Troup v. Mechanics National Bank

53 A. 122, 24 R.I. 377, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 A. 122 (Troup v. Mechanics National Bank) 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
Troup v. Mechanics National Bank, 53 A. 122, 24 R.I. 377, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 87 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

The facts of this case, as they are admitted or as they appear in evidence, are as follows :

Augustus C. Troup, the plaintiff’s intestate, carried on business in his lifetime under the name of A. C. Troup & Company, and kept a deposit in the defendant hank as A. C. Troup & Co. On December 18, 1889, he made his promissory note as A. C. Troup & Company for the sum of $400, payable four months after date, and this note was discounted by the defendant bank, and the net proceeds thereof paid to the plaintiff’s intestate. On February 19, 1900, the plaintiff’s intestate died. On April 6, 1900, the plaintiff was duly appointed administratrix, qualified and gave notice of her appointment, as required by law. At the time of the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, the balance due him on the books of the defendant bank was $735.95, all checks drawn by the intestate having been paid and charged. On April 18, 1900', the bank’s note came due. The bank thereupon charged the amount of said note in said account, but continued to hold the same until some time in October, 1901. On June 30, 1900, the bank sent to the plaintiff a statement of the balance due on the account, which showed that this note had been charged to the account, and the plaintiff returned to the bank a statement that the account was correct. The estate of the plaintiff’s intestate proved to be insolvent, and was so represented to the Probate Oourt November 9, 1900, within thirty days after expiration of the time fixed for the presentation of claims against the said estate. The defendant bank filed no claim either with the administratrix or with the clerk of the Municipal Oourt, and presented no claim to the commissioners *378 who were appointed upon said insolvent estate. After the estate had been declared insolvent and after the time had expired for the presentation of claims to the commissioners, the plaintiff demanded from the defendant the amount of the deposit to the credit of A'. C. Troup & Company at the- time of the death of her intestate. This amount the defendant refused to pay in full, claiming the right to charge the estate, or to offset against this claim, the amount of said note.

The essential facts which raise the disputed question in this' case are that the defendant bank, at the time of the death of plaintiff’s intestate, held deposits -belonging to him amounting to $735.95, and also were holders of a promissory note made by intestate for $400, due two months after the intestate’s death; that the intestate died insolvent and commissioners were appointed to consider claims against his estate, and that the defendant did not present the note to the commissioners for consideration.

The plaintiff claims that the defendant cannot be allowed to charge the amount of the note to the account, because the note had not been presented to. the commissioners as a claim against the estate.

In support of this claim her counsel cite the following cases : Ewing, Ex’r., v. Griswold, 43 Vt. 400. This decision is based upon the statute of Vermont, General Statutes, 401, § 1, which provides that if the party ‘ ‘ does not exhibit his claim to the commissioners within the time limited by the court for that purpose, he shall be forever barred from recovering such demand or from pleading the same in set-off in any action whatever. ”

Jones v. Jones, 21 N. H. 219.

This was not the case of an insolvent estate. The same court in Mathewson v. Strafford Bank, 45 N. H. 104, under a statute similar to our own, and upon facts exactly like those presented by the case at bar, held “that no presentment of claim to the administrator has ever been required in the case of an estate represented insolvent, either for the purpose of an allowance of the claim by the commissioner, or to be used as a set-off in an action by the administrator, where the set-off *379 can be used as a matter of defence only, and not as the foundation of a recovery of any balance. The language of the revised statutes is confined to actions : £ No action against an administrator shall be sustained, etc., unless the demand shall have been exhibited to the administrator and payment demanded.’ In the case of an insolvent estate neither the proof of the claim before the commissioners nor the offer of it in set-off has been regarded as within the meaning of the term ‘action.’”

Bell's Admr. v. Andrews, 34 Ala. 538.

This case holds squarely that a claim against an insolvent estate which has not been filed within the time required by law is not available as a set-off in an action brought by the administrator. The decision depends upon section 1,847, Code of Alabama, 1852, as follows: “Every person having any claim against the estate so declared insolvent, must file the same in the office of the Judge of Probate within nine months •after such declaration,” etc., “or the same is forever barred.”

Our statute corresponding to this provision is Gen. Laws cap. 215, § 21, as follows :

‘ If any creditor shall not prove his claim before the commissioners within the time of the commission as originally fixed or as thereafter extended, as aforesaid, he shall, unless other special statutory provision be made to the contrary, be forever bai’red of his action therefor against the executor or administrator. ”

The Alabama statute, as construed by the court, treats the claim and the counter-claim in the disjunctive, and forever bars for all purposes the claim not duly filed. Our statute applies only to creditors, and, like the New Hampshire statute, bars the creditor’s right of action only. In our jurisprudence with respect to insolvent estates, the distinction is drawn most sharply not between debts and credits as such, but between debtors and creditors of the estate. One who owes the estate more than the estate owes him is a debtor; one who claims of the estate more than he owes it is a creditor, and must prove his claim or be barred of any action for the recovery of it.

*380 The principle has always been recognized in Rhode Island that an equitable adjustment with each debtor or creditor of claims in favor of and against the insolvent estate of a deceased person takes place as by operation of law as of the time of the insolvent’s death, claims not then due being rebated if necessary; and for the purposes of administration only the -balances arising from such an adjustment with any individual are considered. Where such a balance is against the estate and the creditor desires to enforce it, section 11 of chapter 215 becomes operative ; and, the claim and counterclaim having been considered by the commissioners, the balance is reported as the debt due from the estate. Where the balance is in favor of the estate, there is no provision that the balance or the elements of which it is made shall appear in the report.

The adjustment of claims and counter-claims in the case of an insolvent estate is entirely independent of the provisions of the statute of set-off.

Irons v. Irons, 5 R. I. 264.

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

Related

Bandy v. FIRST STATE BANK, OVERTON, TEX.
835 S.W.2d 609 (Texas Supreme Court, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 122, 24 R.I. 377, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/troup-v-mechanics-national-bank-ri-1902.