Sampson v. Sampson

63 Me. 328
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 Me. 328 (Sampson v. Sampson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sampson v. Sampson, 63 Me. 328 (Me. 1874).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

This action is brought to recover of the defendant, as heir at law of Elisha T. Sampson, her proportional part of a balance remaining due upon the second instalment of a note given by said Elisha T. Sampson, March 31, 1861, to his father, Moses Sampson, the plaintiff’s testator, for one thousand dollars, payable in three instalments falling due respectively in one, two and three years after the death of the payee. The payee died April 5, 1871. In pursuance of stipulations in the note under which the promisor was to be entitled to interest during the lifetime of the payee upon such payments in advance as he might make, Elisha T. Sampson paid in April, 1864, as appears by two indorsements, the sum of four hundred dollars, which with the interest that accrued upon it amounts to about five hundred and sixty-six dollars.

Elisha T. Sampson died intestate, January 2, 1869, leaving real estate valued at about $2000, which descended to the defendant [331]*331and three other children. An administrator was appointed upon his estate in March, 1869, who, within three months next after, gave the notice of his appointment required by law. The note was never filed in the probate office and no right of action accrued upon it until more than two years after the administrator of E. T. Sampson gave notice of his appointment.

This suit was brought in August, 1873, and the above are the essential facts alleged in the writ, and confirmed by the agreed statement.

It is manifest that the inclination of the courts both in this and the parent State of Massachusetts, whence our statute provisions touching the matter are mostly drawn, has been so to construe these provisions as to make the liability of the heir for the debts, covenants and contracts of the ancestor only contingent and eventual, • depending upon the absolute inability of the creditor or claimant, on account of the nature of -his claim, to obtain satisfaction through legal process while the estate was under administration, or while the power to compel administration remained. Royce v. Burrell, 12 Mass., 395; Hall v. Bumstead, 20 Pick., 2; Webber v. Webber, 6 Maine, 127. In the latter ease, Mellen, C. J., quotes approvingly certain dicta in Royce v. Burrell favoring the idea that a distinction may be made, between debts due but not payable within the period of limitation of suits - against executors and administrators, and claims neither payable nor due during such period of liability, such as covenants and contracts not then broken but which may be subsequently broken — intimating that debts of the former class must be filed in the probate office pending the administration, and that it is only for those of the latter class that suits may be maintained against the heir.

Conceding the propriety of such legislation as would require a creditor having a claim not yet payable, but still subject to no contingency, to take steps to secure it from the estate before it is divided and passes into the possession of the hems, we are nevertheless of the opinion that our statutes as they stand cannot be so construed. It is beyond the power of judicial construction to hold [332]*332that §§ 14, 15 and 16 of c. 85 of the laws of 1872 compel a creditor whose action does not accrue within the period of limitation to file his claim in the probate office upon pain of losing his remedy against the heirs.

It is not the mere existence of a debt solvendum in futuro, but of a right of action within the two years for the recovery of such debt, which would defeat the claim against the heir, as the legislature have seen fit to frame the statute. Taken together, these sections must be held to authorize the maintenance of a suit against the heir or devisee in all cases where an action does not accrue against the estate in season to avoid the limitation bar, and the claim has not in fact been filed in the probate office so that the creditor might either have a remedy against the heirs upon a bond to respond, or have his right of action against the executor or administrator extended until after the claim becomes due. The word due in § 16 must be held to be synonymous with payable. The true doctrine seems to be that in any case where an action accrues before the expiration of the period of limitation and might be maintained upon the demand against the executor or administrator by taking the proper legal steps, the heir is not liable; but where the action does not thus accrue, the creditor has the option either to file his demand in the probate office, or resort to a stiit against the heir, to be brought within a year from the time when his claim becomes due of payable.

The question in the present case is whether an action accrued upon the claim here sued before the expiration of the time in which suit might be brought against the administrator of Elisha T. Sampson.

Under R. S. of 1857, c. 87, § 12, the term limited was four years from the giving of the notice of his appointment by the administrator. If this statute had remained in force, according to the agreed statement, this time would have expired in June, 1873, and thus a right of action for this instalment accrued within the term, which would have been a bar to the maintenance of this suit against the heir.

[333]*333But by c. 9, of the laws of 1869, as amended by c. 113, § 23, of the laws of 1870, a creditor was required to present his claim against the estate of a deceased person to the executor or administrator in writing and demand payment thereof at least thirty days before commencing an action and within two years after notice is given by the executor or administrator of his appointment — in default of which no action could be maintained. R. S., c. 87, § 11, embodies this requirement and adds to it, in notable inconsistency with §§ 13, 11 and 16 of the same chapter, that no suit thus brought since February 3, 1869, shall be maintained unless the action is commenced, as well as the demand made, within two years after the notice is given by the executor or administrator of his appointment.

In c. 85 of the laws of 1872 this inconsistency was remedied by substituting two years for four years, in §§ 13,11 and 16, and re-enacting the 'requirement for presentment and demand thirty days before the commencement of the action and within two years after the notice of the appointment, and establishing two years and six months from the giving of such notice as the period at which the limitation bar would attach.

The sections thus enacted took the place of certain sections in c. 87 of the revision, and the intention of the legislature that they should take effect as well in cases where administration had already begun as in the future is demonstrated by the provision in § 12 that “in any estate on which, when this act takes effect, administration has been commenced and is not finally closed, a creditor who has not presented his claim shall be allowed at least six months after this act takes effect to present it and demand payment and to commence after thirty days an action thereon.”

The power of the legislature to shorten the period at the expiration of which the limitation bar shall take effect provided they allow a reasonable time for parties to bring suit before their claims shall be deemed barred by the new enactment, and do not absolutely deprive the creditor of his remedy under color of regulating it, has been too often recognized by courts of the highest respectability to be questioned now.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Me. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sampson-v-sampson-me-1874.