Kent v. Somervell

7 G. & J. 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 7 G. & J. 265 (Kent v. Somervell) 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
Kent v. Somervell, 7 G. & J. 265 (Md. 1835).

Opinion

Buchanan, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

John Somervell, the obligee and holder of a bill obligatory, or single bill, for $1,569, executed to him by Thomas T. Somervell, bequeathed it to Sarah II. Somervell, Susan Somervell, and Ann Somervell, and by his will appointed Thomas T. Somervell, the obligor, or maker of the single bill his sole executor; who took upon himself the executorship, assented to the bequest, and delivered the bill so bequeathed to the legatees, Sarah H. Susan, and Ann Somervell. They by assignment in writing, transferred it, and all their interest in it, to John Somervell, and he assigned it by endorsement to James Kent, the plaintiff below, and appellant here, in whose name the suit was brought upon the bill, against Thomas T. Somervell, the maker, and the executor named in the will of John Somervell, but not against him in his representative capacity.

To the declaration making this case there was a demurrer, upon the hearing of which the judgment of the court below, was against the appellant. And the question presented to us [268]*268in argument on the appeal, is, whether an action at law in his own name, can he maintained upon a single bill, by the holder, under an assignment to him by the assignee of a legatee, to whom it had been specifically bequeathed by the obligee, against the maker he being the executor of the will of the obligee, and having assented to the bequest, and in pursuance of it, delivered the bill to the legatee.

It may here be proper to remark, that under the testamentary system of this State, 1798, ch. 101, sub. ch. 8, sec. 20, it is expressly provided, that “the bare naming of an executor in a will, shall not operaté to extinguish any just claim, which the deceased had against him.” Such an executor therefore being liable to some person, and in some form, for the amount due, the inquiry is, how, where the debt is due upon a specialty which has been specifically bequeathed, payment is to be enforced by the legatee, or other bona fide holder of such specialty, into whose hands it has come by assignment.

The general principle is, that an action at law will not lie against an executor to recover a pecuniary legacy payable out of the general funds of the testator, upon the mere assent of the executor to the bequest; on the ground, that the law has been held not to raise an implied promise by the executor to pay such a legacy, upon proof only of his admission of assets; and that in an action at law, entire justice cannot be done to the parties concerned, -which a court of equity can and will do, according to circumstances. That was the character of the case of Deeks and wife vs. Strutt, 5 Term. Rep. 690, which was an action at law, founded upon an acknowledgment only of assets by the executor, for an annuity payable out of the general funds of the testator; and in which the question, whether an action at law could be maintained for a specific legacy assented to by the executor was not raised, nor presented to the court. It had been frequently before decided, that an action at law would lie for such a legacy after the assent of the executor to the bequest; on the principle that the interest in any specific thing bequeathed, vests at law in the legatee by the will, upon the assent of the [269]*269executor. As where the bequest is of a horse, or any specific thing; in which case, as soon as the executor assents to the bequest, the property vests by the will in the legatee, who may have an action at law, for the recovery of the thing bequeathed.

This principle is recognized in the cases of Paramour vs. Yardley, Plowd. 539. Westwick vs. Wyer, Co. Rep. 4th part, 28, Young vs. Holmes, 1 Strange, 70. Duppa vs. Mayo, 1 Saund. 278. Chamberlain vs. Chamberlain, 1 Chan. Cases, 256. Baxstard vs. Stakely, 2nd Lev. 209 — and Barton’s case, Freem. 289. And in the subsequent case of Doe, on the demise of Lord Say and Sele vs. Guy, 3 East 120, the same doctrine is again asserted.

That was an action of ejectment for leasehold premises, founded upon a bequest of the lease, to the lessor of the plaintiff, against the executor of the testatrix, he having assented to the bequest; and it was sustained by the whole court of King’s Bench. Lord Ellenborough, in commenting upon the case of Deeks and wife vs. Strutt, before adverted to, which was relied upon for the defendant in that case says, “the question of a specific legacy assented to by the executor, was not before the court; and that general language used by the court, in giving their opinion in any case, must always be understood in reference to the subject matter then before them.” And in another place he says, “according to the doctrine laid down in the cases cited of Paramour vs. Yardly, and Young, and Holmes, and the passage from 4th Rep. 28, the assent of the executor once given to a specific legacy, vests the interest at law irrevocably, and this is not broken in upon by any subsequent case.”

The distinction there is between a specific legacy, which upon the assent of the executor vests in the legatee, and becomes a chattel, governable by the rules of the common law, the interest at law, being in him; and a pecuniary legacy payable out of the general funds of the testator, for which an action at law will not lie against the executor upon his mere assent to the bequest, or acknowledgment of assets ; [270]*270the interest not being thereby vested at law in the legatee, and the proper remedy therefore being in chancery, where the interests of all concerned may be protected. And even in the case of a specific legacy, where upon the assent of the executor, the interest has vested at law in the legatee, if there be a deficiency of assets, chancery treating him as a trustee for the creditors, will interpose to reach the property in his hands, and compel him to refund, or contribute in the proportion required. But the interest being vested at law in him, this power of a court of chancery, does not stand in the way of his enforcing his legal rights, by a recovery in an action at law of the thing bequeathed, or the value of it.

A bequest of a single bill, is a specific legacy, differing from no other specific legacy; so far at least as respects the forum in which a recovery is sought to be had. A legatee therefore under such a bequest, after it has been assented to by the executor, may in an action of trover against the executor so assenting, but withholding the bill, recover the amount in damages; or he may in an action of replevin, against such executor, recover the single bill, the thing bequeathed, just as he may any other specific legacy; as a horse, &e.

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Bluebook (online)
7 G. & J. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-somervell-md-1835.