Opinion
Fall Sessions, 1841.
Ridgely, for plaintiff.
Cullen, for defendant.
NARR. in assumpsit, with a special count. Pleas; non-assumpsit; payment; set-off and the act of limitation. Replication and issues. Verdict for plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the court on the following case stated.
The plaintiff, Smith E. Davis, recovered against defendant as administrator of Jonas Walker, judgment for $2,322 25, part of which remains unsatisfied. The defendant as administrator, on the 7th of November, 1835, passed an administration account, charging himself with the rents of the land of Walker since his death in 1828, and on this account there was a balance due to the estate of said Walker of $97 92¼, with interest from the 7th of November, 1835. The intestate, Walker, left three heirs at law who claimed this balance, the said Smith E. Davis being one of the heirs. Lot Rawlins, as administrator of Jonas E. Walker, gave bond according to law on the 13th of June, 1828. The question was, whether the plaintiff in this form of action, and upon this declaration, was entitled to recover the balance appearing" on said administration account, being for the rents aforesaid, against the defendant in his own right and as administrator as aforesaid.
Cullen. — An action of assumpsit will not lie against an administrator by a creditor for a debt due from the deceased. The remedy is on the bond. If the rents are assets in the hands of the administrator, the only form in which they can be recovered is by suit on the bond.
Ridgely. contra.
Per Curtain.
By the thirteenth section of the act concerning the probate of wills and the administration, of the personal estate of deceased persons ( Dig. 226,) rents of the real estate of the deceased which shall come to the administrator's hands are made assets for the payment of demands against the deceased, and the administrator is made chargeable therewith accordingly; but it is provided that this shall not extend the obligation of the administration bond, either as against the administrator or his sureties. How then is the administrator chargeable; and to whom is he liable? It is evident that the act did not mean to make him liable only to heirs but to creditors also, for it is further provided that upon a demand of the heir or devisee of such rents, it shall be a sufficient defence that the administrator has applied them to demands against the deceased, or that there are such demands to which the same are applicable. The liability of an administrator to a creditor for rents of the decedent's land received by him, is clear by the terms of the act, and it is equally clear that the remedy is not upon the administration bond. And if there was a remedy under the bond, it would not follow that all other remedies were excluded. In the case of Barber vs. M'Clyment's ex'rs., the late Supreme Court of this State decided the contrary, viz: that the remedy under the bond was cumulative; and the court sustained that action, which was assumpsit against an executor for the proceeds of sales of land sold by order of the Orphans' Court. This decision was indeed made before the act of 1829, requiring administrators to give new bonds for such proceeds of sale; but that does not make any difference as to this question, for it is quite clear here that the administration bond does not cover these rents. The administrator must, therefore, be responsible in the form, of action which the plaintiff in this case has resorted to.
The plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the verdict.