Citation Numbers: 23 N.W.2d 620, 249 Wis. 9
Judges: Fowler
Filed Date: 5/20/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Claim of Wilfred Kueschel and another for recovery on a guardian's bond. From a judgment entered December 4, 1945, dismissing the claim the claimants appeal. (Estate ofBocher.) Action by C. B. DILLETT, as county judge, against J. L. Rollmann for recovery on a guardian's bond. From a judgment entered January 12, 1946, the defendant appeals.
Upon stipulation of counsel this case was argued in connection with the case of Estate of Bocher, and considered and decided therewith. The facts which are applicable to both cases are stated in the opinion. *Page 11 There is before us an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Shawano county dismissing a proceeding against the estate of Herman Bocher, deceased, a bondsman of a guardian of minors, to recover on a judgment rendered against the guardian in proceedings to settle her account as guardian. J. L. Rollmann was on the bond with Bocher as security. A separate case was brought against him in the circuit court to recover on the judgment against the guardian, and recovery was allowed against him. He appealed from that judgment. It was stipulated on the argument of the Bocher case that the Rollmann case be submitted for decision with that against the estate of Bocher.
Two questions were raised in the Bocher case: (1) Was the claim against the estate barred by the four-year limitation provision of sec.
The county court decided that sec.
In Paine v. Jones (1896),
The appellants claim that a proviso in sec.
Sec.
"No action shall be maintained against the sureties on any bond given by a guardian . . . unless it be commenced within four years from the time when he was discharged; provided, that in case an accounting is had, the time within which said action may be commenced shall not terminate until one year after the final determination of such accounting proceedings."
The section was before the court for construction in Rew v.Marshek,
That the words "that time" in the above quotation refer to four years after the time the ward becomes twenty-one years of age is shown by the paragraph next succeeding the one from which the above quotation is taken, where it is said: "It appearing that this [Rew v. Marshek] action was not begun until more than four years after the ward arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and that no accounting proceeding was then pending, the action is barred by the statute." *Page 13
The appellant minors became twenty-one years of age on October 14, 1937, and June 17, 1940, respectively, and twenty-five years of age on October 14, 1941, and June 17, 1944. Rollmann began an accounting proceeding against the guardian on May 31, 1941, and the minors joined in that proceeding on June 10, 1941. Thus there was an accounting proceeding pending when the wards became twenty-five years of age and the one-year extension of sec.
It thus appears that the filing of the contingent claim and the commencement of the circuit court action were timely under sec.
"Every claim against a decedent, proper to be filed in probate proceedings in county court, which shall not, after notice given as required by sections 313.03 and 313.04, be filed within the time limited for that purpose, shall forever be barred."
In the Bocher estate an order was entered fixing the time limited for filing claims at February 14, 1938. That time was never extended under the provisions of sec. 313.03 or 313.04, Stats., and the claim was filed more than two years after the time limited by sec. 313.03 for extension. Thus the claim was barred by the terms of the statute, if a contingent claim must be filed within the time fixed for the filing of claims which are absolute.
By Stats. 1931 special provisions existed for the filing and allowance of contingent claims in secs. 313.22, 313.23, 313.24, *Page 14 and 313.25. Sec. 313.24 provided that if a claim became absolute after the time limited for a creditor to present his claim, it might be presented and proved within one year after it should accrue and become absolute. By ch. 190, Laws of 1933, sec. 313.24 was repealed and secs. 313.22, 313.23, and 313.25 were amended and stand in the present statutes as follows:
"Sec. 313.22 Contingent claims. Contingent claims against a decedent's estate which cannot be allowed as debts shall, nevertheless, be presented to the court and proved, and they shall be embraced in a statement like that provided in section 313.06. The court may order the executor or administrator to retain in his hands sufficient estate to pay contingent claims when the same become absolute; or if the estate is insolvent, sufficient to pay a percentage thereof equal to the dividends of the other creditors.
"Sec. 313.23 Contingent claims; when allowed, how paid. When a contingent claim, which was duly presented, shall become absolute it may be allowed, upon due proof made within one year after it becomes absolute, in the same manner as other claims. If such contingent claim shall be allowed the creditor shall be entitled to receive payment thereon to the same extent as other creditors.
"Sec. 313.25 Liability of heirs and legatees forclaims. When a contingent claim shall have become absolute and been allowed, and the executor or administrator shall not have sufficient assets to pay such claim, the creditor may recover such part of his claim as the executors or administrators has not assets to pay from the heirs, devisees or legatees who have received property from the estate that was liable for the payment of the debts of the decedent."
It will be noted that by sec. 313.22, Stats., contingent claims must be presented to the county court. No special provision being made for the time of filing them, the implication is that they must be filed by the time that other claims are filed; and the provision of sec. 313.23 that having been "duly presented" they may be proved and allowed implies that they must be filed within the time that other claims must be filed; and the provision of sec. 313.23 that a contingent claim *Page 15 "duly presented" can be allowed within one year after it becomes absolute implies that it cannot be allowed if not filed within the time that other claims must be filed.
Suggestion is made by appellants' counsel that ch. 190, Laws of 1933, was a revisor's bill and that the revisor of statutes has no power to change the meaning of revised laws, hence the provisions of the statutes of 1931 remain in force. Ch. 190 was not an ordinary revisor's bill. It was a revision made by the committee on rules of pleading, practice, and procedure created by sec. 251.18, Stats., and professedly contains changes of substantive law as well as mere rules of procedure. The legislature is therefore presumed to have intentionally made whatever changes relating to contingent claims under the nonclaim statute as ch. 190 purports to make, and the enacted provisions must be applied according to that intent.
The appellants claim that if the construction of sec.
". . . the constitution of the United States, to which appeal is made in this case, gives to minors no special rights beyond others, and it was within the legislative competency of the state of Louisiana to make exceptions in their favor or not. The exemptions from the operation of the statute of limitation usually accorded to infants and married women do not rest upon any general doctrine of the law that they cannot be subjected to their action, but in every instance upon express language in those statutes giving them time after majority, or after cessation of coverture, to assert their rights. . . ."
Our general statute, sec. 330.33 (1), Stats., makes no such exception as to claims against estates. It applies only to actions in courts of general jurisdiction, as distinguished from probate courts, and the nonclaim statute does not cover such actions. No exception is made as to minors in the nonclaim statute. Therefore they are bound by that statute. It was so held under the nonclaim statute of Iowa in Boyle v. Boyle,
The judgment against the guardian which forms the basis both the instant actions was for $3,296.91. The penalty of the guardian's bond was $2,500. The judgment in the Rollmann case was for the amount of the penalty, plus interest on that amount, less certain offsets. The beneficiaries of the bond in the Rollmann case filed a motion to review the court's allowance of interest on the amount of the penalty of the bond only from the time the judgment against the guardian was finally determined, and contend that they should have been allowed interest from the time they became of age when the amount of the guardian's obligation to them became due. Cases are cited in the brief of plaintiff in the Rollmann case in which interest was allowed in addition to the penalty of the *Page 17
bond. In Lyon v. Clark (1853),
Counsel for defendant concedes that but for the language of sec.
The plaintiff's claim being unliquidated the plaintiff would ordinarily be entitled to recovery of interest from the time demand for payment was made or from the time of the commencement of the action if demand therefor was not made prior thereto. Thoma v. Class Mineral Fume Health BathCo.
As to sec.
By the Court. — A judgment of affirmance will be entered in each case and the cause remanded to the proper court. No costs will be allowed to either party in either case. Each appellant will pay the costs of the clerk of this court in the case in which he appealed. *Page 19
Rohrig v. Whitney , 234 Iowa 435 ( 1944 )
Vance v. Vance , 2 S. Ct. 854 ( 1883 )
Rew v. Marshek , 240 Wis. 273 ( 1942 )
Thoma v. Class Mineral Fume Health Bath Co. , 244 Wis. 347 ( 1943 )
Amanda Acquisition Corp. v. Universal Foods Corp. , 708 F. Supp. 984 ( 1989 )
McGeoch Building Co. v. Dick & Reuteman Co. , 253 Wis. 166 ( 1948 )
Bennett v. Breuil Petroleum Corp. , 99 A.2d 236 ( 1953 )
Reget v. Paige , 242 Wis. 2d 278 ( 2001 )
Davies v. Meisenheimer , 254 Wis. 419 ( 1949 )
Sherwood v. Merchants Mutual Bonding Co. , 193 Neb. 262 ( 1975 )
Bruns v. Rennebohm Drug Stores, Inc. , 151 Wis. 2d 88 ( 1989 )
Gord v. Iowana Farms Milk Co. , 60 N.W.2d 820 ( 1953 )
Neimark v. Mel Kramer Sales, Inc. , 102 Wis. 2d 282 ( 1981 )