Thompson v. Hoxsie

55 A. 930, 25 R.I. 377, 1903 R.I. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 A. 930 (Thompson v. Hoxsie) 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
Thompson v. Hoxsie, 55 A. 930, 25 R.I. 377, 1903 R.I. LEXIS 85 (R.I. 1903).

Opinion

*378 Tillinghast, J.

The pleadings in this case, up to the present stage thereof, fully appear in the opinion of this court, by Stiness, C. J., reported in 24 R. I. p. 494. There we sustained the defendant’s third plea, which was based upon the special statute of limitations, on the plaintiff’s demurrer to said, plea, which plea alleged that the plaintiff did not bring her action against Samuel H. Cross, the original administrator, or against William Hoxsie the administrator de bonis non, within three years after the first publication of the notice of Cross’s qualification as administrator, and setting up the bar of Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 189, § 8, which reads as follows:

“No action shall be brought against any. executor or administrator in his said capacity within one year after the will shall be proved or administration granted, nor after three years from the time of such proof or grant, except for the causes mentioned in section seventeen of chapter one hundred eighty-six, provided notice of his appointment be given according to law, said periods to be reckoned from the time of giving such notice.”

The plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s fourth plea was sustained b.y this court in said opinion. This plea differed from the third in that it set up the bar of two years’ limitation under Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 218, § 9.

It will thus be seen that the court, following Gunn v. Kelliher, admr., 20 R. I. p. 180, held that, inasmuch as the action was commenced February 15, 1900, which was more than three years after the time when the original administrator, Samuel H. Cross, qualified as such, the action could not be maintained, as said section of the Public Statutes above quoted alone applied and was a complete bar to the action.

The plaintiff now files a replication to said third plea, in which she alleges (1) that she presented her claim to said Cross, as administrator, within the time limited by law; (2) that said Cross allowed her said claim and promised to pay the same; (3) that after the decease of said Cross, and within the time limited by law, she presented her claim to the administrator de bonis non; and (4) that said administrator de *379 bonis non never filed-in the Probate Court any statement allowing or denying .the validity of plaintiff’s claim, and never gave notice that it was disputed.

(1) To this replication the defendant demurs, on the ground that it is insufficient, invalid, and ineffective.

The argument of plaintiff’s counsel in support of this replication is that under' the provisions of Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 189, § 8, the plaintiff could have brought suit upon her claim at any time up to January 15, 1899, this being the time when the three years from the date of the first publication of notice by Mr. Cross expired. He then takes the - position, as' we understand from his brief, that as Mr. Hoxsie the defendant was appointed administrator de bonis non August 1, 1898, under the provisions of the General Laws, which took effect February 1, 1896, the case is governed by the provisions thereof, and not by the provisions of the Public Statutes which were in force at the time of the appointment and qualification of "'the first administrator. And the specific claim made is that section 14 of chapter 218 of the General Laws, providing for the continuity of time limits through successive administrations, is new, and is not found in said Public Statutes. Said section reads as follows:

“When an executor or administrator, after qualification, dies, resigns, or is removed, without having fully administered the estate of the deceased, and a new administrator is appointed, such new administration shall be deemed to be a continuation of the preceding administration, and all limitations which could be claimed for or against the predecessor shall be claimed-and enforced by such successor: Provided, however, 'that the time when there is no representative of the estate shall not be reckoned as part of the periods for the presentation or proof of claims or limitations for bringing suits; and such periods, and generally the periods referred to in this and the preceding title, where no provision to the contrary is made,.shall be reckoned exclusive of such time.”

Even conceding, for the purposes of the argument, that this section is applicable to the case before us, it furnishes no support for the position'taken. Omthe contrary, it is directly *380 opposed to such position, in that it clearly provides that the new administration, which is that of Mr, Hoxsie, is merely a continuation of the preceding administration, namely, that of Mr. Cross. And as it appears that more than three years, not counting the interim, had elapsed after the appointment and qualification of Mr. Cross before the suit was instituted, the special statute of limitations hereinbefore referred to is a full and complete bar to the action. But, as held by this court in the former opinion, the case, in so far as it pertains to the estate of William C. Pendleton, the intestate, is governed by said Public Statutes, and not by the General Laws. And, as under said Public Statutes the administrator de bonis non was not obliged to file in the Probate Court any statement of claims allowed or disallowed by him (see Barber v. Collins, 18 R. I. 763), the plaintiff’s allegation in her replication, that within the time limited by law she presented her claim to him, and that he never filed any statement allowing or denying the validity thereof, and never gave notice that the claim was disputed, is of no account. For, as argued by defendant’s counsel, “presentation alone would avail nothing, and unless suit was begun within three years, the claimant would be remediless.”

But even assuming again that the plaintiff’s claim as against said Hoxsie, administrator, is governed by Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 215, §§ 2 and 3, as argued by counsel in her behalf, still it is clear that she has no standing in court. For under section 2 of that chapter, construed, as it must be, as directed in section 1, the time within which the plaintiff’s claim could be presented to the administrator had expired long prior to its presentation to Hoxsie, as appears in said replication. So that he was not called upon to pay any attention thereto. And even if he had, his action would have given the plaintiff no standing as a claimant against the estate. Neither under the Public Statutes nor under the General Laws, therefore, has the plaintiff any cause of action against the defendant, by reason of that part of the allegations of the replication now under consideration.

(2) We come now to consider the only really new point in the *381 case, namely, the allegation in said replication that Mr. Cross, the first administrator, allowed the plaintiff’s claim and promised to pay the same out of said estate. This raises the question whether an executor or administrator can so waive the special statute of limitations.as to bind the estate. We think it is clear that this question must be answered in the negative.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Umsted v. Umsted
446 F.3d 17 (First Circuit, 2006)
Cox v. Amend
198 A.2d 48 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1964)
Ward v. Magaha
129 P. 395 (Washington Supreme Court, 1913)
Carney v. Hawkins
83 A. 327 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1912)
La Floridienne v. Seaboard Air Line Railway
59 Fla. 196 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 A. 930, 25 R.I. 377, 1903 R.I. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-hoxsie-ri-1903.