Probate Court of Westerly v. Potter

58 A. 661, 26 R.I. 202, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 7, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 A. 661 (Probate Court of Westerly v. Potter) 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
Probate Court of Westerly v. Potter, 58 A. 661, 26 R.I. 202, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 52 (R.I. 1904).

Opinion

(1) Stiness, C. J.

This is an action of debt on an executor’s bond, brought against the executor and sureties. The defendants in their second plea set up a release to the executor, under seal, from Elbert S. Potter, for whose benefit the action now stands. The plaintiff replied fraud in procuring the release, by what he calls an equitable defence to said plea. The defendants rejoined in a long statement, practically a bill in equity in itself, setting forth numerous allegations of facts. To this rejoinder the plaintiff demurs.

*203 The first of the errors in pleading now before us was on the part of the plaintiff, in calling his replication an equitable defence. It was simply, in substance, a proper replication at law, because courts at law, as well as courts of equity, have jurisdiction in matters of fraud and there was no necessity to import an equitable defence into this case. McCulla v. Beadleston, 17 R. I. 20. This error, however, is not a substantial one, because the facts are properly pleaded and the plea concludes with a verification. 1 Chit. PI. *582; 3 Chit-Pi. *1158; 9 Ency. PI. & Pr. 676, 684, 687, 692. The statement that the replication is in the nature of an equitable plea may be rejected as surplusage. To the allegation of fraud, the defendants can rejoin 'by demurrer, confession and avoidance or traverse. This would present an issue in the ordinary way; but a voluminous recital of all the dealings of the parties, with minute details, is not a proper rejoinder. It leads to no issue.

The third plea sets up a former judgment, alleging that this court on November 14, 1898, adjudged that Elbert S. Potter was not interested in said estate, on the ground that he had given a release, as shown by profert of the record.

An inspection of the record shows that in 1898 four appeals were before the court from two decrees of the Court of Probate, two of the appeals being in the name of Grace E. Potter, by her guardian Elbert S. Potter, and two others by Elbert S. Potter individually. These appeals were not consolidated, and only the appeals of Grace E. Potter were heard. According to the minute book the appeals of Elbert S. Potter are still pending. The appeals of Grace E. Potter’were heard November 14, 1898, and an order was entered therein, but the appeals of Elbert S. Potter were continued and still stand upon the docket without final disposition.

The' order which was entered in the Grace E. Potter appeals was drawn by counsel on both sides, and it reversed the decree of the Court of Probate as to her appeals and affirmed it as to Elbert S. Potter’s, on the ground that he had given a release to the executor.

Nothing appears upon the record to show that Elbert S. *204 Potter’s appeals were heard. The order applied expressly to the appeals of Grace E. Potter alone. It applies, therefore, only to those appeals and not to those of Elbert S. Potter. The record, therefore, does not show an adjudication against Elbert S. Potter as pleaded. Both court and parties are bound by the record as it stands. There has been no motion to correct it. The question arises, why should the decree have made any mention of Elbert S. Potter? We can not answer the question, except to say that an order prepared jointly and presented to the court by both parties was probably assumed to be correct, and entered without close examination. It can not be corrected now, because the statutory time for correction has passed, and also- because the membership of the court has changed. The recollection of the judges who sat in these cases, now remaining in the court, is that the parties talked about both sets of appeals, but the court held that, as the guardian could not give a voluntary release to the prejudice of his ward, it was void ab initio as'to her, and she was not thereby deprived of an account; and that as the validity of the release by Elbert S. Potter, claimed to have been procured by fraud, could not have been passed upon by the Probate Court, it could not be considered on appeal, but relief must be sought in equity. Upon this suggestion, the clause relating to Elbert S. Potter’s appeal was doubtless inserted by his counsel to show that the release was not passed upon, and, being hastily drawn, it Was not clearly expressed. However this may have been, the fact remains that the question of fraud was not .passed upon by the court, and the record does not show that it was, because there .was no judgment in his cases.

(2) To support their plea of adjudication the defendants rely on an opinion in this case, given on prior pleadings, 'in 25 R. I. 204. The court there considered the plaintiff’s demurrers to numerous pleas; the second being the plea of a release, to which the plaintiff now replies fraud, as stated above, and the third being the judgment in the appeals, to which we have referred. At that time Grace E. Potter was a party to this *205 suit; but, having since become of age, she has discontinued the suit on her part and given a release.

The court, therefore, said, in regard to the demurrers, in the opinion referred, to, that either of said pleas would be a sufficient defence if the suit were brought for the benefit of Elbert S. Potter alone, and that they presented a defence to the case as it stood.

A decision, on demurrer, that a plea presents a sufficient defence is not an adjudication of the fact in favor of a defendant. If this were so it would be dangerous for a plaintiff to demur to a plea. That a decision on demurrer goes only to the sufficiency of the matter pleaded is too elementary for discussion.

The plea was held to be sufficient in its statement as a defence; but the plaintiff may still reply that other facts invalidate it, as, in this case, that the release was obtained by fraud. If the release is sustained it is a sufficient defence in this suit. If it is not, the defence pleaded amounts to nothing. A plea does not prove itself. It sets up a defence open to further pleading and the finding of fact on the plea.

The case of Blake v. Butler, 10 R. I. 133, relied on by defendants, is in line with the view we have expressed. It was a bill in equity, ancillary to a probate appeal, then pending in the Supreme Court, charging the administrator with fraud in his accounts and in procuring a release. The court dismissed the bill because the matters could be proved in the proceeding at law then pending.

In this case no pending appeal appears, but the pleas can be tried in this action at law.

(3) The plaintiff demurs to the defendants’ first and second' rejoinders, which set up equitable answers to the replications,

These so-called equitable defences are neither responsive nor material. They simply recite evidence to rebut an inference of fraud. The issue of fraud in procuring the release is tendered, and it covers all that is set up in the equitable defence. If the release was not obtained by fraud, that ends the case. If it was so obtained, the executor can not be released by his own fraud, and no change of circumstances on *206 the part of the sureties is alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
58 A. 661, 26 R.I. 202, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/probate-court-of-westerly-v-potter-ri-1904.