Under the provisions of Sarah McMillan’s will, the trustee was required to take care of the fund, to pay the profits and interest annually to her daughter, Nancy H. Brantley, “ for the-use and support of herself and her children during her natural life, and at her death the whole of said property to go to and become the absolute property of the lawful heirs of my said daughter in [equal ?] shares and proportions.” The present bill was filed by Mrs. Nancy H. Brantley and her children as co-complainants, and charges and alleges “ that the trust fund which was received by the trustee [$4,700] has been converted or used and consumed, or is lost and gone; and that said trustee is now totally insolvent.” The bill also charges that the trustee “ has never made any settlement of his trusteeship, nor has he paid the interest upon the trust fund due for 1883 and 1884, though often solicited so to do by Mrs. Nancy H. Brantley, his cestui que trust. She has solicited payment of the interest due for 1883, and he has not paid it.” The bill does not show when the annual interest was due and payable, but we suppose at the end of the year in which it accrued. The presumption is that interest for the year 1883 is the product of the fund during that year. The language implies that. If this be the proper interpretation, the interest would not be due and demandable until the end of the year 1883. The present suit was brought in July, 1884, a little more than six months after the alleged first default in the payment of interest. The transcript before us does not show when the bill was filed, but summons for the defendants bears date July 30, 1884. The sheriff’s return on the summons is not found in the record. Each defendant demurred separately to the bill, but it is not shown when the demurrers were filed. The case was set down for hearing on the demurrers at the January term, 1885, and the demurrers were ruled on at that term. There was an amendment of the bill, not deemed material, and to that amended bill separate demurrers were filed and ruled on. The chancellor sustained Mrs. Burford’s de*176murrer, and overruled McDowell’s. By cross assignments of error, each ruling is brought before us.
McDowell’s demurrer raises two questions which we will notice. The first is, misjoinder of parties complainant; Mrs. Brantley’s interest being that of a tenant for life, and her children tenants in remainder. Each and all of them have a common interest that the fund be recovered and safely invested— Mrs. Brantley, that she may secure the payment of its annual interest to her during her life; and her children, that the principal be equally divided among them at their mother’s death. There is nothing in this objection.— Werborn v. Austin, 77 Ala. 381; 1 Perry on Trusts. § 175.
The second objection is, that the bill fails to show the death or removal of Lewis W. McMillan, alternate testamentary trustee, and fails to show he refused to qualify as such trustee. From this absence of averment, it is contended that the present bill is fatally defective in not showing a case had arisen which conferred on the register jurisdiction to make the appointment of trustee, under which Dawson qualified and received the trust fund. The will has constituted James A. McMillan trustee, and in the event of his death or resignation, it appointed Lewis W. McMillan to execute the trust. The bill avers that James A. McMillan assumed the trust, and subsequently resigned, settling up his accounts. . It offers no excuse why Lewis W. McMillan did not take upon himself the trusteeship. It is not shown whether or not Lewis W. was in life when the vacancy occurred, and this record makes no mention of any claim by him to the alternate right the will had conferred on him to administer the trust. We need not consider what would be Lewis McMillan’s rights, if he were complaining that they had been disregarded. We have no such case. Dawson petitioned for the appointment, and it was conferred on him at his request. He qualified by giving bond, and received the trust funds. Both he and his sureties are estopped from denying his liability to account for them. There is nothing in McDowell’s assignment of errors.
The bill avers that Dawson was appointed trustee in January, 1877, and gave bond for the faithful administration of the trust, with McDowell and Burford as his sureties; that in March, 1877, Burford died, and in April, 1877, Mrs. M. M. Burford, his widow, was appointed administratrix of his estate. She is made a defendant to this suit as such administratrix. There is no averment in the bill that this claim had ever been presented to her for payment, or that it had been filed in the probate court as a claim against the estate. By her demurrer she interposes the defense, known in our jurisprudence as non-claim. If under the facts this defense is available to her, she *177can raise it by demurrer, when the bill on its face shows a state of facts which requires presentation, and fails to aver such presentation was made.— Owens v. Corbett, 57 Ala. 92; Fretwell v. McLemore, 52 Ala. 124. Was this a claim which required presentation 1
The decision of this question depends on the construction of section 2597 of the Code of 1876, which is in the following language: “All claims against the estate of a deceased person must be presented within eighteen months after the same have accrued, or within eighteen months after the grant of letters testamentary, or of administration ; and if not presented within that time are forever barred.” Was the demand asserted in this bill a “ claim ” which could have been presented ? A claim, in the sense here used, is almost "the synonym of moneyed demand ; for it is required to be presented, only when money is claimed to be due. It has no reference to property alleged to be withheld. It must be payable in money, although it is not necessary it should be due and payable presently. A debt not yet due is a claim within the meaning of this statute. It is the asserted liability of decedent and his estate to pay a sum of money. — Bouvier, Law Die. “A demand as of right.” Worcester’s Die. “A demand of a right, or supposed right.” Webster’s Die. “ A calling on another for something due, or supposed to be due.” — -Imperial Die.
The statute we are considering has been in force in this State a great many years. It was intended to facilitate a safe and speedy settlement of estates, by furnishing the personal representative the means of determining its financial status within eighteen months after his appointment. Hence, all claims which had accrued were required to be presented within that time, with an exception of claims in favor of minors and persons of unsound mind, who were allowed eighteen months after the removal of their respective disabilities. — Code, § 2598. Very many rulings have been made on this statute. — Jones v. Lightfoot, 10 Ala. 9; Foster v. Holland, 56 Ala. 474; Fretwell v. McLemore, 52 Ala. 124; Owens v. Corbett, 57 Ala. 92; McDowell v. Jones, 58 Ala. 25; Rhodes v. Hannah, 66 Ala. . 215; Yniestra v. Tarleton, 67 Ala. 126; Taylor v. Robinson, 69 Ala. 269; Jones v. Drewry, 72 Ala. 311.
■ The case of Neil v. Cunningham, 2 Porter, 171, was that of a surety on a bond of indemnity. More than eighteen' months had elapsed after administration was granted on the estate of the surety, and there had been no presentation. Subsequently the liability of the principal was fixed, and it was held the statutory bar did not commence running until the principal committed the default, for redress of which the suit was brought. In Pinkston v. Hine, 9 Ala. 252, a bond was *178given by Clisby, with Gauze as surety, that title should be made to a tract of land when Hine became of age. More than eighteen months before that time Gauze died, and Pinkston became his administrator. There was no presentation until after Hine became of age, and the statute of non-claim was pleaded. It was held the claim did not accrue until Hine came of age, and that the demurrer to that plea was properly sustained. In Jones v. Lightfoot, 10 Ala. 17, it was said : “There are doubtless cases of contingent liability, which may never accrue, and which, therefore, there is no necessity to present to the personal representative.” In Fretwell v. McLemore, 52 Ala. 124, this court said: “The judicial ascertainment creates the cause of action against the surety, authorizing the enforcement of the liability imposed by the bond.” In that case “the period préseribed by thb statutes, as that within which the distributees could claim distribution, having arrived,” it was held that there was a claim against the intestate' — that a liability originating on the bond had accrued — and the plea of the statute of non-claim 'was held good. So, in McDowell v. Jones, 58 Ala. 25, we said : “ There may be contracts involving only contingent liability, or dependent upon the future performance, or the happening of some particular event, of some act or duty by the person to whom the promise is made, or by some other person, not falling within the operation of the statute. Or, there may be claims not within the operation, because they do not accrue until the doing of some act by another, after the grant of administration. When the act is done and the claim has accrued, the bar of the statute is computed, not from the grant of administration, but from the act and the accrual of the claim. * * * The liability of a surety on an administration bond is contingent, until the principal shall fail in the performance of a duty required of him by law.”
The bond in this case, like the bonds of public officers, executors, administrators and guardians, was an obligation to do certain duties and execute certain trusts, which might, in their administration, run through many years. If presentation were required in such cases before actual default committed, it could only be of the penalty of the bond — nothing more definite, and nothing less in amount. In .the present case, the claim would have been eight thousand dollars, the penalty of the bond. This, too, at a time when there was no known default, and, for aught that we can know, there was in fact no default. The bill shows no default until January, 1884. The profession know well what effects the presentation of claims have on administrations. They generally tie up the assets, delay disbursements and distributions, and frequently lead— *179rightfully lead — to report of insolvency, order for sale of real estate, and many other consequences not necessary to be mentioned. And, in such a case as this, all these consequences might be entailed on the administration, and for an unknown number of years, when there was in fact no default, and no claim had accrued. The legislature can not be supposed to have contemplated or intended-such results as these.
A question very like the one we are considering arises in determining what claims are, and what are not provable against a bankrupt’s estate. The claim set up in this suit, until default by the trustee, could not have been proved and allowed in bankruptcy. — Steele v. Graves, 68 Ala. 21; Loring v. Kendall, 1 Gray, 305 ; Ellis v. Ham, 28 Me. 385; Fowler v. Kendall, 44 Me. 448; Pogue v. Joyner, 1 Eng. (Ark.) 241.
Mrs. Burford’s demurrer ought to have been overruled, and the result is that on Mrs. Brantley’s assignments of error the decree of the chancellor is reversed.
Reversed and remanded.