Furth v. Wyatt

By the Court,

Hawley, J.:

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage against the estate of Ann Hannum, deceased.

The only question which the record presents is whether the plaintiff can maintain this action, it appearing that the suit ‘ ‘ is to enforce a claim against the estate', which the plaintiff purchased at the time when he was the administrator of the estate.”

'It is argued by appellant that the administrator could not purchase an indebtedness against the estate, and acquire a valid title thereto.

*182The piwisions of the statute, upon which appellant relies, are as follows : “ Sec. 222. No administrator or executor shall purchase any claim against the estate he represents; and if he shall have paid any claim for less than its nominal value he shall only be entitled to charge in his account so much as he shall have actually paid.” (1 Comp. L. 702.)

The mortgage in question was executed and delivered to Joseph Dondero in 1875.

The facts relative to the purchase of the mortgage by plaintiff are, as stated in the findings of the court, That on and before the twenty-first day of February, 1878, the said Joseph Dondero had threatened to bring suit against the executors of said estate, viz : the plaintiff in this action and * * * James Hannum, to foreclose said mortgage and to cancel said claim, unless the same was fully paid, and that the plaintiff in this 'action fully believed that said Joseph Dondero would so commence said action and subject the said estate to costs of court unless the same was paid, and that, acting upon such belief, and actuated by a motive to save the estate from costs, and to preserve the same, the said plaintiff purchased said claim from the said Joseph Dondero in good faith, and that he paid therefor, on the twenty-first day of February, 1878, the sum of one thousand nine hundred and forty-two dollars and seven cents, which was the full amount then due upon said claim, and that the said Dondero then-assigned, transferred and set over said claim * * * to the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was the holder and owner of the same at the commencement of this action, and has ever since been, and that said estate has not been in anywise injured by the purchase of said claim by the plaintiff, but that the same has resulted in benefit to the said estate, by causing a delay in the foreclosure of said mortgage and the enforcement of said claim, and * * * that said purchase was made in good faith, and with no intent to in anywise injure said estate or the heirs of said Ann Hannum.”

From these facts it will readily be seen that this is not a case where an administrator has attempted to take any advantage or gain any profit by the transaction in which he engaged, and applying the rules announced by this court in *183the estate of Millenovieh, 5 Nev. 161, we think the plaintiff is entitled to maintain this action.

The statute was designed to protect the estates of deceased persons, and to prevent administrators and executors from taking advantage of their position to the injury of the estate.

If an administrator purchases a claim for less than is due, he could not enforce it for the full amount, but would be entitled to be remunerated for the amount he actually paid. (Mitchum Heirs v. Mitchum Administrators, 3 Dana, 260; Van Horne v. Fonda, 5 John. Ch. 409; Miller v. Towles, 4 J. J. Marsh. 256.)

In cases where an administrator has, without actual fraud, purchased property of the estate at his own sale, the transaction is not absolutely void; but only voidable at the suit of the cestui que trust. (Boyd v. Blankman, 29 Cal. 36; Terrill v. Auchauer, 14 Ohio St. 80; Rogers v. Rogers, 1 Hop. Ch. 524.)

And where the administrator “ has acted without moral turpitude a court of equity may protect him, and in ordinary cases will protect him, so far as to give him a lien on the property for any advances of a reasonable nature which he may have made.” (Mulford v. Minch., 3 Stock. Ch. 20; Bigelow on Fraud, 224.)

In Munroe v. Holmes the court, in discussing the question as to the right of a previous executor to collect money advanced by him for the benefit of the estate from an administrator, de bonis non, said : “An original executor or administrator is not obliged to incur expenses beyond the means which are placed in his power to discharge them; and he may, and usually does, protect himself by not permitting the estate to become his debtor. But circumstances may exist in which it is certainly not wrong in him, although it may not be a positive duty, to make advances for the benefit of the estate which he administers, and where, by his death or removal, he may be unexpectedly deprived of the power to reimburse himself for these advances. Where they have been'made in good faith, and for the benefit of the estate, we can have no doubt that they in some form become a charge upon the estate in the hands of the succeeding administrator, and that it is his duty *184to pay them as much as if they had been incurred in the-course of his.own administration.” (13 Allen, 110.)

In this- case the record shows that the money was- advanced, by the plaintiff for the benefit of the estate and to avoid litigation, and that it resulted to the benefit of the- estate without, gain to the administrator; and in such cases, in whatever way the question has arisen, the courts-have'held that the executor or administrator is entitled to bo protected and remunerated. (Jennison v. Hapgood, 10 Pick. 101; Liddell v. McVickar, 6 Hals. 48; Pettingill v. Pettingill, 60 Me. 425.)

The judgment of the district court is affirmed.