Murphy v. Colton

44 P. 208, 4 Okla. 181
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 P. 208 (Murphy v. Colton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Colton, 44 P. 208, 4 Okla. 181 (Okla. 1896).

Opinion

*185 'The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bierer, J.:

On the trial the plaintiffs objected to any ■evidence on the defendants’ set-offs, consisting of a due-bill of one hundred and fifty dollars made to Mrs. Jennie Colton by F. R. McKennon, the board bill of Harry ■Colton against McKennon, and the lumber bill of forty-six and fifty-nine one-hundredths dollars due to the Col-tons from McKennon, because it was not alleged, and no proof shown, that these claims had ever been presented to the administrators as claims against the estate of F. R. McKennon.

McKennon died in January, 1893. The administrators ■qualified in February, 1893, and this suit was tried in November, 1893, and it is insisted that the presentation of these claims to the administrators was a pre-requisite to setting them up as set-offs against the claim of McKennon. Section 1312, 1318 and 1320, of the Compiled Laws of 1893, of this Territory, are relied upon in ■support of this contention.

Section 1312 provides, with some exceptions, which ■do not include this case, that if a claim arising upon a contract be not presented within the time limited in the notice to the administrators it is forever barred.

Section 1318 provides that if a claim is rejected, either by the administrator or the judge of the probate court, suit must be brought thereon within three months after the date of the rejection or it is barred.

Section 1320 provides:

“No holder of any claim against an estate shall maintain any action thereon, unless the claim is first presented to the executor or administrator.”

Now, if this were an action brought against the administrators upon these claims against the estate of FR. McKennon, the position of counsel for appellant would *186 be well taken. But these items are set up as a set-off to McKennon’s claim, and no judgment for any balance was given against McKennon’s estate.

Section 4391 of the Statutes of 1890, under which this action was brought and tried, provides:

“ When cross demands have existed between persons, under such circumstances that one could be pleaded as a counter-claim or set-off to an action brought upon the other, neither can be deprived of the benefit thereof by the assignment or death of the other and the two demands must be deemed compensated so far as they equal’ each other.”

We cannot see any reason, under these statutes, why a party who does not want to rely upon having a balance of claim established against the estate of a decedent, where the estate has a claim against him, might not refrain from the presentation of his claim to the administrators, and still hold the same as a set-off against the claim of the estate should it be asserted against him.

The three sections referred to, from the probate law, do not prevent such procedure, and § 4391, which is from the Code of Procedure, plainly authorizes such action.

It is true the Coltons did, in this case, claim a balance in their favor, but they did not recover any balance. They have, therefore, maintained no action upon any claim against the estate, but have simply presented proof' that they did not owe the estate the amount claimed, because they had a just set-off to the claim of the estate.

Suppose MoKennon had never furnished for the Col-tons’ benefit any money beyond the two hundred and fifty dollars, and that the Coltons had a just account against McKennon to the full amount of this two hundred and fifty dollars, and accruing interest, and they had never had any settlement. In such case, of course,. *187 their claims would be evenly balanced, and neither would be a debtor.

Suppose the Coltons, considering the accounts were-even, should have let the matter rest in that way, as the parties no doubt would have done had McKennon lived,, and the time for presenting claims against the estate had expired, and the estate had then sued the Coltons on the note. Could it be claimed that, under these statutes, they could not show that the note was, in fact, settled by the account of McKennon due to them, and that it, in fact, had been settled long before McKennon’s death ? Such a position would be absurd as well • as absolutely untenable, not only in the face of the statutes, which would protect rather than injure the Coltons, but without them.

But there is a second objection to part of these items’ of set-off that is a more serious one, and that is that the-Coltons cannot set-off against the claim of McKennon individual accounts due to one and not to both of the defendants sued. The action of the estate of McKennon against the Coltons is one against them jointly, in which they are sued upon a joint contract, on which both are liable.

The accounts that were offered and admitted over. plaintiffs’ objection as set-offs were the due-bill of one hundred and fifty dollars due to Jennie Colton, the board-bill of eighty-five dollars due to Harry Colton, and the-lumber bill of forty-six and fifty-nine one-liundredths dollars. It is claimed by the plaintiffs that these were all individual accounts, and it appears so as to the first, two, but not as to the latter.

The manner of stating the set-off for lumber by defendants’ counsel, and some of the testimony given would seem to indicate that this was a claim of Henry Colton’s, but the plaintiffs moved to strike out the evidence relat *188 ing to this claim of forty-six and fifty-nine one-hundredths dollars ‘‘alleged to be due from MoKennon to -defendants Coltons for lumber,” showing that the plaintiffs took the claim on the trial to be one due both the Coltons; and the evidence is that this amount was due for lumber which had been purchased to build the building, and was on hand at the time of its completion, and was sold by McKennon. This, of course, was lumber for which both of the Coltons had been charged by McKen-non and both of the Coltons would have an equal interest in the overplus of lumber, and this item shows that it is for one-half of such lumber. It was, therefore, an account with both of them, and not with Harry Colton, as plaintiffs contend.

The other two items, however, were separate accounts, and not due to-the defendants jointly, but due to them separately, one to Mrs. Colton and one to Harry Colton.

There is quite a difference of authority upon the question as to whether accounts due one of two or more defendants can be asserted as set-off in a suit against all of the defendants, some authorities holding they cannot, whether the liability of the defendants is joint or several; and some holding that they can be, where the liability is a several one; and some holding that they can be, whether the claim against the defendants, or the persons so •asserting the set-offs, is either joint or several.

The matter, however, is easily determined by recourse fo decisions which, upon questions of this character, must always be controlling. This is a matter of procedure, and this cause was brought and tried under the 1890 Code, which, as many times before stated, was the Indiana Code, adopted into the procedure of this Territory.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P. 208, 4 Okla. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-colton-okla-1896.