Peck's Administratrix v. United States

15 Ct. Cl. 364
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Ct. Cl. 364 (Peck's Administratrix v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peck's Administratrix v. United States, 15 Ct. Cl. 364 (cc 1879).

Opinions

Drake, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

On the 7th of November, 1877, Campbell If. Peck instituted this suit in this court.

On the 10th of February, 1879, he obtained judgment for $43,113.63, from which the defendants appealed.

At no time until now was it made known to this court that on the 31st of August, 1878, he filed a petition in bankruptcy and was adjudged a bankrupt, and that John W. Hobbs became his assignee in bankruptcy.

[366]*366In the schedule of his property, the said Peck set forth the claim involved in this ease, in the following terms:

Glioses in action.
“D. — Unliquidated claims of every nature, with their estimated value.
u 6. Claim against the Government of the United States of America on account of contract with B. C. Card, chief quartermaster or commissioner for Department of Dakota, of date August 17, 1876, held by E. F. Brownell as collateral, $57,000.”

On the 2d of December, 1879, the said Peck died intestate, and on the 8th of that month Helen A. Peck became his admin-istratrix.

On the 19th of January, L880, the Supreme Court of the United States allowed her to be substituted for Campbell K. Peck in the cause.

Before that time the said Hobbs, as assignee of Campbell K. Peck, applied to the Supreme Court to be substituted for him in the cause; but the motion was denied, on the ground that the proper notice of it had not been given to the administratrix.

On the 2d of March, 1880, the proper notice having been given, the assignee renewed that application ; which, on the 22d of that month, was denied by the Supreme Court, upon the following grounds, stated in the opinion of the court:

u It is evident from this brief rehearsal of facts that there is a controversy about the disposition of the proceeds of this claim between the creditors for whose benefit the claimant made the appropriation referred to and the assignee in bankruptcy. This is an original and separate controversy, distinct from the merits of the case on the appeals, and we are not disposed, even if we have the power, to take it up in this collateral way and decide upon the rights of the parties, which we would probably be obliged to do if we granted the motion now made by the assignee. The latter has lain by ever since August, 1878, when the claimant was declared bankrupt, and allowed the case to go on in his name, at his expense, and under his direction and management, or that of the creditors for whose use he was prosecuting the claim. Costs and expenses have been incurred by them, and arrangements have been made with counsel which have at least some title to equitable consideration; and injustice might be done if we should now, by main force, without going into an original investigation, which, to say the least, would be of very doubtful propriety, place the assignee in control of the cause. From the papers laid before us, it appears that the district court [367]*367has already assumed partial jnrisdictiou of tbe matter; and, as that court can do fall justice between all the parties, we think it better that the controversy should be disposed of there or in some other tribunal having original jurisdiction in such matters, than by this court, in a collateral way.”

The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of this court; and on the 22d of April, 1880, it's mandate of 'affirmance was filed here, in which the order appears substituting the administratrix for Campbell K. Peck, and directing this court to allow an additional amount of $2,660 to the claimant. . •

On the 31st of March, 1880, the said John W. Hobbs filed a motion in this court to be substituted as claimant instead of the administratrix; and that motion is the subject of the present ■controversy.

It raises the simple question, Which party is entitled by law to become the claimant on the record, the administratrix or the assignee in bankruptcy ?

Were this question now raised for the first time in this case, there could not, as we conceive, be any room for doubt that the assignee had all the legal right to prosecute this claim, and that the administratrix has no legal right at all to do so.

More than a year before Peck’s death the claim had passed,. by operation of law, out of him, and into his assignee in bankruptcy ; so that, -when he died, it.was in no sense an asset of his estate. The right of the administratrix could attach to no property of the intestate but such as -was acquired by him after he was adjudged a bankrupt. As to any claim he had at the time he was so adjudged, the title to it has, since then, never been anywhere else than in the assignee.

Such being the case, shall not the assignee be made the claimant to prosecute his own legal claim to a finality ? Section 5047 of the Iievised Statutes provides as follows :

“ If, at the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy, an action is pending in the name of the debtor for the recovery of a debt or other thing which might or ought .to pass to the assignee by the assignment, the assignee shall, if he requires it, be admitted to prosecute the action in his own name, in like manner and with like effect as if it had been originally commenced by him.”

This language would seem hardly to be open, in any part of it, to controversy. It fixes the right of the assignee to be substituted for the bankrupt in any pending suit, for the recovery [368]*368of anything which passed, or might or ought to pass, by the assignment.

But though the right is fixed, it is not made the duty of the assignee to become the plaintiff in the suit. It is in his discretion to allow the suit to go on in the bankrupt’s name. By so doing lie does not lose his right to whatever may be recovered; nor does he thereby divest himself of the title vested in him -by the assignment.

So far we do not understand the administratrix’s counsel as questioning the views we have expressed; but they urge that the action of the Supreme Court in substituting Peck’s admin-istratrix makes the matter, so far as this court is concerned, res judicata; and that we, therefore, have not legal authority to remove her from the record and give her place to the assignee. This proposition seems to us untenable.

If the Supreme Court had specifically ordered us to render judgment in favor of the administratrix, we would obey the order; but such is not the tenor of the mandate.

It is urged that, though that has not been ordered, yet the substitution by that court of the administratrix does, proprio vigore, entitle her to have the judgment rendered in her favor. We do not so regard it.

When Peck’s death was suggested to the Supreme Court, there was no longer any claimant on the record. In order to the proper decision of the cause, it was necessary that there should be a claimant$ and the court, to that end, allowed the administratrix, on her own ex parte motion, to take that position.

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Related

Hobbs v. United States
19 Ct. Cl. 220 (Court of Claims, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ct. Cl. 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecks-administratrix-v-united-states-cc-1879.