McIntire v. Conlan
This text of 111 N.E. 852 (McIntire v. Conlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an action on an administrator’s probate bond under R. L. c. 149, § 20, against the principal defendant and his sureties, by a creditor who recovered judgment against the administrator on January 2, 1905, in the sum of $1,093.65. Execution was issued on January 6, 1905.
The administrator neglected upon demand to pay the judgment or to show sufficient goods or estate of the deceased to be taken on the execution.
The defendant claimed a trial by jury, and the case accordingly was tried before a jury on an assigned date, October 14, 1914, agreed to by the defendant. “When the case was reached for trial, the defendant moved that the case be removed to the jury waived list on the ground that under the statute of this Commonwealth the question whether or not there had been a breach of the bond was a question of law, and that the statute does not contemplate the trial of such an action before a jury, but before the court only.” This motion was denied
. The issue was properly one of fact for a jury, and there was no error in the refusal to transfer the case to the jury waived list.
• As the principal defendant apparently admitted at the trial, as he actually does upon his brief, the facts that the creditor brought an action against him in his administrative capacity, that the creditor recovered judgment, and that the defendant failed to expose goods or estate to be taken in satisfaction thereof, it followed that there was no disputed material issue of fact, and that the judge properly could direct a verdict to be found in the penal sum of the bond. Campbell v. Whoriskey, 170 Mass. 63. Donahue v. Witherell, 203 Mass. 489, 492. The judge, however, did not pursue this course but proceeded, at the same time, to submit to the jury- as an issue the question of the amount due the creditor upon the judgment which he had recovered. This he properly could do under R. L. c. 149, § 31. Defriez v. Coffin, 155 Mass. 203. Hudson v. Miles, 185 Mass. 582, 588. Newburyport v. Davis, 209 Mass. 126, 132.
It is not contended that the amount due the creditor upon his judgment was in dispute or that it was not larger than the penal sum of the bond and interest thereon from the date of the writ. [391]*391The direction of the verdict for the penal sum and interest from the date of the writ, as appears by the record, was within the proper exercise of the power of the court. Bassett v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 184 Mass. 210, 216.
At the trial on the bond, the defendant offered evidence that he had filed in the Probate Court an account purporting to show that the assets, which had come to his hands, had been exhausted in the payment of charges and preferred claims. It was held in Fuller v. Connelly, 142 Mass. 227, that an account filed and allowed in the Probate Court was admissible in an action to establish a breach of the bond to show that all the assets of the estate had been used and applied with the approval of the court. It is clear that there can be no breach of a- probate bond arising from expenditures made with the sanction and under the implied, if not express, direction of the Probate Court. In the case at bar no claim is made that the account offered in evidence ever was allowed by the Probate Court. McKim v. Haley, 173 Mass. 112, 115.
The defendant also offered in evidence the fact that about a month after the entry of the judgment and issue of execution to the above named creditor, he filed a petition in the Probate Court representing the estate to be probably insolvent. It was held in McKim v. Roosa, 183 Mass. 510, that a “decree of probable insolvency is not a bar,” and that, to effect such result, there must be a commissioner’s report and a decree on that report. In this case there is no decree of probable insolvency, no appointment of a commissioner, and consequently no report or decree thereon. All that was offered was a representation of insolvency without evidence of further action.
It appears by the bill of exceptions,
We find no reversible error in any of the proceedings.
Exceptions overruled.
The case was submitted on briefs.
By Hardy, J.
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111 N.E. 852, 223 Mass. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintire-v-conlan-mass-1916.