Hoffecker v. D'Alonzo

159 A. 372, 18 Del. Ch. 298, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 A. 372 (Hoffecker v. D'Alonzo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffecker v. D'Alonzo, 159 A. 372, 18 Del. Ch. 298, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 27 (Del. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The real estate in question is known as 809 Shipley Street, Wilmington, Delaware. It was held by Thomas Rossiter at the time of his death intestate on March 4, 1926. Rossiter left two children, a son, Raymond, and a daughter, Mary, to survive him as his only heirs at law. He was seised at the time of his death of other parcels of real estate besides the one in question. He gave two mortgages which were liens on properties other than 809 Shipley Street to secure debts evidenced by bonds. One of those mortgages was for $885.00 and was dated October 23, 1912; the other was for $5,000.00 and was dated April 19, 1920. These mortgages and the bonds secured by them are still outstanding and apparently unpaid. Since his death judgment was obtained by the mortgagee on November 15, 1929, upon a sci. fa. sur mortgage issued on the $5,000.00 mortgage. No levari facias has been issued on the judgment.

Letters of administration were taken out upon the estate of Thomas Rossiter by his son Raymond. The final account of the administrator shows that the administrator advanced sufficient funds to pay the debts filed against the estate of the deceased. The debts evidenced by the two bonds above referred to and secured by the two mortgages, however, were not filed with the administrator and are therefore not shown to have been paid by the administrator out of the personal estate.

After the death of Thomas Rossiter, a judgment in the amount of $779.48 was obtained on April 27, 1929, against Mary Rossiter and became a lien on her one-half share in all her father’s real estate.

On October 30, 1929, Raymond Rossiter was adjudicated a bankrupt and a trustee of his estate was duly appointed.

[300]*300On December 11, 1929, the trustee in bankruptcy, in pursuance of authority conferred on him by order of the referee in bankruptcy, instituted proceedings in the Orphans’ Court for partition of the real estate of Thomas Rossiter, deceased, naming as party defendant, Raymond Rossiter, Trustee for Mary Rossiter, the co-parcener, for whom he had been appointed trustee in lunacy proceedings.

The Orphans’. Court decreed a partition of the lands of the deceased and allotted, inter alla, 809 Shipley Street to the trustee in bankruptcy for Raymond Rossiter as and for his share in his father’s real estate to be held in severalty. Certain other of the real estate was allotted to Mary Rossiter in severalty as and for her share in the father’s real estate.

The complainant derives his title from a sale duly made by the trustee in bankruptcy of 809 Shipley Street, free and clear of all liens except taxes.

The foregoing are all the material details in the complainant’s chain of title which the objections to title raised by the defendant make it necessary to state. These objections are:

1. The trustee in bankruptcy of one of the co-parceners had no power to institute partition proceedings, and the partition was therefore void.

2. Even if the partition proceedings were valid, the allotment of the premises in suit to Raymond Rossiter did not relieve the moiety thereof from the lien of the judgment theretofore obtained against Mary, his co-parcener.

3. Conceding the validity of the partition and allotment thereunder of the premises in suit to Raymond Rossiter to be held in severalty, yet the order of the referee in bankruptcy directing a sale of the premises free and clear of all liens and the ensuing sale were void in so far as the bond creditors of Thomas Rossiter are concerned, and the premises are subject to a liability to answer such creditors.

The foregoing epitomizes the objections to the title urged by the defendant under seven heads.

[301]*301I shall refrain from discussing the points of objection above stated under 1 and 2.

The objection stated under point 3 will alone be noticed.

If that objection is a good one, there are two points that must be established to support it. These are first, that the debts evidenced by the bonds constitute liens on the lands generally which were held by Thomas Rossiter at the time of his decease; and second, the sale by the trustee in bankruptcy, undertaken to be made free and clear of all liens, did not operate as a discharge of 809 Shipley Street from the burden of those liens.

Upon the first question, the law is well settled in this State that the creditors of a decedent have a lien by operation of law upon his real estate as well as his personalty. Vincent v. Platt, 5 Har. 164; Cooch’s Ex’r. v. Cooch’s Adm’r., 5 Houst. 540, 1 Am. St. Rep. 161; Cohen v. Tuff, 4 Boyce (27 Del.) 188, 86 A. 833, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 596; Beadenkopf v. Swartz’s Adm’r., 159 A. 837, recently decided by the Superior Court. In Cohen v. Tuff, Judge Woolley, speaking for the Supreme Court described the rights of the creditors to look to the real estate of their deceased debtor for payment as a “species of lien.” The usual method of enforcing the lien is by petition in the Orphans’ Court for an order to sell lands for the payment of debts, filed by the personal representative on his own motion (Revised Code 1915, c. 99) or on compulsion by a creditor (Revised Code 1915, § 3366). Whether the land of the deceased be held by his heirs or devisees or their grantees, it is equally subject to sale in such proceedings. Cohen v. Tuff, supra. The personal estate is the primary fund for the payment of a decedent’s debts. There is no showing here, however, that the personal estate was sufficient for that purpose. That being so, there is no occasion for considering what the situation would be with respect to the rights of creditors in the instant case to look to the real estate for payment if the personalty had been sufficient.

Within what time a petition to sell lands for the pay[302]*302ment of debts must be filed, is a matter upon which the statutory law is silent. Cohen v. Tuff, supra, held that it must be filed within a reasonable time after the death of the debtor. The court below in that case held that such reasonable time is to be ascertained by analogy to the periods fixed by the statute of limitations for the institution of suits. While the Supreme Court in its opinion in the same case, when it came before it on a. writ of error, did not in express terms adopt the rule as to reasonableness of time thus laid down by the trial court, yet every intendment of its opinion seems to me to look in that direction. The provisions of Section 4316 of the Revised Code 1915, which provide that real estate of a deceased person shall not be liable to be taken in execution and shall not be bound by a judgment against his executor or administrator, unless such judgment is rendered on a verdict, etc., would appear to lend force to the view that the statutory periods of limitation should be referred to as supplying by analogy the measure for reasonableness of time within which petitions to sell land for the payment of debts should be filed in the Orphans’ Court; for that section recognizes the right of a creditor to obtain judgment in an independent suit at law of his own and to take the deceased’s land in execution; and it must be supposed that in such suit, the appropriate period of limitation, when pleaded, would be applied by the court in bar.

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Related

Central National Bank v. Industrial Trust Co.
51 A.2d 854 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1947)
Beadenkopf v. Schwartz
159 A. 837 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 372, 18 Del. Ch. 298, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffecker-v-dalonzo-delch-1932.