Walker v. Caldwell

8 Del. Ch. 91
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Del. Ch. 91 (Walker v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Caldwell, 8 Del. Ch. 91 (Del. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

The Chancellor:—

The bill was filed by the legatees under the will of Daniel Caldwell, deceased, for the purpose of obtaining a decree of this Court, requiring Daniel Caldwell, executor of the said Daniel Caldwell, to pay over to them certain moneys which had been deposited in 1842 by the said testator in the Provident Institution for Savings, in the City of Boston, in the name of Daniel Caldwell, trustee for Richard Caldwell, which, with interest, amounted to $1666.76, when it came into the hands of Daniel Caldwell the said executor.

The respondent filed his demurrer to the bill, stating as his first cause of demurrer that the complainants had a plain and adequate remedy at law; it being urged by counsel for the respondents that the enactment of statutory remedies in America and the establishment of statutory courts of probate, have either taken away the jurisdiction of courts of equity over administration suits, or rendered them practically obsolete, so that the jurisdiction will not be exercised unless rendered necessary by some of the special heads of equity jurisprudence, such as fraud, etc.

It will not be necessary to go outside of our own State to find decisive authority for the determination of the questions raised by this first ground of demurrer. It is of course, not denied by counsel for the respondent that at common law it was a very important part of the exclusive jurisdiction [99]*99of the English Court of Chancery to hear and determine suits for the recovery of legacies and for distributive shares of the personal property of an intestate, and when the jurisdiction of the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain was conferred upon the Colonial Courts of Common Pleas by our early colonial statutes, this became an important part of their exclusive jurisdiction, and so continued to be until jurisdiction was given by Act of March 31, 1764, 1 Del. Laws, 408, to the Courts of Common Law, to entertain a suit against an executor for a legacy due.

This act, passed during the term of John Penn as Lieutenant Governor of the Colony, clearly recognized the existing jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, reciting that “Whereas the proceedings in the Courts of Chancery, within this government, for the recovery of legacies are tedious and expensive.” It then enacted that, “from and after the publication of this Act, it shall and may be lawful for any person or persons, to whom any legacy, or bequest of any sum or sums of money, or other goods or chattels, have been, or may be, made, by the last will and testament of any other person or persons legally made, to commence, sue and prosecute, an action of debt, detinue or account render, as the case may require, for such legacy, after it becomes due, in any of the Courts of Common Pleas within this government.”

There was no further legislation until a general statute for the regulation of probate and administration was passed February 16, 1829, entitled “An Act Concerning the Probate of Wills and the Administration of Personal Estates of Deceased Persons,” 7 Del. Laws, 465, 483, ch. 28, sec. 16, which provided that an action of assumpsit might be maintained against an executor or administrator for a legacy or distributive share.

The Act of 1764 is found in the Digest of 1829, p. 370, where it is provided that the legatee may sue in “debt, detinue or account render, as the case may require.” And the Act of 1829, to be found on page 217 of the same Digest, provides in sec. 16, p. 228, that: “An action of assumpsit may be maintained against an executor or administrator for [100]*100.a legacy or distributive share.” The latter statute does not refer to the former, and it presumably left it open at that time to the suitor to adopt any one of the forms of action mentioned in both acts. This seems to be a necessary conclusion from the language of the statute providing for the publication of the Digest of 1829, and the statement of the preface, in which Judge Hall, its editor, states “that this edition shall contain the law, as it stands in force upon our Acts of Assembly.”

In the Revised Code of 1852, the action of assumpsit was alone designated as the remedy at law in this class of cases. Rev. Code (1893) 680, sec. 40.

In the act of 1829 a legacy either directly or indirectly the subject of a trust was excluded from the grant of jurisdiction; but there was no such exception noted in the Act of 1764; doubtless it was deemed unnecessary.

It is, of course, obvious that the question here touched upon as to what action at law will lie, cannot arise in this Court and is here referred to only as part of the historical statement of the legislation on the subject.

Can it be successfully contended that either the Act of 1764 or the Act of 1829 does more than provide a concurrent remedy for the recovery of a legacy in addition to that which had always existed, which, as above stated, was established in the early colonial period, and was subsequently adopted by the State, when the present Court of Chancery was created by the Constitution of 1792, and continued by the Constitutions of 1832 and 1897? Clearly not.

It might be sufficient to rest alone upon the language of the statutes of 1764 and 1829, which plainly shows that they only established a concurrent remedy, intending to make available a more speedy and easy method of recovering a legacy, without interfering with the right of a suitor to proceed by bill in equity if for any reason he were advised so to do. With the same end in view, the proceeding by snre facias on a mortgage was provided, and is generally used, although not interfering with the right of a mortgagee, at his [101]*101option to file a bill in equity for foreclosure. Giles vs. Lewis, 4 Del. Ch. 51; Fox vs. Wharton, 5 id. 200.

It may be not inappropriate, however, to review the series of cases in our Court of Chancery relating to this subject.

At the time of the passage of the act of 1829, the jurisdiction in equity to make a decree against an executor for the payment of a legacy at suit of the legatee was habitually exercised and was unquestioned. It was not considered to be affected by the statute of 1764 in the colonial period, which was recognized as the law of the State in Killen, et al. vs. Adams, Ex’r., 1 Del. Ch. 185, where the statute was invoked by no less an authority on our statute law, than Judge Hall, who within a decade was chosen to codify for the first time, and unaided, the statute law of the State. It was recognized by no less an authority on equity law and practice than Chancellor Ridgely, as being in full force, he merely holding in that case that it did not sustain the particular point made.

The right to file a bill in equity against an executor for the recovery of a legacy was unquestioned,and was habitually recognized in this State between the time of the Colonial Act of 1764 and the Act of 1829. Where the question was whether a legacy was charged on the lands, the suit was, of course, necessarily brought in the Court of Chancery, but disregarding all such suits in the earlier -Chancery Reports, many cases are found in which the bill was filed to recover legacies payable out of the personal estate.

The following may be considered all the relevant cases.

In West and Wife and Mary Turner’s Admr. vs. Evans, Adm’x., 1 Del. Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. Ch. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-caldwell-delch-1896.