Judges: Bradford
Filed Date: 1/15/1857
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
—Victor Barsalou, claiming to be a creditor
The Eevised Statutes have provided a convenient and summary method for the ascertainment of demands against the estate of a deceased person. Six months after the grant of letters, the executor or administrator may, under the order of the surrogate, give notice by advertisement, requiring all persons, having claims against the deceased, to exhibit the same to the executor or administrator within six months from the day of the first publication of such notice. When the claim is presented, satisfactory vouchers may be demanded, and also the affidavit of the claimant, that the demand is justly due over and above all payments and offsets. If the justice of the claim be doubted, the matter in controversy may be referred to three referees, approved by the surrogate; or if the claim “be disputed or rejected, and the same shall not have been referred, the claimant shall, within six months after such dispute or rejection, if the debt or any part thereof be then due, or within six months after some part thereof shall have become due, commence a suit for the recovery thereof, or be forever barred from maintaining any action thereon.” (2 Rev. Stats., 88, 89, §§ 31-38.)
These provisions are judicious, and they afford ready and prompt means for the final adjustment of estates. The limitation of six months within which the creditor must bring his action at law, or be forever barred, relates only to the commencement of his suit, and is sufficiently long for all creditors who are in earnest, to determine whether or not they will resort to legal proceedings. Beyond that period the law does not permit their doubts or hesitancy to stand in the way of the distribution of the estate among other parties whose rights are unquestioned. It would certainly be hard to suspend all creditors, next of kin and legatees, from the enjoyment of their respective shares, because of some single claim, hanging like a cloud over the whole estate, and which the claimant was in no haste to submit to the decision of a legal tribunal.
On coming to apply the statute to the case now before me, I find the main difficulty to consist in determining whether the claim in question was “ disputed or rejected” within the meaning of the statute. It was presented to the executor in writing, on April 7,1855. Two days after, the executor replied that he could not receive it as a claim, but required “ satisfactory vouchers in support thereof,” and the claimant’s “ affidavit according to the statute.” A bill of items, amounting to $581.38, duly verified, was accordingly made out by Mr. Barsalou, and presented to the executor, who, on April 21, 1855, wrote to the claimant as follows:—“Your claim presented against the estate of William Wright, deceased, I must reject, on the ground that you took his affidavit for the amount of $100, and gave him credit for said amount, and no circumstance having since occurred which would justify us in questioning the correctness of the affidavit. I do not object to the $181.38.”
Are the words “must reject” contained in this communication, final and conclusive as a rejection of the claim ? The petitioner insists that they are not, and that they were not so intended ; and, to sustain the position, points to his own letter in reply, dated April 23,1855, wherein he says :—“ I duly received your letter of April 21, admitting my claim for $181.38, but
There does not appear at any time to have been a dispute of the items of Barsalou’s bill, which was for goods sold and delivered, but the controversy related solely to an alleged payment by Wright of $400, to a clerk of Barsalou, who absconded in 1851. Wright, in his lifetime, had made an affidavit of this payment, and this, the executor contended, had been accepted by Barsalou as proof of payment.
I have no opinion to express as to the merits of that question, but am only called upon to consider whether the demand was so rejected by the executor as to prevent the court from reaching and passing upon the merits. There can be no doubt that if the executor had rested upon the notice contained in the letter of April 21, 1855, as a positive rejection, and had refused to parley with the creditor on the subject, the language of the letter was sufficiently explicit to constitute a dispute or rejection of the demand. If that attitude had been taken at the outset, the creditor would have known where he stood, and have been bound to act hostilely. But when, with the rejection, a reason for it was given; when by the correspondence and conduct of the claimant the executor was apprised that the rejection was not esteemed as definitive, but only as deliberative; when the arguments were considered between the parties pro and con, and the facts were further investigated; when the executor, in his last letter upon the subject, alludes to thy alleged rejection in