Potter v. Harvey

82 A. 812, 34 R.I. 71, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 A. 812 (Potter v. Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Harvey, 82 A. 812, 34 R.I. 71, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 37 (R.I. 1912).

Opinion

Dubois, C. J.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Municipal Court of the city of Providence, entered February 5th, 1909, adjudging the said Dexter B. Potter as administrator upon the estate of Abbie M. Harvey, deceased, to be guilty of unfaithful administration for neglecting and refusing to pay the claim of Edwin B. Harvey, M. D., “for professional services from Feb. 1, 1902, to March 17, 1906, $400.00,” filed May 15, 1907. Said appeal was duly entered and prosecuted in the Superior Court and the decree of the Municipal Court was therein affirmed, for the reasons appearing in the following rescript: “Tanner, P. J. This is an appeal from the action of the Municipal Court of Providence adjudging the appellant guilty of unfaithful administration in refusing to pay a claim allowed by operation of law against the estate of which the appellant is administrator.

“It appears that the appellee filed a claim against the estate within six months and brought suit thereon after disallowance by the administrator, and that he afterwards filed within the statutory period another claim against the estate which was not disallowed by the administrator within the statutory period given for that purpose: The appellant appeals from the decision of the Municipal Court adjudging him guilty of unfaithful administration.
“The first reason of appeal is that the administrator disallowed the claim as by record therewith filed is shown.
“The meaning of this is that the administrator attempted to disallow the claim more than 30 days after the expiration of the time within which he might have disallowed the claim, *73 because of the provisions of Sec. 6 of Chap. 314 of the Gen. Haws of 1909, because of evidence discovered after the period within which he might have originally disallowed the •claim. We think, however, this provision of the statute xefers to evidence which the administrator could not with .reasonable diligence have discovered within the time originally given for disallowance. The newly discovered evidence presented in this case is clearly evidence which the administrator could have discovered within the time originally given, and in all probability would have discovered had he been aware of the filing of the claim. The administrator, in fact, did not discover the filing of the claim because he did not examine the records of the Probate Court, and did mot know of the fifing of the claim until after the thirty days prescribed by law. The administrator alleges as an excuse that the appellee had filed a prior claim against the estate .and brought suit thereon. The appellant also urges that the .appellee by his conduct in fifing the first claim, and saying nothing about the second claim, excused the administrator from looking for further claims. We find nothing, however, in the evidence which warrants that conclusion. The .appellee did not know that the second claim was valid until so advised by counsel. We think, therefore, that the evidence urged as newly discovered was evidence which the .administrator did not discover because he did not examine the records as he should have done to discover the fifing of the claim. The case of Raub vs. Nesbitt, 111 Mich. 38, is urged upon our attention. The newly discovered evidence in that case, however, was evidence which the administrator was prevented from finding because of the attitude of the claimant in changing his claim at the time of the trial of the .appeal. In the case at bar, however, the administrator was prevented from discovering the evidence because of his own neglect to examine the records. We think a claimant has a right to file amended or additional claims within the .statutory period. In fact, that is his only recourse if he ■discovers that he has made a mistake or an omission. The *74 rule against splitting causes of action does not, we think, apply to the mere filing of different claims against an estate. It is true that in the case at bar the appellant might have-defeated the second claim because of the action brought upon, the first, which would estop the appellee from- maintaining any further action on a claim which might have been included in the first suit, but this, as we have seen, the administrator-might have done by a disallowance within the thirty days, and we cannot see how this amounts to newly discovered evidence within our construction of the statute. We-think the appellant attempted to disallow the claim, not upon evidence discovered after the thirty days, but rather upon discovery of the existence and filing of the claim after the thirty days.
"The remaining reasons of appeal are to the effect that, the appellee was estopped from fifing the second claim, that, the second claim was not such a claim as should have been allowed, and that the decree of unfaithful administration was-erroneous.
"These reasons, we think, have been fully dealt with in-our discussion of the first reason of appeal. We should be-very glad to afford relief to the estate and administrator if we felt that we could do so within the law as we construe it..
"The decree of the Probate Court is affirmed.”

The case comes before this court upon the appellant’s, bill of exceptions based upon the following grounds: That, the decision of the Superior Court affirming said decree is against the law, and secondly, that the same is against the. evidence and the weight thereof. It appears in evidence that the date of the first publication of notice of the appointment and qualification of the appellant as administrator of the-estate of Abbie M. Harvey, deceased, was May 17, 1906. That on the fourteenth day of November, 1906, the appellee, filed the following claim against said estate:

*75 “Providence, R. I., Nov. 14th, 1906.
Estate of Abbie M. Harvey,
“ To E. B. Harvey, M. D., Dr.,
139 weeks board, from May 1st, 1899 to Jan. 1st, 1902. $1,390 00-
Professional services, from April 15th, 1900 to Jan. 1st, 1902. 1,610 00'
$3,000 00'
“P. O. Address 18 Broad St., Providence, R. I.;”
that said claim was duly disallowed by said administrator within thirty days after the expiration of six months from said publication; that suit was brought thereon by said appellee by writ dated June 6,1907, and served June 7, 1907, and the case was tried and a verdict rendered therein by a jury; that the case was afterwards settled by the parties on the first day of August, 1908, as appears by a receipt which reads as follows: “Received from Dexter B. Potter, Administrator of the Estate of Abbie M. Harvey, $350 in full settlement of suit, entitled Edwin B. Harvey vs. Dexter B. Potter, Administrator of the Estate of Abbie M. Harvey, now pending in the Superior Court in this state, numbered. 23416, for board and professional services furnished said Abbie M. Harvey, from May, 1899 to January 1, 1902;”' that on the fifteenth day of May, 1907, the appellee also filed in the office of the clerk of the said Municipal Court the following claim against the said estate:
“Providence, R.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 812, 34 R.I. 71, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-harvey-ri-1912.