they be, should have had if they were living. This statute was subsequently extended to executors of executors, and to administrators, and being a remedial statute has been always liberally construed, and although using the word trespasses alone, has been extended to all acts by which personal property has been lessened in value. It has been construed as extending to an action for an escape, to debt on a judgment, suggesting a devastavit by the executor, to an action for a false return, for removing goods token on execution before the landlord was paid a year’s rent, and for not setting out tithes. The statute, it will be perceived, only gave actions to executors, and not against them, for as against the person committing the injury the action dies with him. Chitty 59; 1st Saunder; 217. Our statute has changed the English law in this respect, and has given an action both to and against executors and administrators, and by employing much broader language than the statute of Edward, seems to have included by -express enactment the injuries which were comprehended in that statute only by construction. The words of our statute are, “for wrongs done to the property, rights or interests of another,” &c., with an exception of actions for slander, libel, assault and battery, or false imprisonment, and to actions on the case for injuries to the person. Rev. Code, title administration, art. 2, sec. 24 and 25.

For the wrong complained of by the plaintiff in her declaration, had a scienter been alledged, an action on the case could have been maintained at common law against the wrong doer. Buller 32. There is no room for the doubt expressed by Buller, whether an action for the injury would lie, inasmuch as it was made a felony by statute, and therefore the civil remedy was merged in the crime, for our code expressly declares that in no case shall the right of action of any party injured by the commission of a felony, be deemed or adjudged to be merged in such felony. Rev. Code 215; Nash vs. Prim, 1 Mo. Rep. 125; Mann vs Trabue, ib. 508.

[496]*496Our statute giving an action in all cases against an executor or administrator, where, by the English law, it is given only to the executor or administrator1, it will be perceived at once that many actions which by the English law, die with the person committing the injury, will under our law survive against his executor or administrator; and therfore the principle of the common law that where the plea must be, that the testator or intestate was not guilty, no action can lie against the executor or administrator, does not obtain in our jurisprudence.

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9 Mo. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-breen-mo-1845.