Judges: Lusk
Filed Date: 5/23/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
This is an appeal by a claimant against an estate from a judgment for the defendant entered notwithstanding the verdict of the jury.
Charles H. Boydston died on July 18, 1948, and Anna Pearl Burkhalter was appointed executrix of his estate by the Circuit Court for Marion County on July 27,1948, and qualified. On September 4,1948, the claimant, Addie B. Senter, who is also the appellant, presented to the executrix an unverified statement of account reading as follows:
‘ ‘ September 4,1948
“Estate of Charles H. Boydston to Nancy E. Boydston dr in care of Addie B. Senter, 2460 Trade Street, to money loaned on house.
‘ ‘ Check No. 11 dated 2-18-47 600
‘ ‘ Check No. 18 dated 7-18-47 200
‘ ‘ Check No. 21 dated 4-20-48 80
“Total 880”
The parties agree that the foregoing claim, if such it can be called, was never acted upon. On September 5, 1948, Nancy E. Boydston died. Sometime in April, 1949, Addie B. Senter presented to the executrix of the estate of Charles H. Boydston, deceased, a claim verified under date of March 31,1949, and which, omitting the verification, reads as follows:
“PROOF OF CLAIM AGAINST THE ESTATE OF CHARLES H. BOYDSTON, DECEASED
“I, Addie B. Senter, being first duly sworn, depose and say that I loaned to Charles H. Boydston during his lifetime the sum of $880, which moneys he agreed to pay. That said loans are evidenced by bank checks on the Ladd and Bush, Salem Branch of the U. S. National Bank, endorsed by Charles H. Boydston. That said checks consist of a cheek in the amount of $600 dated February 18,1947, a check in the sum of $200 dated July 18,1947, and a check in the sum of $80 dated April 20, 1948, which cheeks will be produced upon demand, and I hereby verify that the amount claimed, to wit: the sum of $880 is justly due; that no payments have been made thereon; and that there is no just counterclaim to the same to the knowledge of the affiant.”
The claim having been rejected by the executrix, a summary hearing was had and the claim was similarly rejected by the court on March 8, 1950. The claimant thereupon demanded a plenary hearing in accordance with the procedure prescribed in Ch. 477, Oregon Laws, 1949. See Brown v. Irwin, 187 Or. 462, 212 P. 2d 729. In the meantime, on March 4,1950, Addie B. Senter had been appointed administratrix of her deceased mother’s estate by the Circuit Court for Marion County and letters of administration had been issued to her. The
On the trial the evidence of the claimant showed, that in 1947 and 1948 her mother, Nancy E. Boydston, who was then upwards of 90 years of age, had turned her money over to the claimant to be kept in the latter’s bank account. The only testimony regarding this arrangement was that of the claimant, who said that since her mother “couldn’t see to handle it or write checks it was just placed in my account in the bank só I could write the checks as she directed.” Pursuant to this arrangement the claimant, at the direction of her mother, drew checks in favor of Charles H. Boydston, her brother, for the respective amounts set forth in the claim. There was a dispute in the evidence as to whether the moneys thus received by Boydston were intended to be a gift to him, or a loan as the claimant contends. That dispute was settled by - the verdict of the jury and we are not concerned with it here.
The question for our consideration is whether the verdict should have been permitted to stand in view of the complete departure in the evidence from the averments of the claim. Addie B. Senter alleged that she had loaned money to Charles H. Boydston, deceased. She testified that her mother loaned the money and that she acted merely as her mother’s agent in disburs
Counsel for the claimant contends, first, that she was trustee of an express trust and as such could sue in her own name under the provisions of § 1-303, O.C.L.A., which reads as follows:
“An executor or administrator, or trustee of an express trust, or a person expressly authorized by statute, may sue without joining with him the person for whose benefit the action is prosecuted. A person with whom, or in whose name a contract is made for the benefit of another, is a trustee of an express trust within the meaning of this section.”
But the claimant, in writing the checks and delivered them to her brother, was no more than an agent for her mother. The contract was between her mother and Charles H. Boydston, and Addie B. Senter had no personal interest in the subject matter and could not, therefore, maintain an action as principal. Simon v. Trummer, 57 Or. 153, 158, 110 P. 786. See Annotation, 112 A.L.R. 1514. And if the contract sued on was made for the benefit of the mother, that fact should have been stated in the claim. Holladay v. Davis, 5 Or. 40, 43.
The principal contention of the claimant is that the judgment when satisfied will fully protect the executrix of the estate of Charles H. Boydston, deceased, against litigation on the same Claim, for the reason
When the claim was presented no administrator of the estate of Nancy E. Boydston, deceased, had been appointed, and there was no one in existence who was qualified to file a claim on behalf of her estate. If. however, at that time Addie B. Senter had been, as she became more than a year later, the administratrix of her mother’s estate, she could not have maintained an action in her own name to recover the moneys claimed to have been loaned to Charles H. Boydston, deceased. The general rule is that an executor or administrator must sue in his representative capacity, and not otherwise, on a cause of action which accrued in the lifetime of the decedent whom he represents, but, when the cause of action arises subsequent to the death of the decendent, the representative may sue in his individual capacity. 21 Am. Jur., Executors and Administrators, 876, § 898; Kane v. Paul, 39 U.S. 33, 10 L. ed. 341; Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Street, 234 Ala. 537, 176 So. 350; Kent v. Bothwell, 152 Mass. 341, 25 N.E. 721;
“The distinction is, that when an executor sues in respect of a cause of action which occurred in the lifetime of the deceased, he must declare in the detinet, that is, in his representative capacity only. But where the cause of action accrues after the death of the testator, if. the money recovered will be assets, the executor may declare in his representative character, or in his own name.”
While, so far as we have been able to discover, there are no decisions in this state which involve attempts of an executor or administrator to sue in his own name on causes of action arising before the death of the decedent, this court has in the following cases recognized the distinction pointed out by the Supreme Court of the United States and the other authorities above cited: Reed v. Hollister, 95 Or. 656, 662, 188 P. 170; Sears v. Daly, 43 Or. 346, 73 P. 5; Burrell v. Kern, 34 Or. 501, 503, 56 P. 809.
We are dealing here with a cause of action which arose before the death of Nancy E. Boydston. Addie B. Senter, the individual, had no standing to prosecute such a claim. Had Addie B. Senter been the administratrix at the time the claim was presented she would have been required, under the established rule, to sue in her representative, not her individual, capacity and to state facts in the claim which, if proved, would have entitled her to recover in such capacity. Had she proceeded in her individual and not in her representative capacity, but had presented a claim which showed a right of recovery in the estate of Nancy E. Boydston, deceased, the contention of claimant's counsel that the absence of a proper party is a matter of no concern to the executrix of the estate of Charles H. Boydston, de
In our opinion the Circuit Court was right in granting the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.