Williams v. Penn

12 Mo. App. 393, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 58
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Mo. App. 393 (Williams v. Penn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Penn, 12 Mo. App. 393, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 58 (Mo. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs filed a claim in the probate court, which was allowed and placed in the sixth class. The plaintiffs appealed to the circuit court, where the same judgment was rendered, and they have again appealed to this court. The grounds of their, appeal are, that the claim ought to have been put in the fifth, and not in the sixth class. It is stated that there are assets to pay claims of the fifth class, but none to pay claims of the sixth class.

The claim arose in this way: Walter B. Morris and the defendant’s intestate were sureties on a guardian’s bond. In 1879, a judgment was recovered against Morris on the bond for $1,578. He paid the same and assigned to the plaintiffs his right of contribution against the estate of his co-surety; and this is the demand which the plaintiffs exhibited in the probate court. The record does not show when letters of administration upon the estate of John F. Quisenberry were granted, nor when notice thereof was published.

We have been favored with a copy of the following opinion delivered in this case by the learned judge of the probate court: —

Woerner, J.: “ Walter B. Morris and John F. Quisenberry were the sureties of one Willoughby as curator of Jane Willoughby, now Williams. Willoughby died after Quisenberry, and in January, 1879, judgment was rendered on his [395]*395bond against Morris, who paid the same and assigned his right of action for contribution to the claimant. Within one year after the judgment was rendered and paid, but more than one year after the date of letters, claimant presented her claim against the estate of Quisenberry, and the only question presented for adjudication is, whether the allowance is to be placed in the fifth or sixth class.

“ The statute places in the fifth class, 4 all demands, without regard to quality, which shall be legally exhibited against the estate within one year after the granting of the first letters on the estate;’ and in the sixth class, 4all demands thus exhibited, after the end of one year, and within two years after letters granted.’ (Rev. Stats., pp. v, vi, sect. 184.

44 The plain letter of this statute seems decisive of the question without recourse to rules or principles of construction. The demand was first4 exhibited, after the end of one year and within two years after letters granted.’ Such demands are assigned to the sixth class by the statute; hence nothing remains for the court to do but to announce, in completion of the syllogism and giving effect to the statute, that the claimant’s demand is placed in the sixth class.

44 But it is earnestly argued that such a judgment would work injustice, because the cause of action did not accrue until the expiration of the first year after the grant of letters, and that it would not, therefore, have been exhibited within that time, thus depriving the claimant of the benefit of participating in the fifth class entirely. It may be answered that if the language of the statute is clear, the injustice of its operation affords no excuse for its disregard. No authority but that of the legislature can amend an unwise or an unjust law. But this provision seems neither unwise nor unjust. The principle underlying the division of debts of a deceased person into the several classes, with priority according to the enumeration, does not rest upon the merits of the claimants, but is dictated by public policy and regard [396]*396to the practical requirements of settling an estate. The first class of claims has priority over the second, not because the undertaker is more favored by the law than a physician or sick-nurse, but because the decent burial of the dead is of paramount importance, and the dead person is not capable of acting for himself. Nor is the claim of a physician or other person serving the decedent during his last illness in itself more meritorious than that of any other person having a just demand; but the public, the state itself, is interested in securing ministration to a helpless person, and hence postpones the demands of even the government to those of persons performing these services. So, the fifth class takes precedence of the sixth ; not because there is any distinction in the relative merits or justice between fifth and sixth class claims, but because it is necessary to fix a time for the payment of claims, without regard to quality. The earliest moment to do this with safety has been fixed by the statute at about one year after the beginning of the administration. All claims then proved, or exhibited to the administrator, should be at once paid, or the means to pay them reserved, if they are still in litigation. This is the obvious policy of the law, and . its wisdom seems unquestionable. That another year is given within which claims may be exhibited and proved, is a concession to the possibility of debts arising or accruing subsequently ; but it is obvious that it would be both impolitic and unjust to defer the payment of the claims already proved or allowed, on the ground of the mere possibility of further liabilities accruing, or of dilatory creditors desiring to prove their demands subsequently. Hence a sixth class is created, which is necessarily postponed to the fifth, because the fifth is payable before the sixth can be deemed to exist. There is nothing in the objection, that creditors, whose demands accrue subsequent to the debt of the debtors, should in justice and under the policy of the law have one year thereafter within which their claims may be placed in [397]*397a class prior to the sixth. £ The year given to creditors, within which their claims are referred to the sixth class, h.as and can have relation only to the history of the administration, but not to that of the origin of the claim.’

“We are referred to the decision of the supreme court, that the three (now two) years’ limitation against the presentation of claims against an executor or administrator does not apply when the debt accrued subsequent to the date of the letters. It was so held in Miller v. Woodward (8 Mo. 169) ; and Scott, J., there says that, if the estate has been distributed, a court of equity would afford relief. Other cases to the same effect (of which, Finney v. The State, 9 Mo. 227, and Richardson v. Harrison, 36 Mo. 96) are cited by counsel for claimant. It is argued that, since this is a principle of equity, it applies as well to classification as to limitation. But the sequitor is not apparent: it is true that the law does not hold a party accountable for not doing that which is impossible, and will hence excuse a creditor for not establishing a claim which does not exist; but such excuse does not operate to give the claim an ante factum validity. If it originate or accrue after the distribution, there may be, as Judge Scott suggests, a remedy against the heirs by bill in equity, because their rights are subject to the claims of all creditors ; but there can be none against creditors whose rights have become fixed by compliance with the legal requirements determining the class and the fund out of which they are to be satisfied.

££ The case of Bryan v. Mundy (14 Mo. 459) is quoted as establishing the proposition that classification is the same as allowance. This case is a leading one on the point thereby established, that in presenting a judgment for allowance against an estate, the same notice is required to be given to the administrator as in presenting other demands, without which the allowance is unauthorized and illegal.

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Related

Price v. McCause
30 Mo. App. 627 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1888)
Bauer v. Gray
18 Mo. App. 164 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. App. 393, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-penn-moctapp-1882.