Maffit v. Commonwealth

5 Pa. 359, 1847 Pa. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 14, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Pa. 359 (Maffit v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maffit v. Commonwealth, 5 Pa. 359, 1847 Pa. LEXIS 64 (Pa. 1847).

Opinion

Burnside, J.

This was a scire facias No. 112, to May Term, 1845, to ascertain the damages due on judgment No. 41 to December Term, 1842. It is impossible to comprehend the case without great labour from the paper-book. It is a mass of confusion. I will endeavour to trace the proceedings of the parties as well in the Common Pleas as in the Orphan’s Court, with a view of presenting the legal question, intelligibly.

Thomas Beale died in 1821. Shortly after his decease, on the 27th of April, letters of administration were granted on his estate .by the register of Mifflin county, to Elizabeth Beale, his widow, William Grillson and Joshua Beale. The administrator's gave the usual bond to the Commonwealth in the penal sum of $8000. In October following, they filed an inventory, amounting, to $527 68. On the 2d of June, 1825, the administrators filed their administration account, showing a balance in their hands of $702 90. This account never was confirmed by the Orphan’s Court. The bond given by the administrators was generally sued. The action of debt against Elizabeth Beale on the bond, was No. 202 to August Term, 1825, which was removed into the Circuit Court of Mifflin county, and afterwards transferred to Juniata county, after that county was created by the legislature.

Pending the action on the administration bond in the court of [362]*362Juniata county, on motion of Mr. Fisher, (the defendant having intermarried with John Maffit, now plaintiff in error, since the institution of this suit.) John Maffit, and Elizabeth his wife, were substituted defendants. The 8th of May, 1832, verdict for the Commonwealth in the Circuit Court.

The Circuit Court causes having all been remanded to the Common Pleas, on the 10th of February, 1837, a rule was obtained to show cause why a judgment should not be entered on the verdict. May 5,1837, rule made .absolute. December 8,1846, on motion of Mr. Fisher, the Common Pleas amended the record nunc pro tunc, by adding, fox the penalty of the bond $8000.

I will now trace the proceedings in the Orphan’s Court.

At April Term, 1824, Elizabeth Beale, William Gillson and Joshua Beale were dismissed by the Orphan’s Court of Mifflin county, from the administration on the estate of Thomas Beale, deceased. In November, 1828, Elizabeth Beale intermarried with John Maffit. She died on the 7th November, 1841.

On the 27th April, 1824, letters of administration de bonis non on the estate of Thomas Beale, were issued to Thomas Todd, the defendant in error.

The joint account of Elizabeth Beale and her co-administrators, filed on the 2d of June, 1825, was referred to auditors, who, on the 28th of May, 1839, made a report. The court, on the 13th May, 1840, referred the report back to the auditors, with instructions to find specifically the amount paid by the administrators on bonds and specialties, and the amount paid on simple contract debts, and find how much was due from the administrators in each way of finding, leaving the question of law as to a devastavit and misapplication of the money to the court.

On the 7th August, 1840, the auditors made report, finding the sum paid on bonds to be, with interest to the 5th February, 1840, $1828 22, leaving a balance in the hands of the administrators of $2209 63; the amount paid on simple contract debts to be $924 75, leaving a balance in the hands of the administrators of $1353 91, which, on the 8th of August, 1840, was read and confirmed nisi, and exceptions filed. On the 4th of November, 1840, the report was confirmed and judgment entered.

We find no further proceedings in the Orphan’s Court until the 6th of January, 1844, (after the death of widow Beale,) when Thomas Todd, the administrator dc bonis non, presented a petition setting forth the history of the former administration, and that judgments against the estate remained 'unpaid, and praying the [363]*363court to issue an attachment, or other proper process, to compel the said Joshua Beale, John Maffit and William Grillson, or either of them, to pay to him, as administrator de bonis non, of to such other person as the court may seem meet, all and every the moneys, goods and chattels, with interest, &c.

On the 6th January, 1844, the court granted a rule to show cause why an attachment or other process should not issue, returnable the last Monday of March next. John Maffit, in answer to the rule, returned on oath “that he never joined in stating or exhibiting an account on said estate; that he never was made a party to any proceedings in the Orphan’s Court in relation to an account alleged to have been filed by Joshua Beale and others, the former administrators of Thomas Beale, deceased; nor was he cited, summoned or otherwise notified of any such proceedhigs, either before the Orphan’s Court or auditors appointed by said court, in relation to any administration account upon said estate; that he never received directly or indirectly any part of the assets of said Thomas Beale, deceased, no goods, chattels or effects having at any time come to his hands, possession, or knowledge, nor' to the hands or possession of the said Elizabeth, from the time of his intermarriage with her until her death, &c.”

The Orphan’s Court, on the 6th of April; 1844, ordered and decreed “ that Joshua Beale and William Grillson, the former administrators of Thomas Beale, deceased, pay over to Thomas Todd, administrator de bonis non, &e., of said Thomas Beale, deceased, the sum of $1885 91, with interest from the 7th of August, 1840, and award against the said Joshua Beale and William Grillson a writ of execution in the nature of a writ of fieri facias, directed to the sheriff of Juniata county, commanding him to levy the said sum of $1835 91, and interest from the 7th of A-ugust, 1840, of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of John Beale and William Grillson, and pay the same over to Thomas Todd, administrator de bonis non of Thomas Beale, deceased, &c.”

This ended the proceedings of the Orphan’s Court. The court made no order against John Maffit. I incline to the opinion this was right, for Elizabeth Beale was discharged from the administration on the estate of Thomas Beale long before her intermarriage with John Maffit, and died before this proceeding in the Orphan’s Court. Lord Chancellor Nottingham (Sir Heneage Einch) held: if feme administratrix wastes the assets, then marries and dies, the husband is liable to no more than the value of what came to his or her hands after the intermarriage; Sanderson v. Crouch, 2 Vernon, [364]*364118. As no part of the estate of Thomas Beale came or could come to the hands of either John Maffit or wife during coverture, on the death of the wife the law discharged him from.' her devastavit before marriage, a decree not having been obtained against him. It is settled, where the husband has not, by his own acts, made himself responsible, he is only liable for his wife’s devastavit while the marriage subsists between them; so that when it determines before a judgment or decree'is obtained against them for the demand, his or his wife’s death discharges his liability; Roper on Husband and Wife, 203, (32 Law Lib. 129.)

I will now return to the Common Pleas, No. 41, of December Term, 1842. After the death of Elizabeth, the wife of John Maffit, a scire facias was issued, entitled “ The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. 359, 1847 Pa. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maffit-v-commonwealth-pa-1847.