Skidmore v. Romaine

2 Bradf. 122
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 Bradf. 122 (Skidmore v. Romaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skidmore v. Romaine, 2 Bradf. 122 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

Benjamin Romaine departed this life 31 January, 1844. A contest arose on the probate of Ms will and the codicils, which continued for several years, so that letters testamentary were not issued until 27 January, 1849. A collector was appointed 15 February, 1844. The executors having qualified, they were cited to account at the end of eighteen months by some of the creditors; and, it appearing that the personal estate was insufficient to pay the debts, application was made to mortgage, lease or sell the real estate for that purpose.

Host of the claims presented for my adjudication in [124]*124this proceeding, are for groceries, furniture, coal, merchandise, and other articles for household or domestic use ; and the evidence of sale, and delivery.at the testator’s residence, and on his order, is such as would ordinarily be sufficient to establish his liability. It was contended, however, that the testator was not at the time possessed of sufficient capacity to make a valid contract.

With several of these parties the deceased had been in the habit of trading many years ; and if his mind was impaired at the period of these particular transactions, there is, with perhaps one exception, no evidence of the fact .being actually brought home to the knowledge of the claimants. But even a lunatic is liable for necessaries suitable to his ^degree or condition in life. (Browne vs. Jodrell, 3 Car,. & P., 30; Baxter vs. The Earl of Portsmouth, 2 Car. & P., 178.) In Wentworth vs. Tubb, before Lord. Lyndhurst, the creditor of a lunatic instituted suit for payment out of the real estate, there being no personal assets. The heir set up the lunacy; and the Lord Chancellor held that “ where necessaries are furnished to a lunatic, and no fraud or imposition is practised, upon him by the party furnishing them, the lunatic is bound to pay for them as being a debt due from him to such party ; and if a debt upon his decease, his estate is chargeable with it.” (1 N. Y. Legal Observer, 282.) That case is precisely in point, in many of its features, with the present one, except that I do not think the proof shows the testator to have been non-compos, or wholly deprived of reason, at the period these debts were contracted. It may very properly be sai,d that his mind was impaired so as to make him the subject of imposition or undue influence. There is not enough to establish an absolute and entire incapacity to contract. But under either supposition, he was chargeable for necessaries suitable to his circumstances, pecuniary and domestic, his rank in life, and his ordinary mode or habit of living.

It appears that the testator’s daughter, Mrs. Nichols, [125]*125and her children, resided with him previous to his decease. She went to Europe in October, 1842, and returned in September, 1843, at his request, to nurse and attend him. With her two sons she continued to reside at his house, during the period the debts in question were contracted. The testator being old and infirm, she managed his domestic affairs. Her husband being insolvent, her children were taken in charge by their grandfather, and were supported by him; they all, in fact, for the time being composed part of his household, and this seems to have been well known and understood in the family. These circumstances explain many items in some of theppesIlSS mands, which evidently relate to articles pipcjj* use of the testator’s daughter and her child a single exception, there is no proof that ti) ticular to which they were put, or had reason to sudtaec^l improper. The goods were sold and deliverc ator’s residence, in the ordinary course of business, »uu, the most part, by persons with whom he had previously dealt. The carpets and furniture were in actual use in his house, and formed part of his estate, at the time of his death. The coal, some of the clothing, and a large proportion of the groceries and provisions were in the strictest sense, necessaries. To hold, under such circumstances, without any evidence of fraud or imposition on the part of the vendors, that the deceased was not liable, would, in my judgment, be grossly inequitable. I must therefore find generally, in favor of all the demands except that of Buttle. Buttle was in the habit of seeing the testator frequently. His account contains many charges, for borrowed money, wines, cigars, &c., which, with his knowledge of the family of the testator and his condition, he should have hesitated to furnish. It is true that most of these items occur previous to 1 Nov., 1843, when a settlement was made, part of the account paid, and a note given for the balance. But that note forms part of the [126]*126present claim, and its consideration may be inquired into. Besides, Buttle brought suit against the executors, and on their offer under the code to permit a recovery for $750, consented to take judgment for that amount. He thus liquidated his claim against the personal estate at that sum; and though the judgment is no evidence against the devisees, still it estops the judgment creditor, for it would be an anomaly to allow a greater debt against the real estate than can be demanded or has been established against the personal representatives. The personal estate . is the primary fund, and the measure of recovery against the realty cannot exceed that against the personalty, though it may be less. Without going into particulars, I am satisfied that the amount for which Buttle consented to take judgment against the executors, was quite as much as he was entitled to, on a fair or even liberal adjustment of his account-; and I shall therefore allow his claim at $750, with interest from the date of the judgment.

It is however insisted, on the part of some of the devisees, that all these demands are barred by the statute of limitations. The statute may be set up by the devisees. (2 R. S., 3d ed.,p. 165, § 13.) As against all the claims, except oile, the statute had begun to run at the testator’s death; but for five years there was no representative of the estate, letters testamentary, in consequence of the pz’obate being litigated, not having been issued till January 27,1849. In Rhodes vs. Smethurst, 4 Meeson & Welsby, 42, it was held, after an elaboz’ate argument in the Court of Exchequer, that when a cause of action has accrued and the statute commenced running, if the debtor dies within the six years, it is no answer to a plea of the statute, that by reason of litigation as to the probate, an executor was not ajzpointed until the six years had expired, and that suit was brought within a z-easonable time after probate granted. It is not necessary for me to express an [127]*127opinion on the point thus determined, there being another answer to the plea of the statute in this case.

The statute of limitations, in terms, applies only to actions, and requires the action to be brought within a certain period after the cause of action accrued. An application for the sale of real estate is in no strict sense an action, nor can the original cause of action against the deceased be said to swmwe against his heirs or devisees, as respects this peculiar form of proceeding. As an action proper, it survives only against the executor or administrator. In providing a statutory remedy for the sale of real estate for payment of debts, the proceeding is not likened at all to an action. Suits at law and in equity may be brought against the personal representatives or against the heirs or devisees, and these are proper actions.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Bradf. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skidmore-v-romaine-nysurct-1852.