Kearney v. Sascer

37 Md. 264, 1873 Md. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 30, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 37 Md. 264 (Kearney v. Sascer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kearney v. Sascer, 37 Md. 264, 1873 Md. LEXIS 4 (Md. 1873).

Opinion

Robinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thomas Sascer died iñ the year 1841, seized and possessed of a large and valuable real and personal estate, and by his will directed the same should be kept together until his youngest daughter then in her third year, should attain the age of eighteen. The debts due and owing by him, he also directed should be paid out of the rents and profits of the estate.

Letters testamentary were granted to Zadock Sascer, and these being subsequently revoked, letters of administration de bonis non were granted to Dor in da E. Sascer, widow of the testator.

■ In 1846, the appellant recovered a judgment against the said Dorinda, administratrix d. b. n., for the sum of eleven thousand and five hundred dollars.

In 1861 she died, and letters of administration d. b. n., were granted to John Thomas Sascer, one of the complainants.

■ In 1865, the appellant caused a scire facias to be issued on said judgment against Sascer, administrator d. b. n., and a judg.ment oí fiat was confessed by him for the sum of seven thousand nine hundred and eighty-nine dollars and twenty-five cents. The statement and agreement in pursuance of which the fiat was entered are lost or have disappeared from the papers in the cause, but evidence in regard to the same was taken by both parties, without exception. ' ■

[275]*275Moreover the complainants in their bill state, “that a fiat was obtained for the sum of $11,989.//?, upon the agreement of the counsel for the said plaintiff and the said John T. Sascer, administrator d. b. n.” thus admitting that the amount and form of the judgment are according to the agreement of parties.

Upon the judgment of fiat thus entered, execution was issued and this bill is filed by Sascer, administrator d. b. n., and the sureties on his administration bond, praying that the same may be enjoined.

The equities of the bill rest mainly on two grounds: First, that the agreement in pursuance of which the judgment of fiat was entered, was signed by Sascer, administrator d. b. n., in utter ignorance of its contents, and without knowing the effect and operation of the same, and that at the time when the fiat was confessed there was but a small amount of personal property in his hands chargeable with the payment of the judgment.

Secondly, that in confessing a fiat he did not intend to charge himself personally with the payment of the same, and was entirely ignorant that such would be its legal effect..

An administration account passed in 1869, and showing a balance of only $41.//¡¡-, as applicable to the payment of the judgment upon which the scire facias was issued, is also filed with the bill. Apart from the administration account, the only evidence in support of the allegations in the bill is the testimony of Sascer one of the complainants, who says that if he signed the agreement in pursuance of which the fiat was entered, he did so under the impression that the personal estate in his hands was sufficient to pay it; that he never meant to, make himself personally responsible, and had no idea that the judgment would.bind him further than he had assets in his hands as administrator.

The first question to be determined then, is whether the complainants are entitled to relief on the ground that the [276]*276judgment oí fiat-was confessed by Sascer, administrator d. b. n., under the impression that the personal estate was sufficient to pay the same. Now whilst it is well settled, that Courts of Equity will grant relief in certain cases where parties have acted in ignorance or under misapprehension in regard to material facts, it is equally clear that they do not lightly interfere with judgments rendered after trial, or deliberately confessed by the parties. It is not sufficient to state merely that injustice has been done, but that it has been done under such circumstances as will authorize the Court to interfere. Mistake as to facts will not entitle a party to relief if the mistake arose from negligence or want of due diligence, such as may be fairly expected from a reasonable person. What is the exact nature or degree of mistake, not attributable to negligence, in regard to which a party may be entitled to relief as distinguishable from mistake due to negligence, and therefore not believable cannot be well defined, and must in a great measure depend upon the • discretion of the Court under all the circumstances of the case. The jurisdiction to relieve in such cases being purely equitable, it must be exercised upon equitable principles. As a general rule, however, we safely say, that “any fact which clearly proves it to be against conscience to execute the judgment and of which the injured party could not have availed himself at law; or of which he might have availed himself at law, but was prevented by fraud or accident unmixed with any fault or negligence in himself,” will justify an application to a Court of Equity. Marine Ins. Co. vs. Hodgson, 7 Cranch, 336.

Was the mistake then in this case such as the complainant Sascer might have availed himself of under the proceedings in the scire facias f The appellees insist that, inasmuch as there were assets in the hands of the administrator d. b. n., the latter could not have prevented an absolute judgment of fiat, although in point of fact the [277]*277assets were wholly insufficient to pay the judgment. But in this view we do not concur. An administrator d. b. n., is chargeable only with unadministered assets which come into his hands, and the fact that the former administrator may have confessed a judgment and thereby admitted a sufficiency of assets in his hands to pay the same, does not preclude an administrator d. b. n., from pleading to a scire facias issued on such judgment that the unadministered assets for which alone he is responsible, are insufficient to pay the original judgment.

In the cases relied on by the counsel for the appellees, they have failed to distinguish between cases where the scire facias is issued against an administrator of the original administrador to revive a judgment recovered against the latter, and cases where the scire facias is issued against an administrator d. b. n., who is entitled to and chargeable only with assets not administered by his predecessor. Where a judgment is recovered against an administrator he admits thereby a sufficiency of assets, and becomes personally liable for the payment of the same, and in the event of his death, his personal estate in the hands of his administrator is of course also liable. The administrator of the administrator could not in such a case plead plene administravit, because it would not necessarily follow that he had rightfully paid away the assets as against the judgment creditor. The claim of the latter may have precedence or priority to the claims paid. And such was the case in Ordway vs. Godfrey, Croke Eliz., 575. There the scire facias was brought against the administrator of the administrator, and the Court decided that the plea of 'plena administravit was bad, because they say “the administrator may have paid claims

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Md. 264, 1873 Md. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kearney-v-sascer-md-1873.