Matter of Estate of Stirling

537 N.W.2d 554, 1995 N.D. LEXIS 177, 1995 WL 565015
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1995
DocketCiv. 950036
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 537 N.W.2d 554 (Matter of Estate of Stirling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Estate of Stirling, 537 N.W.2d 554, 1995 N.D. LEXIS 177, 1995 WL 565015 (N.D. 1995).

Opinion

MESCHKE, Justice.

Connie Ness appealed from an order that her personal injury claim against the Estate of Donald Stirling was barred by the statute of limitations. We affirm.

Ness was injured in a May 21, 1987, collision between her car and one driven by Donald Stirling. In May 1993, Ness attempted to serve a summons and complaint on Stirling. Stirling, however, had died on February 7, 1993. No probate proceedings had been begun.

By letter of June 23, 1993, counsel for Ness asked Mrs. Stirling if a personal representative had been appointed for Stirling’s estate. By letter of July 2, 1993, Stirling’s insurer replied that it believed the six-year statute of limitations had run. 1 On September 19, 1994, Ness filed a petition alleging that, from her injuries in the May 21, 1987, collision, she was a creditor of the Estate of Donald Stirling, seeking a determination that Stirling died intestate, and requesting that she be appointed personal representative of the estate.

The trial court held that “Connie Ness’s claim is barred by the applicable statute of limitations and on that basis she is not entitled to be appointed personal representative.” Ness appealed.

Ness contends that her claim is not barred by any statute of limitations because her “cause of action against the Estate of Donald Stirling does not fully accrue until there is a personal representative appointed” and that she has “at least one year after the personal representative is appointed in order to initiate her lawsuit.” Ness argues her claim is not time-barred because, when a person dies, NDCC 28-01-16 becomes ineffective, and NDCC 28-01-26 becomes the applicable statute of limitations. 2 Therefore, Ness argues, her time to sue Stirling’s estate should be measured from (1) the appointment of a personal representative under NDCC 28-01-26 and 30.1-12-04, 3 (2) the first publication of notice to creditors under NDCC 30.1-19-03(1), 4 or (3) death, if a notice to creditors has not been published under NDCC 30.1-12-08. 5 Alternatively, Ness argues that, *557 even if the general statute of limitations, NDCC 28-01-16, continued to operate, her claim still would not be time-barred because NDCC 30.1-12-04 6 prohibited commencement of her action before a personal representative was appointed, and under NDCC 28-01-29, 7 this statutory prohibition tolled the general six-year statute of limitations. Ness’s analyses are mistaken.

Except for Stirling’s death, the statute of limitations in NDCC 28-01-16 would have barred Ness’s claim on May 21, 1993, six years after the car accident. Ness’s first argument is mistaken because the death of a potential defendant before the six-year period runs neither makes NDCC 28-01-26 the applicable statute of limitations, nor renders NDCC 28-01-16 ineffective. NDCC 28-01-26 says that, upon the death of a potential defendant before the statute of limitations has run, a claimant may sue after the statute of limitations has run and within one year after letters of administration were issued, if the claim “is not one based upon a claim which may be filed proceeding under title 30.1.” A tort claim for damages may be filed in a probate proceeding under Title 30.1. See NDCC 30.1-01-06(5), which says, “ ‘Claims’, in respect to estates of decedents ..., includes liabilities of the decedent ... whether arising in contract, in tort, or otherwise,” and NDCC Ch. 30.1-19, which authorizes the presentation and payment of creditors’ claims. Because a creditor’s claim for tort damages can be filed in a probate proceeding under Title 30.1, NDCC 28-01-26 does not apply.

Ness also argues that, even if the six-year statute of limitations in NDCC 28-01-16 applies, her claim is still not time-barred because NDCC 30.1-12-04 prohibits enforcing her claim before a personal representative is appointed and, under NDCC 28-01-29, that statutory prohibition tolls the general six-year statute of limitations. This argument is also mistaken. Part of NDCC 30.1-12-04 directs: “No proceeding to enforce a claim against the estate of a decedent or his successors may be revived or commenced before the appointment of a personal representative.” That section is “designed to force creditors of decedents to assert their claims against duly appointed personal representatives.” Comment, NDCC 30.1-12-04 (U.P.C. § 3-104). But that statute does not prohibit enforcement of Ness’s claim. Long ago, in Osborne v. Lindstrom, 9 N.D. 1, 81 N.W. 72, 74 (1899), this court explained: “The right to sue is not prohibited; it simply has a condition annexed to it.” In this case, the annexed condition is the appointment of a personal representative.

After a brief 45 day delay, 8 a creditor may obtain appointment of another or herself as the personal representative of an estate in order to present a claim:

Creditors of a decedent are interested persons who may seek the appointment of a personal representative (section 30.1-14-01). If no appointment is granted to another within 45 days after decedent’s death, a creditor may be eligible to be appointed if other persons with priority decline to serve or are ineligible (section 30.1-13-03).

Comment, NDCC 30.1-12-04 (U.P.C. § 3-104). While, on first reading, a creditor’s power to petition for appointment of the personal representative may appear permissive, the effect of the 45 day delay and related probate statutes makes clear the effect of the creditor’s power is mandatory, in fact.

Upon the death of a person liable to suit on a tort claim for damages, the time to sue the decedent’s estate is not measured, as Ness argues, from the appointment of a personal representative, first publication of *558 notice to creditors, or the decedent’s death. Instead, in this case, the time for Ness to sue was measured from the date of the injury on May 21, 1987. Under NDCC 28-01-16, if Stirling had not died, Ness’s suit for damages for her injury would have been necessary within six years from May 21, 1987. Stirling’s death only caused a temporary suspension that extended the limitation period by three months under part of NDCC 30.1-19-02:

The running of any statute of limitations measured from some other event than death and advertisement and mailing of notice for claims against a decedent is suspended during the three months following the decedent’s death but resumes thereafter as to claims not barred pursuant to the sections which follow. For purposes of any statute of limitations, the proper presentation of a claim under section 30.1-19-04 is equivalent to commencement of a proceeding on the claim.

The Comment to NDCC 30.1-19-02 (U.P.C. § 3-802) explains:

This section means that [three] months is added to the normal period of limitations by reason of a debtor’s death before a debt is barred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
537 N.W.2d 554, 1995 N.D. LEXIS 177, 1995 WL 565015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-estate-of-stirling-nd-1995.