Lewis v. Champion

The Chancellor.

The bill states that George ~W. Hinkle, now deceased, borrowed of the complainant, on or about December 3d, 1883, $1,000 upon his, Hinkle’s, promissory note, which was unpaid *60•and not due when the latter died, which was but a few days after the note was given; that the defendants, the executors of Hinkle, took an order to limit creditors, the time limited wherein expired September 19th, 1884; that the order was duly published, and that the complainant had no knowledge of the order, and therefore did not present his claim under oath until after the limited period had expired, and when he did so present it after the expiration of that period, the defendants refused to receive it, on the ground that it was not presented in due time. The bill states that each of the defendants promised the complainant, before the time limited in the order expired, to pay the claim, and said it was included among the debts. It alleges that the defendants made those promises and that statement for the purpose of defeating the complainant’s claim and deterring him from taking any measures to secure it, and it states that the defendants allege that the estate is insolvent. It states that the defendants are wasting the estate and converting it to their own use. It prays answer not under oath; that the defendants may be required to admit the claim among the debts and liabilities of the estate; that if the estate be solvent, they may be decreed to pay the claim in full, or that if it be insolvent, they may be decreed to pay the ratable proportion of the claim, and that they may be decreed to be personally liable for the claim, and may be compelled to pay it. The defendants filed a general demurrer. *61It will have been seen that the complainant alleges that he had no knowledge of the order to limit creditors, and therefore did not put in his claim, under oath, until after the period limited for the purpose in the order had expired. If the estate be insolvent, his claim is barred of a dividend by his failure to put it in under oath within the limited period, and no recognition of the claim by the executors, or by the orphans court itself, can supply the place of the statutory requirement. Gould v. Tingley, 1 C. E. Gr. 501. If the estate be not insolvent, the case made by the bill is not such as to warrant a decree depriving the executors of the protection against suit for claim which the statute give.s them under the order to limit. They appear to have duly taken and published the order. They made no false or fraudulent representation to deter the complainant from making due proof of his claim. It is indeed alleged that their recognition of the claim, and promise to pay, were with a fraudulent design, but the facts stated do not support the charge. Their promises were promises to pay the debt out of the assets of the estate in due-course of administration. They did not bind the executors, individually. They were without consideration, and oral, merely. The circumstances, according to the bill, were as follows: In April, 1884, the complainant called on Mi’. Evans, one of the two executors, and gave him a notice from the bank in which the note was, demanding payment of the note, and then pre*62sented the claim to Evans, who received it as a just claim against the estate, saying that he had personal knowledge of it, and that it was all right. The complainant then inquired of him what he intended to do about paying the note, and Evans replied that he had only about $200 in bank belonging to the estate, and could not pay it then, but would pay it so soon as money enough of the estate should come into his hands to enable him to do so. The complainant asked him what was the amount of the assets of the estate, and Evans replied that the inventory amounted to $9,209.57, and the claims to about $4,000, including that of the complainant. Afterwards the complainant saw the other executor, Mr. Champion, and presented the claim to him, and he recognized and received it as a just claim against the estate, saying that he knew all about it, but could not pay it at that time for want of funds of the estate wherewith to pay it when he got the money. The complainant’s attorney called on Evans in April, 1884, and conversed with him about the claim. The latter said the amount of the inventory was $9,209.57, and the debts, including the claim of the complainant, which had been received, $4,000. In all this there is no evidence of fraudulent design on the part of the defendants, or either of them. Nor was there anything more than the ordinary replies made under such circumstances by executors to creditors inquiring concerning estates supposed to be entirely solvent, as the estate of Hinkle was then believed to be. The effect of such promises on the part of executors would be, at most, if their conduct had been inequitable to the prejudice of the complainant, misleading him, and so preventing him from putting in his claim, to estop them from setting up the bar of the statute under the order to limit to a suit brought by the complainant against them with a view to obtaining satisfaction of his claim out of the estate. But, as before stated, there is nothing in this case to create such an estoppel. The complainant was bound to take notice of the proceedings taken by the executors, according to the statute, in the course of the administration, and to comply with the requirements of such proceedings, so far as applicable to them, and calling for their action. It may be observed that, as before *63stated, the bill alleges that the promises were made with the intention to defraud the complainant, but that allegation, though a statement in form, is, in fact, but a mere charge, and, as before remarked, is unsupported by the facts set forth in the bill. It may be added that the bill states that the executors have wasted the estate and have converted it to their own use, but this allegation being sustained by no statement of fact, is insufficient. Kerr Fr. 365. It may be added that no relief is sought which is based on such alleged waste or conversion.

In Fmson v. Ivins, MS. N. J. Ghan. Nov. 1888, a creditor of an estate failed to present his claim within the time limited, but the executrix made payments thereon both before and after the expiration of the time fixed by the order. The executrix afterwards confessed a judgment for a large amount, and the sheriff levied on the assets of the estate and sold them. The creditor thereupon Bled a bill in equity to recover his debt, and obtained a preliminary injunction restraining the sheriff from paying over the proceeds of his sale to the judgment creditor, on an allegation that the confessed judgment was fraudulent as to him. On motion to dissolve this injunction, Vice-Chancellor Bird ordered it to be retained until final hearing. ' In Whitmore v. San Francisco Sav. Union, 50 Cal. 11/5, a debtor had conveyed land to his creditor, in trust to secure his promissory note. After the debtor’s death the creditor failed to present his claim to the executor in due time — Heidi that the court would not compel him to surrender his security, nor enjoin him from selling the land under a power contained in the deed of trust. — Rtvp.

*63The demurrer will be allowed.