Wright v. Wright

183 A. 410, 121 Conn. 115, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 5, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 A. 410 (Wright v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Wright, 183 A. 410, 121 Conn. 115, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 98 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

On February 21st, 1934, the Court of Probate for the district of Bristol limited six months from that date for the presentation of claims against the estate of Wilfred E. Fogg, deceased, the limitation expiring on August 21st, 1934. On October 20th, 1934, the administration account was approved, distribution was ordered and the administrator distributed the assets excepting a portion of the cash. On November 13th, 1934, Louise Bohme filed, under § 4914 of the General Statutes, a petition that the Court of Probate limit a further time within which she might present a claim against the estate and the court, after hearing, found that the failure of the claimant to present her claim was through no fault of her own but because of illiteracy and incompetency and extended the time for presentation of claims against the estate for thirty days from December 10th, 1934. From this order Howard F. Wright individually and as administrator of another heir of the decedent appealed, on the ground that the claimant had failed to establish any right to an extension under the statute (§ 4914). The appellee in her answer to the reasons of appeal alleged, as she had in her petition, that her failure to present her claim within the time originally limited was through no fault of her own but because of her illiteracy and mental incompetence, because she was misled by the heirs into believing that her claim would be taken care of, because the heirs fraudulently represented to her that they would pay such claims as she had against the estate, and because she was un *117 familiar with the requirement that claims must be presented within the time limited. The Superior Court concluded, in effect, that none of the causes so alleged had been established and sustained the appeal. The appeal to this court involves the question of the requirements, under the statute, for the granting of the extension of time therein provided for.

Formerly our statute (General Statutes, 1888, § 581) provided that any creditor who neglected to present a claim against a deceased person’s estate within the time limited therefor by the order therein provided for should be debarred of his demand. There was no provision for suspension even during disability of the claimant, or when, otherwise, there was no one to present the claim. Cone v. Dunham (1890) 59 Conn. 145, 161, 20 Atl. 311. In 1899 (Public Acts, Chap. 224) there were inserted in this statute provisions in substance the same as now appear in § 4914 of the General Statutes that the Court of Probate “may, for cause shown upon hearing after public notice, limit a further time for the presentation of claims, not exceeding the period which it might have originally limited; and may, if any creditor, through no default of his own, shall have failed to present his claim within the time limited, for cause shown upon hearing after public notice, extend the time for such creditor to present his claim not more than thirty days beyond the period which it might have originally limited.” The purpose of the statute as a whole remains, however, for “the security and benefit of . . . estates;” “to produce a speedy settlement of estates and the repose of titles derived under persons who are dead” (Cone v. Dunham, supra, p. 161) and “to ensure . . . that the executor shall know exactly what the claims are.” Roth v. Ravich, 111 Conn. 649, 653, 151 Atl. 179. We have not hitherto had occasion to *118 discuss the provisions, above quoted, which are involved in this appeal.

A Rhode Island statute (General Laws, 1923, Chap. 365, § 3) provided that claims against the estate of a deceased person not filed within one year are barred, “provided, that a creditor who by reason of accident, mistake, or unforeseen cause,” or “by reason of any other cause, has failed to file his claim, may at any time, before the distribution of the estate, petition the Probate Court for leave to file his claim,” and the Probate Court, after notice and hearing, “may, in its discretion, grant leave to file such claim.” It is said in Tillinghast v. Iverson, 50 R. I. 23, 25, 144 Atl. 673, that “This statute is comprehensive and broad in scope, but the discretion thus given is not without limitation. ... As the character of the required reason is not defined by the statutes, the determination of the value of the reason is left in the first instance to the Probate Court.” But the exercise of this discretion is reviewable on appeal (see also State ex rel. Musgrave v. Probate Court, 79 Minn. 257, 82 N. W. 631). It is indicated in the Rhode Island case (p. 26), and we consider the like to be true under our statute, that upon such an application the question is, not whether the claim should be allowed, but merely whether it should be permitted to be presented, in order that it may be determined upon its merits, in the orderly course of probate procedure. What is required to be shown for the purposes of the application for extension is a claim prima facie of sufficient apparent merit to justify its presentation so as to open its validity to subsequent inquiry and decision. “The applicant must present a claim of apparent merit.” State ex rel. Lukes v. Williams, 123 Minn. 57, 58, 142 N. W. 945; 24 C. J. p. 367.

As to the further essential element that the exten *119 sion must be “for cause shown,” our statute resembles that of Vermont which provides that the Probate Court “may, for cause shown,” allow a further time, and those of Minnesota and Wisconsin requiring a showing of “good cause.” Whitcomb v. Davenport’s Estate, 63 Vt. 656, 22 Atl. 723; State ex rel. Lukes v. Williams, supra; In re Mills, 34 Minn. 296, 25 N. W. 580; Seidemann v. Karstaedt, 130 Wis. 117, 109 N. W. 942. Our statute, however, imposes a further limitation that the failure of the creditor to present his claim within the time limited must be “through no default of his own.” This serves to narrow somewhat the scope of causes which might avail to procure extension under a statute such as those above referred to in the cases above cited. It manifestly creates a wider disqualification than that in the Massachusetts, Maine and New Hampshire statutes which authorize relief to a claimant, if the court is of the opinion that justice and equity require it “and that such creditor is not chargeable with culpable neglect in not prosecuting his claim within the time . . . limited.” Farrington v. Miller, 225 Mass. 535, 114 N. E. 737; Estabrook v. Moulton, 223 Mass. 359, 111 N. E. 859; Powers v. Holt, 62 N. H. 625; Webster v. Webster, 58 N. H. 247; Blunt v. McCoombs, 110 Me. 211, 85 Atl. 748. The facts held, in the case last cited, to fall within the disqualification of culpable neglect, are somewhat analogous, in necessary effect, to those hereinafter stated as found by the trial court in the present instance. It is said (p. 220) that the plaintiffs “appear to have relied upon their own ability and the ability of their fellow creditors to work out their own indemnity. They were not trapped, misled or defrauded.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A. 410, 121 Conn. 115, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-wright-conn-1936.