Opinion
December Term, 1823.
Laws 1715, ch. 10, is intended for the protection of dead men's estates, and not for the personal benefit of the executor; an executor de son tort may, therefore, plead it, as well as a rightful executor. The true distinction is that what will protect the assets may be used by any executor; but those rights which the law allows to the executor on account of his office can be claimed by a rightful executor only.
ACTION brought against the defendant as executor of one James McDowell, to which defendant pleaded ne unques executor, fully administered, act of 1789, and the act of 1715, reenacted in 1799. To the plea of ne unques executor there was a replication that the defendant, since the death of James McDowell, had acted as executor of the said James by administering divers goods and chattels which belonged to the estate of said James.
Gaston for appellant.
Seawell and Wilson contra.
This suit was commenced 30 July, 1818, and at September Term, 1820, the case by rule of court was referred to arbitrators; no award having been made, the rule was set aside and the cause set for trial. It did not appear on the trial that the plaintiffs knew at what time defendant took the property into his possession. The jury found that defendant was executor de son tort of James McDowell, that he had assets sufficient to satisfy plaintiffs' demand, and further, they found that the act of 1715 was a bar to plaintiffs' recovery.
Plaintiffs moved for a new trial on three grounds: (1) that an executor de son tort is not within the protection of the act of 1715; (2) that it did not appear from the evidence that the plaintiff knew of the defendant's having possession of the negroes for more than seven years next before he brought suit; (3) That the reference to arbitrators (545) took the plaintiff's claim out of the operation of the act of 1715.
The court held that an executor de son tort was within the protection of the act of 1715, and that the time began to run in favor of the defendant from the time he took possession of the property and openly and publicly used it, and that the reference to arbitrators did not take the case out of the act of 1715, and a new trial having been refused and judgment rendered, plaintiff appealed.
The question in this case is whether an executor de son tort can plead the statute of limitation, created by the act of 1715, ch. 10. If this were a plea that tended to the personal benefit of the executor de son tort, he ought not to be permitted to avail himself of it, but it is a plea pleaded for the benefit of the estate; the rights of the defendant are not in any respect thereby affected, and creditors have a right to bring actions against him; and I see no reason why they should succeed in making out their claims against him with more facility than they could do against the rightful executor; certainly other creditors and the next of kin would be thereby injured. If a rightful executor can plead such a plea for the purpose of protecting the estate, I think the defendant may do it in the present case. The plaintiff will not be in a worse situation than if he had sued a lawful representative of the estate. No hardship or inconvenience is pointed out in this case that might not equally apply to the other. I Wentw., office of Exrs., 177; 3 Term, 588; 10 Ves., 93; Andrews, 328; 2 Str., 1106.
The act of 1715, commonly called the seven-years bar, was intended for the benefit and protection of the estates of dead men; not for the protection of those who have the management of them, or may represent the dead men; and the plaintiff, having chosen to (549) consider the defendant an executor, and thrown on him the defense of the assets, shall not oust the estate of any defense to which it would be entitled in the hands of a rightful executor, for it would be very strange that a demand should be enforced against the estate, when the estate is defended by one person, and not when defended by another. I think the distinction is that what will protect the assets may be used in either; those rights which the law allows to the executor on account of his office can be claimed by the rightful executor only as the right of retaining compensation for his trouble and others; if there be any of the like kind, possibly the right of offering a set-off may be one exception from the above rule; this can be denied to the wrongful executor only on technical reasons, to wit, that as he cannot sustain suits for want of letters testamentary, he cannot set off against a demand upon the assets; and as the declared object of the statutes allowing a set-off is to prevent a multiplicity of suits, it can only be used where it can have that effect. The soundness of this reasoning it will be sufficient to examine when the case occurs. It may be taken either way without affecting the present question. Rule for a new trial discharged.
TAYLOR, C. J., dissented.
PER CURIAM. No error.
(550)