On the 24th of August, 1859, the defendant, with one Richard Dunn, a resident of Nova Scotia, gave a receipt to the plaintiff, a deputy sheriff in this county, for
The action of Hunter v. Dunn, was duly entered .in Court, answered to by'Winslow Bates, Esq., a counsellor residing in Eastport, — an offer of default for a specific sum was made and not accepted, — and, at the January term, 1861, the death of Dunn was suggested. His attorney, Mr. Bates, who was also public administrator for the countyr, having taken out letters of administration, January 15, 1861, appeared at the April term following, and was defaulted, and judgment was duly awarded against the estate of the intestate in the hands of Bates, as administrator, and execution was regularly issued, and placed in the hands of the plaintiff, who made demand upon the defendant within thirty days after judgment, and was met with a refusal, and was informed by the defendant that Mr. Bates, the attorney and administrator of Dunn, the defendant in the original suit, told him not to give up the property. Hence this suit, which the receiptor claims to defend by showing that, on the 2d of April, 1861, before he had appeared as administrator in this Court, Mr. Bates made a representation of the insolvency of the estate in the Probate Court, and procured the appointment of commissioners, who subsequently reported that no claims were presented, whereupon the administrator closed the estate, by paying his own bill for defending the original suit and the administration charges.
If it be true that the officer is relieved from liability to any person for the property attached, the contract being substantially one of indemnity, it may perhaps follow that he is not entitled to maintain this action, notwithstanding the stipulation that the receipt should be conclusive, against the signers, of their "liability, under all circumstances,” for the value of the property.
The question that presents itself here, is whether an attachment in a suit pending against a debtor at the time of his death, is vacated by a representation of insolvency and the appointment of commissioners in the Probate Court, when these proceedings are not made judicially to appear in the suit in which the attachment is made ?
The defendant relies upon § § 15 and 17 of c. 66, R. S., providing that judgment may be rendered in actions pending on claims not preferred against persons whose estates shall be represented insolvent, with a particular effect, and to be satisfied in a certain manner, viz.: no execution shall issue except for costs to the prevailing party, and the sum found due to the claimant is to be entered by the Judge of Probate on the list of contingent debts entitled to dividends.
The defendant relies further upon cases where it has been adjudged in the original suit, either upon disclosure of a trustee summoned, or upon motion of the administrator defending, for stay of execution, that where the insolvency of the estate was made to appear by the issuing of a commission in the Probate Court, the attachment was thereby dissolved, and judgment could only be rendered with the effect an satisfided in the manner above stated. Doubtless this is so. The difficulty is, that this was not the kind of judgment that was entered up in the suit of Hunter v. Bates, Adm'r. The case finds that judgment was awarded against the estate
We are clear that the defendant in this suit cannot be permitted here, and now, to impeach the correctness of that judgment and the proceedings thereon, in this collateral manner. It was tho duty of the administrator, on appearing, (if he had represented the estate insolvent,) instead of submitting to a general default, to have the proceedings in insolvency in Probate Court made to appear upon the record here, so that the right judgment might be entered up. In the face of a judgment standing as this does, neither he nor any other party can be permitted to dispute the propriety of it in any collateral proceeding.
It was long ago settled that, although an estate had been represented insolvent aud actually proved to be so, yet, if the creditor had been permitted, notwithstanding this, to proceed to judgment in a pending suit, in the usual form, a levy upon the execution would bind the estate, even though the attorney of the creditor knew of the representation of insolvency. Ramsdell v. Creasy, 10 Mass., 170.
And again, in case an execution, regularly issued upon a judgment obtained under like circumstances as to insolvency, is returned nidia bond, the administrator cannot escape a judgment and execution de bonis propriis by setting up the proceedings in insolvency in defence of the scire facias against himself. Sturgis v. Reed, Adm’r, 2 Maine, 109.
Now, the original suit of Hunter v. Dunn, in which the property, for which the receipt was given, was attached, proceeded regularly to judgment and execution, and the execution was duly placed in the plaintiff’s hands to be satisfied out of the property which he had attached. His liability to the creditor was thereby fixed, and the receipter, in his turn, must make good the contract of indemnity. Or if, by reason of the assent of the creditor’s attorney to the taking of a receipt and his approval thereof, the officer was re
The plaintiff’s objections to the reception of the evidence, as to the proceedings in the Probate Court, should have been sustained. Defendant defaulted.