Person v. . Montgomery

26 S.E. 645, 120 N.C. 111
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 645 (Person v. . Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Person v. . Montgomery, 26 S.E. 645, 120 N.C. 111 (N.C. 1897).

Opinion

Fueoi-ies, J.:

This is a proceeding to sell and to pay debts and costs of administration. The defendants, Eva Speed and Maggie Speed, and their husbands, deny plaintiff’s allegations that it is necessary to sell the lands of their intestate mother for the payment of debts and costs of administration. And they allege that the personal estate is sufficient for this purpose if: properly and faithfully administered; and that their co-defendant Montgomery is indebted to the estate in a much larger amount than is sufficient to pay the debts and costs of administration.

The defendant Montgomery answers,admitting the allegations of the complaint- — denies that he is indebted to said estate, alleges that the estate is indebted to him, and pleads the Statute of Limitations as to any debt that he may be owing to the estate. He also alleges that the land of the intestate had been divided between him and his co-defendants, under a proceeding for that purpose, and an order of court; and alleges that, if he was so indebted, it should have been, and in fact was, adjusted and settled in that proceeding. And he pleads the record in that proceeding as an estoppel and bar against his co-defendants and against the plaintiff.

*113 Upon this state of the case, it was referred to W. B. Shaw, who took an account in the matter, and the case now stands upon pleadings, report of the referee, exceptions and judgment of the court thereon.

An administrator has a right to have land sold to pay debts and costs of administration where the personal assets are not sufficient (Code, Sec. 1136). The heirs must be made parties to a proceeding to sell land for assets, and where they denjr that it is necessary to sell, or allege that there are sufficient personal assets if properly administered, or that the debts upon which it is asked that the land be sold are not due by the estate, the court will not order a sale until these questions are determined. And the usual course is to refer the matter, as was done in this case. This reference is not for the purpose of settling the estate, but for the purpose of informing the court whether it is necessary to sell the land for assets, and the probable amount that it will be necessary to raise out of the land.

In this proceeding, it being against the heirs and for the purpose of taking and converting their land to the payment of debts due by their ancestors, they are at liberty to show any personal estate that should be first made liable, and a solvent debt due the estate, that might be collected, is a part of the personal assets. They are also at liberty to dispute and contest the liability of their ancestor’s estate to the debts for which their lands are sought to be sold; and even to plead the Statute of Limitations against the debts claimed to be due, unless they have been reduced to judgment. And if fraud and collusion can be shown between the administrator and the creditor, it may be pleaded where there has been judgment.

These defences have been allowed the'heirs as a defence against the right to convert their land. But our attention has not been called to any case in a proceeding to sell land *114 for assets where the heir has pleaded the Statute of Limitations against his own debt due the estate. And still, as the defendant Montgomery is a party, and his co-defendants had alleged, specially, his indebtedness to the estate, as a reason why it is not necessary to sell the land, we do not say but «hat it was proper for him to plead the Statute of Limitations at that time if he intended to avail himself of that plea, if sued, so that the referee might pass unon it to see whether this indebtedness was available as-x i sets or not.

This is a very peculiar case. The allegations are, and the evidence tends to show, that defendant Montgomery was the agent of his intestate mother ror many years in managing, renting and receiving the rent of her land; that in the proceedings to divide the land among the defendants in this proceeding, his sisters, who were the plaintiffs in that proceeding (and co-defendants in this) undertook to set up this indebtedness of defendant Montgomery, as to what they called an advancement, so as to thereby give them more land in the partition than Montgomery. That during the pendency of that proceeding (for partition) ir was agreed by the parties to arbitrate the matter and their award to be a rule of court. The arbitrators so appointed took the matter into consideration and found the defendant Montgomery indebted to the intestate’s estate $1,552.42 which they took into consideration in dividing the real estate between the two sisters and the brother, the defendant Montgomery. But when this award was returned to court it was set aside, upon the motion of defendant Montgomery, upon the ground that the arbitrators had exceeded their power in finding an indebtedness against him, when there had been no administration upon his mother’s estate, and the arbitrators could find no indebtedness against him without an administrator was a party.

*115 This award was set aside — whether rightfully or not, is not a matter for our consideration, and has but little to do with the case before us, and is mentioned to show that there was at least ground for the allegation that Montgomery was indebted to the estate, and for the further purpose of showing the nature of the proceeding, the record of which the defendant Mongtomery pleads as an estoppel of record — res judicata.

We fail to see any estoppel, and as the defendant Montgomery procured it to be set aside, because there was no administration and no administrator a party to the action, and the partition was irade without considering this alleged indebtedness, it seems to us that he is estopped to set it up now. But be this as it may, we cannot allow it to work an estoppel as to the defendant Montgomery’s debt, if he owed one.

The intestate bad been dead three years, one month and nine days when the plaintiff administered. And it is claimed by defendant Montgomery that his agency terminated at the death of his mother. And whatever amount he may have been owing her on account of said agency became due at her death — the termination of the agency. And as more than three years have elapsed since her death and before suit brought — and in fact no suit has yet been brought by the administrator to enforce this debt — the same is barred by the lapse of time and the Statute of Limitations (Code, Sec. 164).

There seems to be a want of uniformity upon the construction of this section of The Code, which we will not undertake to reconcile. But we adopt the construction placed upon it in Benson v. Bennett, 112 N. C, 505. It is plain to us that it is an enabling and not a disabling statute, as is held in that case, That it was not intended by this section to cut down the timo given by the general statute for *116 bringing actions, but to extend this time in the cases therein provided for. And if any of the decisions of this court are susceptible of the construction that it limits the time to one year from the de»th of the creditor, notwithstanding the general statute — as it is contended they do — such cases to this extent are overruled.

But as the agency terminated at the death of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 645, 120 N.C. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/person-v-montgomery-nc-1897.