Cornell University Law Library The Moak Collection PURCHASED FOR The School of Law of Cornell University And Presented February 14, 1893 IN nEHORY OF JUDGE DOUGLASS BOARDMAN FIRST DEAN OF THE SCHOOL By his Wife and Daughter A. M. BOARDMAN and ELLEN D. WILLIAMS Cornell University Library KD 1528.E21 Principles of the administration of asse 3 1924 021 859 230 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tlie Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924021859230 PRINCIPLES ADMINISTRATION OF ASSETS PAYMENT OF DEBTS. BY ARTHUE SHELLY EDDIS, V OF LINCOLN'S INN, ONE OF HER MAjSt?S COUNSEL. LONDON : STEVENS AND SONS, 119, CHANCERY LANE, 1880. PREPACE. The following pages are, with various alterations and additions, the substance of one of the Courses of Lectures which, as Professor of Equity to the Covincil of Legal Education, I delivered to Equity Students in the year 1876. I have materially changed their form, partly because I wished to include later decisions, but chiefly because it appeared to me, that much, which would be necessary to make an oral lecture intel- ligible, might with propriety be curtailed or modified in a treatise intended to be read. The frequent requests which have been made to me to publish some of my lectures lead me to hope, that this short Manual may assist students in acquhing the elementary principles of one important head of Equity Jurisprudence. 19, Old Square, Lincoln's Inn, November, 1880. a 2 CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Administration of Assets — Origin of the Jurisdiction^ — Now assigned to the Chancery Division — Assets : Personal, Real, Legal, Equitable — Form of Judgment in Creditor's Action for Administration of Personal Estate — Effect of Judgment on Powers of Personal Representative. CHAPTER II. Funeral and Testamentary Expenses — Debts : what Provable — Order of Priority — Crown Debts — Debts under Par- ticular Statutes — Judgment Debts — Decrees and Orders of Courts of Equity — Judgments obtained against Personal Representatives — Results arising from Decrees operating as Judgments — Statutes and Recognizances — Specialty Debts : how Created — Liability to Contribute under Companies Act, 1862 — Debt for Airears of Rent — • Simple Contract Debts — Voluntary Bonds or Covenants — Voluntary Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes — Assignee for value of Voluntary Instrument — The 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46 : its application to Crown Debts — Does not include Judgment Creditors — Applies to Contribu- tories under Companies Act, 1862 ; to Arrears of Rent — Interest on Debts — Effect of Foreign Domicil — Cook v. Gregson — Right of Retainer. VI CONTENTS. CHAPTER III. Unsecured and Secured Creditors — Judgment Creditors — Writ of Fi. Fa. — Garnishee Order — Charging Order — Charge by Judgment Creditor upon Real Estate — Writ of Elegit — 27 & 28 Vict. c. 112 — Delivery in Execution, what it is — Hatton v. Haywood — Beckett v. Buckley — Wells V. Kilpin— Anglo- Italian Bank v. Bavies— Fx parte Evans — ^Action by Specific Incumbrancer for General Administration. CHAPTER IV. Who may bring the Action — Volunteer — ^Assignees of Debt — Creditor in respect of Partnership Debts — Reason of his Right to come against the Estate of Deceased Partner — Beresford v. Browning — Kendall t. Hamilton — Re- spective Rights of Joint and Separate Creditors under Administration Judg-ment — Form of such Judgment — Who are necessary Parties to the Action — Actions by Ofiicial Liquidators. CHAPTER V. Personal Representative necessary Party — Account against him for Wilful Neglect and Default — Ground of such Account — Bill of Review to make case of Wilful Neglect and Default — Procedure since Judicature Act — Other Special Forms of Relief against Personal Representatives — Cases in which Personal Representative not necessary Party — Question whether he is necessary Party when Estate has been Administered out of Court. CHAPTER VI. Administration of Real Estate — Successive steps by which Real Estate became applicable for Payment of Debts — CONTENTS. Vll Action by Creditor by Specialty binding the Heirs — Effect of the Statute of Wills — Alienation by the Heir — Statute of Fraudulent Devises — 47 Geo. III. c. 74 — 11 Geo. IV. & 1 "Wm. IV. c. 47—3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 104— How far Alienation by Heir or Devisee valid — What constituted Alienation — 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46 — Trusts or Charges for Payment of Debts — What constitutes a Charge of Debts — Where Implied Power of Sale or Mortgage— 22 & 23 Vict. c. 35— Whether Debts charge- able on Rents and Profits or on Corpus — Where Interest kept down by Tenant for Life. CHAPTER VII. Form of Judgment or Order for Administration of Real Estate — When Debtor died Intestate — Class Enquiries — Actions on behalf of Self and all other Creditors — More complicated Form of Judgment — Order for Ad- ministration of the different Assets— General Personal Estate — Effect of Lapse — Real Estate Devised in Trust to Pay Debts — Real Estate Descended — Real and Per- sonal Estate charged with Debts — Effect of Lapse — Pecuniary Legacies — Residuary Real Estate — Conflict of Decisions — Specific Devises and Bequests — Real and Personal Estate appointed — Application of Mesne Rents and Profits. CHAPTER VIII. Marshalling of Assets — Principle of Rule — Essential Requi- sites — Exception to Rule in case of Charity — Contribu- tion—Locke King's Act— 30 & 31 Vict. c. 69—40 & 41 Vict. c. 34. CHAPTER IX. Effect on Administration of Assets of Judicature Acts — 10th Sect, of Judicature Act, 1875 : to what it applies — As vm (JONTENTS. to Rights of Secured Creditors — Who are Secured — Rule of Mason v. Bogg — Rules of Bankruptcy — Ques- tions as to Proper Construction of the 10th Sect. — Debts and Liabilities Provable — Valuation of Annuities and Future and Contingent Liabilities — Effect of the 10th Sect, on Administration of Estate of Deceased Partner : its effect on Computation of Interest. CHAPTER X. Statutes of Limitations — Points Common to All — Distinction between Statutes barring Debt and barring Remedy — How far binding in Courts of Equity — 21 James I. c. 16 : results of it — Cause of Action, what — Effect of Fraud — New Promise to Pay — Admission of Debt — Payment of Interest — How far Right kept alive against Realty by Promise of Personal Representative — ^Whether Rule of Marshalling Applies. CHAPTER XL 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 42 — Nature of Acknowledgment — Who are the Persons Liable — Roddam v. Morley — Dickenson V. Teesdale—S & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, and 37 & 38 Vict. 0. 57 — Extinguishment of the Debt — Express Trusts — Sterndale v. Hankmson — Effect of 10th Section of Judicature Act, 1875. CHAPTER XII. Chief Clerk's Certificate — Order upon Hearing on further Consideration — Rights of Creditors thereunder — Costs of Administration Action in Solvent and Insolvent Estates. TABLE OE CASES. Adey t;. Arnold Albion Steel and "Wire Co., In re Aldrich v. Cooper Ambler v. Lindsay ... Anglo-Italian Bank ii. Davies Armstrong v. Storer ... Ashley ?;. Ashley Aston !). TroUope Atkinson v. Grey Attorney-General i: Brunning PAGE 19 110 89 50 38 103 149 125 19 33 150 . Carlton Bagot V. Legge Bain 1). Saddler ... ... 7, 30 Baine, Ex parte ... ... 65 Barber ti. MaokreU 53 Bailey v. Bailey 70 Barnwell v, Iremonger 84, 94, 150 Bates, Ex parte 117 Beaumont «. Oliveira ... 91 Beckett D. Buckley 37 Beckford «. Wade 120 Beiesford i;. Browning ... 44 Berrington D. Evans .. . ... 142 Berrow «. Morris ... ... 53 Berry i;. Gibbons 10 J). Hebblethwaite ... 76 Bethell u Green 84 Biederman v. Seymour ... 81 Blair !). Bromley 126 Blakemore, Ex parte ... 114 Blann K.Bell 81 Blount 2>. Hipkins 80 Bolding t>. Lane 130 Bothamley v. Shersou . . 91 Brett, Ex parte 107 Bridgwater Engineering Co., Ke 110 Investment Briggs V. Wilson British Mutual Co. V. Smart Brown, Ex parte V. Lake Browne v. Groombridge Brownson v. Lawrauce Buck V. Eobson Burdick v. Garrick . . . Burrowes v. Gore PAGE 125 Carter v. Sanders Cattail V. Simons Chad wick v. Holt . Chasemore v. Turner Cheat V. Yeats Christian v. Foster . Christy v. Courtenay Clark V. Clark Clegg V. Rowland Clifford V. Lewis Clough V. French Coal Consumers' Association, .. 113 56, 148 .. 78 .. 95 .. 18 .. 127 .. 140 65 56 15 128 78 150 6 84 54 69 19 In re Collins V, Lewis Cook V. Dawson V. Gregson Coombs V. Coombs Coope V. Cresswell 109, 110 ... 85 69, 70 ... 6, 28 ... 124 3, 65, 66, 129, 136 Cord well's Estate, In re ... 123 Courtenay v. Williams 123, 128 Cox V. Barnard ... ... 23 Cracknell v. Janson io7 Crosse v. General Eeversionary and Investment Co. ... 76 Bady v. Hartridge 84 X TABLE OB" CASES. Davies v. Nioolson 9 J). Topp ... 81,87,90 Davis's Trusts, In re 86 Dawkins «. Lord Penrhyn ... 122 Dawson v. Kearton ... ... 22 De la Vega v. Vianna ... 29 Devaynes v. Noble ... ... 43 Dewdney, Ex parte ... ... 144 Dickenson v. Teasdale 137, 140 Dinning v. Henderson ... 64 Dolphin i). Aylward .. . ... 89 Dowdeswell v. Dowdeswell ... 50 Downe, Viscount, v. Morris ... 63 Driver v. Ferrand ... ... 80 Dugdale v. Dugdale ... ... 85 Ecclesiastical Commissioners v. North Eastern Ey. Co. . . . Eddels V. Johnson Emanuel v. Bridger Eno V. Tatham European Assurance Society v. Eadcliffe Evans 7>. Brown Ex parte Parley v. Briant Earquharson v. Floyer Fenton v. Wells Fielding v. Preston . . . Fleming v. Buchanan Fletcher v. Fletcher . . . Foley «. Hill Fordham v. Wallis . . . Foster v. Cook V. Haudley Fowler v. Roberts Fry V. Lowndes Fryer v. Eoyle Fuller V. Eedman 126 84 33 94 17 63 39 60 86 81 ... 86 ... 20 ... 122 130, 131 ... 90 ... 64 ... 33 ... 20 ... 78 ... 129 Gale u Fenwiok ... ... 97 Garner v. Moore ... ... 10 Garrard v. Lord Dinorben ... 21 Geller, Ex parte 104 Gibbins i>. Eyden 84 Gowan v. Broughton ... ... 81 Gray v. Chiswell ... ... 46 Great Eollinjr Stock Co., Ex parte ... ... ... 144 Greenway v. Bromfield ... 144 Greig v. Somerville ... ... 56 Hall, Ex parte 32 ,PAGE Haly W.Barry 33 Hamer v. Giles ... ... 33 Hamer's Devisees Case ... 63 Hamilton v. Dallas 29 Hancock ii. Podmore ... 12 Handford a Storie ... ... 142 Hankin v. Turner ... ... 3 Hanson t!. Stubbs 16,25 Harding «). Harding ... ... 95 Harmood 1). Oglander ... 81 Harris n. Quine ... ... 122 V. Watkins 70 Harloe 13. Harloe ... ... 160 Hatton -y. Hay wood .. . ... 36 Henley and Company, In re 13 Henry «. Smith 139 Hensman v. Fryer ... ... 84 Hepworth 1-. Heslop 76 V. Hall 93 Hicks V. May 56 Hillu. Walker 123 V. Wormsley ... ... 93 Hills u.McRae 47 Hobson V. Blackburn ... 91 Hodson V. Ball 52 Holliday v. Atkinson ... 22 Holmes a Coghill .-.. ... 86 Hood J). Hood 94 Home «. Shepherd ... ... 14 Hovenden v. Lord Annesley 122 Hunting v. Sheldrake ... 60 Hunter u Nockolds ... ... 144 V. Young 55 Imperial Gas Co. v. London Gas Co ■... 126 Ingle K. Richards 124 Irby s;. Irby 17 Irvin II. Ironmonger .. . ... 82 Iven V. Elwes 18 Jackson r. Pease Jenney v. Andrews . Jervis v. Wolf erstan . Job ('. Job Johnson, Ex pai-te . Jones V. Caless Joselyne, Ex parte . Keeue v. Riley Kellook's Case Kendall v. Hamilton. Kinderley v. Jervis . . 86, 150 ... 86 55, 117 ... 10 ... 106 ... 81 ... 33 .. 61 .. 103 . 44, 4.1 .64, 65 TABLE OF CASES. XI King, Ex parte Knott, In re . . , Knox V. Gye . . . Laming v. Gee Lancefield v. Iggulden Lee V. Nuttall Leonino v. Leonine . . . Lewis V. Lewis Lloyd V, Chune Lodge V. Pritchard . . . Lomas v. "Wright Lowe V. Blakemore . . . Lowis V. Eumney Mackinlay, In re Manning v. Spooner .. Mansfield, Earl of, v. Ogle Marshall v. Crowther Mason v. Bogg Mayer v, Murray Melbourn, Ex parte . . . Melhuish i>. Milton . . . Metcalfe v. Hutchinson Meyerhoff v. Froelioh Miles V. Harrison Milnes v, Dawson Mirehouse v. Scaif e . . . Mitchelson v. Piper . . . Moodie v. Bannister . . . Moors V. Marriott Morris' Estate, In re Morton, Ex parte Morse v. Tucker Murray v. East India Go. Mutlow V. Mutlow . . . Naden, Ex parte Neal, Ex parte Newman, In re Newman v. Wilson Newmarch v. Storr Onslow's Trusts, In re Owens V. Dickinson . . . Palethorpe, In re Parker v. Ringham . . . Partington v. Reynolds Patch v. Shore PAGE 106 110 122 53 .'.'.'84,85 1 30 109 94 93 23 46 20 33 123 76 81 15 73 102 52 29 3 73 128 150 22 83 "l7 125 125, 127, 129 135 14 30 65 60 127 7 ... 116 114, 116 ... 113 ... 95 34 7 PAGE Paterson v. Scott ... ... 90 Payne v. Mortimer ... ... 24 Peacock v. Peacock ... ... 82 Pearmain «. Twisa ... ... 84 Pears 2). Laing ... ... 137 Penny -u. Penny .., ... 150 Philips 0. Beal 125 V. Parry ... ... 81 Pickford 1'. Brown ... ... 150 Pimm v. InsaU ... ... 65 Ponsford r. Hartley ... ... 78 Pottinger, Ex parte ... ... Ill Potts 21. Smith 116 Po wis D. Corbet ... ,. 81 Price (I. Price... ... ... 94 Printingand Numerical Regis- tering Co., In re ... 101, 109 Putnam i;. Bates 130 106 16 51 20 Richards and Co., In re Richardson v. Horton V. Richardson Richmond v. White . . . Ripley v. Moysey River Steamer Co., In re Robinson v. Lowater Roddam v. Morley ... Rossiter v. Rossiter . . . Rotheram v. Rotheram Round "v. Bell... Row V. Row ... Rowsell V. Morris Ryves v. Ryves Sackville v. Smythe ... Sandars v. Millar Saxe, Ex parte Schomberg v. Humfrey Scott V. Cumberland . . . V, Jones Sewell V, Moxsy Shallcross v. Finden ... Sharp V. Lush Shaw V. Borrer Shewen v. Vanderhorst ShirrefE v. Hastings ... Silk ■('. Prime ... Sill V. Warwick Skey V. Bennett Slater x. Binder Smith V. Clay... V. Morgan Solomon v. Solomon ... South Sea Co. f. Wymondsell 109 64 151 30 150 128 70 135 97 84 144 150 50 82 95 150 116 87 ,82 80 41 69 12 70 125 26 68 27 78 32 122 112 93 126 81 xn TABLE OP CASEH. PAGE Spackman (.'. Timbrell ... 64 Stanhope Silkatone Collieries Co., In re 33 Stead V. Hardaker ... ... 82 SterndaleD.Hankinsnn 141, 143,144 Stockton Iron Furnace Co., In re 110 St. John, Lord, I'.Broughlou... 142 Story«. Fry ... ... ... 127 Stratford v. Ritson ... ... 87 Strickland D. Strickland ... 81 Stringer u Harper ... ... 150 Stronge v. Hawkes ... ... 87 Summers, In re ... ... 118 Talbot V. Frere Tanner v. Smart Taylor, In re . . . ■ V. Taylor Thomas v. Griffiths . . V. Jones Thompson v. Bennett Tippets V. Heane Todd ?;. Bielby Tombs V. Eoch Tomkins v. Colthurst Trestrail v. Mason . . Trethewy v. Helyar ... Trotter i). Maclean . . , 30 128 109 52, 55, 117 13, 54 ... 161 7 ... 129 ... 116 86,89 ... 86 ... 94 ... 81 ... 126 Tuckley v. Thompson Turquand v. Kirby . . . Vincent v. G-odson . . . PAGE 103 49 19 Walker v. Hardwick ... 80 Ward «. Shakeshaf t . . . ... 15 Warren v. Davies ... ... 70 Watson V. Birch... 139, 142 ■!). Parker ... 21,41 Webb V. De Beauvoisin ... 78 WeUs «>. Kilpin ... 37,38 West of England Bank 109, 113 Westbourne Grove Drapery Co. 114 Wickenden v. Rayson ... 75 Widgery t!. Tepper ... 14,34 Williams j;. Chitty 82 Ex parte 32 V. Williams 15, 16, 25 Williamson v. Codrington ... 20 Wilson V. Kimbley ... ... 60 V, Lady Dunsany 16, 28 Wood ». Ordish ..." ... 82 Woodgate r. Field 8 Woolstencroft v. Woolstencroft 94 Worraker v. Fryer ... ... 78 Wride V. Clark 82 Wrigley v. Sykes 70 TABLE OF STATUTES. 13 Edw. 1, c. 18 32 Hen. 8, c. 1 21 Jao. 1, c. 16 29 Car. 2, c. 3, s. 12 . 3 Wm. & Mary, u. 14 14 G-eo. 2, u. 20, s. 9 17 Geo. 2, u. 38, s. 3... 47 Geo. 3, u. 74 9 Geo. 4, o. 14, s. 1 11 Geo. 4&lWm. 4,0." 47 3 & 4 Wm. 4, u. 27 PAGE 34, 58 ... 58 119, 121, 123 59 6 14 61 128 61 119, 121, 122, 138 s. 25 ... 140 s. 34 ... 138 s. 40 138, 142 s. 42 ... 144 3 & 4 Wm. 4, c. 42 119 121, 134 3 & 4 Wm. 4, c 104 ... 61 4 & 5 Wm. 4, c. 40, s. 12 ... 14 1 Vict. c. 26, s. 6 6 s. 24 ... ... 83 S.27 ... ... 87 1 & 2 Vict. 0. 110, s. 11 ... 35 s. 13 35, 39 s. 14 ... 33 s. 15 ... 33 s. 18 ... 14 3 & 4 Vict. c. 82, s. 1 ... 33 12 & 13 Vict. i;. 106... ... 115 PAGE 17 & 18 Vict.. ;. 113 (Locke King's Act).. 92 19 & 20 Vict, e 97 128, 138 20 & 21 Vict. >; 77 2 22 & 23 Vict, u 35 54,"71 ,72 23 & 24 Vict u 145 51 25 & 26 Vict. . 89 (Compa- nies Act, 1862) 18,25 , 48 26 & 27 Vict. u. 57 14 27 & 28 Vict, u 112 35 30 & 31 Vict. c. 69 94 32 & 33 Vict. u. 46 "24 ,67 32 & 33 Vict. c. 71 (Bankruptcy Act, 1869) a. 12 106 K. 16 "39, 100 ». 31 113, 115 tS. 32 109 s. 40 103 s. 78 115 36 & 37 Vict. c. 66 (Judicature Act, 1873) 4, 38 s. 2.5, sub-s. 2 141 s. 25, sub-s. 6 41 37 & 38 Vict. 0. 57 ...119, 138, 140 38 & 39 Vict. c. 60, s. 15, sub-s. 7 14 38 & 39 Vict. c. 77 (Judicature Act, 1875), s. 10 ... 98,118, 144 40 & 41 Vict. c. 34 97 PRINCIPLES ADMINISTRATION OF ASSETS. CHAPTER I. ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. I PROPOSE to deal with some of the elementary prin- ciples of that head of Equity Jurisprudence, which relates to the administration of the estates of deceased persons (commonly called the Administration of Assets) in payment of debts. It is a subject which cannot fail to be of interest and importance to a student of Equity For not only has it until recently been under the exclusive juris- diction of the Court of Chancery, but it represents the origin, the progress, and the nearly completed termination of a successful struggle between equitable principles and the principles and procedure of the Com- mon Law. It is also at the present moment of great practical utility, for we are still in a period of transi- tion from an old to a new order of things, and it is B 2 ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. impossible to act with safety, unless we are acquainted with the leading features of its past history and its present aspect. The jurisdiction over the administration of the personal estates of deceased persons was, to a certain extent, vested from very early times in the Ecclesias- tical Courts, and continued nominally to belong to them until their authority was formally abolished by the 20 & 21 Vict. c. 77. And for a long time the administration of the real estates of deceased persons remained under the control of the Common Law. But neither the Ecclesiastical nor the Common Law Courts possessed the machinery requisite for the purpose of administration. For that purpose it was necessary that the property should be got in and realized, that the debts and liabilities should be ascertained and paid, and that the residuary estate, whether real or personal, should be distributed amongst or conveyed to the respective parties bene- ficially entitled. It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that a Court, which could alone compel discovery, examine properly into accounts, and readily enforce its decrees, should have early become the favoimte tribunal for the performance of functions, which the other Courts had proved themselves incompetent to discharge. We accordingly find suits for administra- tion by creditors in the Calendars, as far back as the reign of Edward the Sixth ; and it is expressly stated, that in tlie reign of Queen Elizabeth the right ORIGIN OF JURISDICTION. 3 of a creditor to aue in Chancery was considered as settled. 1 Now, when the Court of Chancery assumed this jurisdiction it never professed to interfere with the appointment of the personal representative, which was allowed to remain the exclusive prerogative of the Ecclesiastical Courts. ^ But when, after probate (in cases of testacy) bad been obtained to a will of personal estate, or letters of administration (in cases of intestacy) had been granted. Equity proceeded to the task of administration, she found certain rules, especially with reference to the payment of debts, already established ; rules, which though they bore traces of a different origin, and were diametrically opposed to her own principles, she was compelled to leave imtouched. She could scarcely indeed have otherwise maintained her ground. For although the particular creditor who applied to Chancery for the payment of his debt submitted to its jurisdiction, the decree generally involved an account and payment of all the debts, and the other creditors were thus obliged to come in and establish their respective claims. It would have been scarcely possible for a Court of Equity, while thus compelling creditors to transfer the adjudication of their debts to its ovpn tribunal, to have deprived them of any advantage to ,1 See Spence's Eq. Jurisd., vol. i. 580. 2 As it still remains practically the prerogative of the Probate Division. Hankin v. Turner, 10 Ch. D. 372, and see Meluish v. Milton, 3 Ch. D. 27. B 2 4 ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. which they would have been entitled, had they been left to pursue their original remedies. To some extent therefore Equity submitted to follow the Com- mon Law ; but where she was free to act for herself, we shall find that she treated the administration of an estate as the exercise of a trust, and carried out to the very utmost her own distinctive principles. I propose to confine myself for the present to one class of administration, viz., to suits, or (as they are now more properly called) actions by creditors for the payment of their debts out of a testator's or intestate's assets. They are by the Judicature Act, 1873, assigned to the Chancery Division of the High Court. First, what is meant by the term " Assets ?" The debts due from a deceased person were always payable at Common Law out of his personal estate. But that estate (including chattels real) vested in the personal representative when constituted, and he was held liable to a,n action by any creditor who required payment of his debt. The creditor's right, however, was limited to such property of the debtor as had come or could come into the hands of the personal representative ; in other words, the executor or administrator was only chargeable personally so far as he had estate of the debtor sufiicient to meet the claim. The personal property so sufficient was called "Assets," from "Assez" or more technically aasetsentre main, and sometimes " personal assets." And any person who contracted a debt had also ASSETS — PERSONAL — REAL. 5 from very early times the power of making his heir chargeable with its payment to the extent of the lands descended to him, and the expression "real assets," or "assets by descent," denoted the real pro- perty which, in the hands of the heir, was sufficient to make him so chargeable. It is very important to observe (for much of the subsequent history and practice of administration will be found to depend upon it) that the primary meaning of " assets " was not that so much property was applicable for the payment of the debts, but that the personal representative, as to the personal estate, and the heir, as to the descended real estate, were respectively held personally hable for the debts at the suit of the creditors, the amount of the personalty vested in the one, and the value of the realty descended to the other, being the measure of their respective liabihties in the action. From this primary meaning the word " assets" came to be applied to all property of a deceased person available for the payment of his debts, and now extends to the whole of his real and personal estates. Assets were subdivided into two great classes, Legal Assets and Equitable Assets. The former term was applied to all that property to which the personal representative became entitled virtute officii, and for which he would be answerable in an action at Com- mon Law brought by a creditor against him. The real test, therefore, for ascertaining what ought or ought not to be called legal assets, was whether 6 ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. the personal representative, as such, was or was not capable of recovering them. It mattered nothing, whether the interest in them was of itself of a legal or equitable nature. Thus, if a testator had mortgaged by way of assign- ment a leasehold property, and had died possessed only of the equity of redemption, that equity of redemption would clearly be equitable in its nature, for it is a mere creation of equity ; but it would be legal assets, for the personal representative is the only person who had the right to redeem the mort- gage, although for that purpose he would have been compelled to go into a Court of Equity.^ So where a testator had before his death contracted to sell land, but had died before he had executed the conveyance, or been paid the purchase money, the right to the purchase money was equitable, but the executor was the only person entitled to receive it, and it was therefore held to be legal assets.^ Such also were some estates pur auter vie, for though of the nature of freehold they were by various statutes' directed in certain cases to be distributed by the personal representatives in the same manner as personal estate. Now, this character of legal assets Courts of Equity always recognized, and accordingly treated as such ^ Cook Y. Oregson, 3 Dr. 547, 549 ; Christy v. Gourtenay, 26 Beav. 140. 2 Attm-ney- General v. Brunning, 8 Ho. Lds. Ca. 258, 264. * 29 Car. II. c. 3, s. 12 ; 14 Geo. II. c. 20, s. 9 (now repealed); and 1 Vict. c. 26, s. 6. ASSETS — LEGAL EQUITABLE. 7 all personal estate, which the executor or adminis- trator could alone recover, and administered it for the payment of debts in a certain order of priority, of which we shall speak hereafter. Equitable assets, on the other hand, were those which could only be made available for the payment of debts, through the operation of a decree or order of a Court of Equity ; e.g., a trust estate created for the payment of debts, or an estate equitably charged with their payment,^ or the separate estate, whether real or personal, of a married woman,^ or in recent times her separate interest in the earnings of a trade or profession under the Married Woman's Property Act, 1870.^ Equitable assets were always treated as a trust fund, and were upon the principle of equality being equity divided pari passu amongst the creditors for value, without any regard to the order of priority, which obtained in the case of legal assets. Mr. Spence mentions a case of Wolstencroft v. Long in the 15th year of Car. II., in which the practice of dividing the property amongst the creditors pari passu is spoken of as the then constant rule of the Court of Chancery. Besides these legal and equitable assets strictly so called, we shall find that there were certain species 1 Mutlow V. Mutlow, 4 De G. & J. 539 ; Bain v. Sadler, 1 2 Eq. 570. ■^ Oweiis V. Dickenson, Cr. & Ph. 48. ■* Tliompson v. Bennett, 6 Cli. D. 739. 8 ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. of property, which by various statutes were required to be administered exclusively in Courts of Equity, but to be administered there, in a certain order of priority, very nearly resembling that of legal assets. Such then being in outline the different kinds of assets, let us next consider how they wer^ respectively administered in payment of the debts of a testator or intestate. I will first suppose a testator to have died before the year 1870 possessed of personal property sufiicient to pay his debts, and an action for administration of his personal estate to be brought in the Chancery Division of the High Court by a creditor. In such an action the creditor would be plaintiff, and the per- sonal representative, as the person in whom the whole personal estate was vested, would be the only neces- sary defendant. The creditor, if he confined his relief to the personal estate, might sue not for general administration, but for payment merely of his own particular debt ; in which case, if the personal repre- sentative chose to admit sufficient assets, there would be an immediate judgment for the amount of the debt, when ascertained ; ^ or if there were no admis- sion of assets, there would be an account directed of the personal estate, and of the plaintiff's debt to be paid in due course of administration. But a single creditor's action is so unusual that I shall assume the action to be brought by the creditor, on behalf of ' Woodgate v. Field, 2 Hare, 11. JUDGMENT IN CREDITOR S ACTION. • 9 himself and the other creditors of the testator, for the payment of all the debts. The Court would have in such a case two things to do : First, to ascer- tain what were the funeral and testamentary expenses and debts to be paid ; and, secondly, what were the assets wherewith to pay them. The judgment would therefore direct accounts to be taken of what was due to the plaintifi' and all the other creditors of the testator, and of the testator's funeral (and testamen- tary) expenses,^ and then of all the personal estate come to the hands of the executor, or to the hands of any other person by his order or for his use,^ with an inquiry what parts {if any) of the testator's personal estate were still outstanding and undisposed of ^ The result of these accounts and inquiries would be to ascertain all the testator's debts and habilities, and all his personal assets available for their discharge. The judgment would then proceed to provide for the application of the personal estate in payment of the testator's debts and funeral (and testamen- tary) expenses in a due course of administration, and would then order the further consideration of the action to be adjourned (i.e.) until after the 1 In modern judgments it is more usual to say " funeral expenses " alone. The testamentary expenses would be allowed to the executor i n passing his accounts. ^ In creditors' suits, the judgment directs an account and appli- cation of the personal estate without any exception of that speci- fically bequeathed. See Seton, 4th ed., p. 955 ; Davies v. Nieolson, 2DeG. &J. 701, and the reasoning there founded upon it. ' Cons. Order XXIII., r. 14. 10 ADMINISTRATION OF PERSONAL ESTATE. accounts and inquiries previously directed had been taken and made. The account it will be observed directed against the executor is confined to his actual receipts, it being now settled that a personal representative, while acting within the limits of his duty, is always in the position of a gratuitous bailee, and is not hable for any assets which might be lost without some default of his own.^ It follows that where an executor or administrator has not acted improperly, the existence of a judg- ment in an administration action does not supersede or put an end to the legal powei's vested in him by the probate, or grant, although he should thence- forward exercise them only with the sanction and under the control of the Court.^ Hence it was not unusual to add to the inquiry as to the outstanding personal estate a direction that the personal repre- sentative was to take such proceedings to get it in as the judge might direct ; a direction no longer in- serted in ordinary practice, because on application to that effect it can be obtained as a matter of course at Chambers. An executor in passing his accounts is always entitled to " all just allowances." A direc- tion to that effect used to be inserted in administra- tion decrees, but the 16th rule of Cons. Order XXIII. rendered it no longer necessary. ' Job V. Job, 6 Ch. D. 562. ' Berrji v. Gibbotis, 8 Ch. App. 747 ; Garner v. Mooiv, 3 Dr. 277. JUDGMENT IN CREDITOR'S ACTION. 11 In the case I have supposed all the assets ■ would necessarily be legal assets, and the payment of the debts and funeral (and testamentary) expenses in due course of administration would be their payment out of such assets in that order of priority, which was prescribed by the Common Law, and which the executor would out of Court have himself been bound to adopt. 12 CHAPTER 11. ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. First, with respect to the funeral and testamentary expenses. The reasonable expenses of the funeral are always allowed as a first charge, and the executor is hable to pay them out of the assets, even where he has not himself given the order, it being part of his official duty to bury the deceased.^ Testamentary expenses (often called executorship expenses) would include all such as are incident to the proper performance of the duty of an executor — e.g., the costs of probate ; of collecting the effects of the deceased; of ascer- taining the debts and liabilities ; of obtaining proper professional assistance ; of taking care of the specific legacies and of any other assets pending distribution ; and of applications to the Court for administration or otherwise, which the circumstances of the case might render necessary or desirable.^ With respect to the debts, it was at one time the practice that only those which were actually due at ^ Hancock v. Podmore, 1 B. & Ad. 262. '' Sharp V. Lush, 10 Ch. D. 472. CROWN DEBTS — DEBTS BY PARTICULAR STATUTES. 13 the death of the testator were provable under the decree ; but it has long been the settled rule, that aU creditors are admitted whose debts became due before the date of the chief clerk's certificate ; and as to all such debts, the decree would, except under special circumstances, to which I shall advert hereafter, be a bar to any subsequent claim. ^ I ought also to premise, that the rights of creditors of a deceased person inter se have in certain cases, and under certain conditions, been materially affected by the provisions of some recent statutes, to which I shall refer hereafter ; but in other respects those rights remain unaltered, and it is therefore as neces- sary as ever to understand the order of priority in which the debts of a testator or intestate were pay- able out of legal assets. That order was as follows : — I. Certain debts due to the Crown. This right of absolute precedence was confined to such debts as were due either as matter of record or by specialty f but it may be laid down as a general rule, that in the administration of assets, whenever the right of the Crown and the right of a subject to the payment of a debt of equal degree come into competition, the Crown's right always prevails.^ II. Debts having priority by force of particular statutes ; as, for instance, debts owing to the parish 1 Thomas v. Griffiths, 2 De G. F. & J. 563. ^ See Williams on Executors, 8tli ed., p. 996. ' In re Henley S; Co., 9 Ch. D. 481. 14 ORDER OP PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF BEBTS. by the overseers of the poor,i or to building societies,^ or to friendly societies,^ or regimental debts,* the extent and character of priority in each case depending upon the terms of the particular statute. III. Judgment debts or debts of Record, i.e., debts payable under a judgment order or rule of some Court of Record, obtained against or confessed by the testator or intestate, in his lifetime. Such judgment debts ranked equally inter se, but were only entitled to priority over other debts if they had been duly registered in manner prescribed by statute ; otherwise they ranked no higher than simple contract debts. The reason given for the necessity of this registration was the risk, which the personal representative would otherwise incur, of inadvertently committing a devastavit, by paying debts of inferior degree without being aware of the existence of judgments.^ Decrees and orders of Courts of Equity, by which a sum of money, or costs, charges, or expenses, was or were made payable to any person, had by statute the effect of judgments." But to have this effect it was necessary that there should be a final adjudica- 1 17 Geo. II. c. 38, s. 3. ^ Moors V. Marriott, 7 Ch. D. 543 ; 4 & 5 Wni. 4, c. 40, s. 12. ■'' 38 & 39 Vict. c. 60, s. 15, sub.-s. 7. ■» 26 & 27 Vict. c. 57. ^ See Home v. Shepherd, 3 Jur. N. S. 806 ; 26 L. J. Ch. 817. « 1 & 2 Vict. c. 110, s. 18 ; Widg&ry v. Tepper, 6 Cli. D. 364. JUDGMENT DEBTS. 15 tion to pay a definite sum of money, and unless the decree or order was of tliat nature it could not confer upon the person entitled to the benefit of it the rights of a judgment creditor. No priority, therefore, could be obtained by a mere decree for foreclosure, for such a decree only barred the equity of redemption ; ^ nor by a decree for an account and for payment of what might ultimately be found due, for nothing whatever might in the result become payable ; ^ nor by a chief clerk's certificate, though finding a sum of money to be due, for it would not amount to an order for payment ;^ nor by an order for payment of money into Court to the credit of a cause, for such an order would not decide any beneficial right.* Although this priority was only given to judg- ments recovered against or confessed by the testator or intestate in his lifetime, a judgment might, after his death, be obtained against or confessed by his personal representative ; and this, as a kind of reward for superior diligence on the creditor's part, had priority over the debts of all other creditors of equal degree with that, for which the judgment was re- covered ; '' and if there were several of such judg- ments, they ranked in the order of their respective dates. And, inasmuch as the personal representative ^ Wilson V. Lady Dunsany, 18 Beav. 299. 2 Chadwick v. Holt, 8 D. M. & G. 584. 3 Earl of Mansfield y. Ogle, 4 De G. & J. 38. 4 Ward V. Shakeshaft, 1 Dr. & Sm. 269. = Williams v. Williams, 15 Eq. 270. 16 ORDER OP PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OP DEBTS. must have known of these judgments, it was held not necessary to have them registered.^ The fact that decrees and orders of Courts of Equity were considered to be in the nature of judg- ments led to some important results in the adminis- tration of assets in Equity. Thus, when a suit was instituted by a creditor on behalf of himself and aU the other creditors, the decree for administration operated as a judgment for the benefit of all the creditors who should prove under it, and after such de- cree was made, any other creditor would be restrained from bringing an action against the personal represen- tative, for each creditor was considered to have already had a judgment in his favour ; and if a creditor obtained judgment against an executor, and on the same day a decree for administration was made, the judgment creditor had no priority, for the judgments were simultaneous.2 On the same principle an executor, who before the decree for administration had a right to prefer one creditor to another of equal degree, was deprived by the decree of that right, and if he chose nevertheless to give any preference, he could only stand against the estate in the place of the preferred creditor. And if a creditor had been paid before the decree any part of his debt in preference, the Caurt after decree refused to pay him any more out of either legal or equitable assets until the other ^ Williams v. Williams, ubi supra. 2 Parker v. Bingham, 33 Beav. 535 ; Hanson v, Stuhhs, 8 Ch. D. 154. DEBTS OF RECORD— SPECIALTY DEBTS. 17 creditors had received the same proportion of their debts, to which they would have been entitled had no such preference been given.'^ But if in the in- terval between the institution of the suit and the decree the executor paid one creditor in full, he was always in Equity, though not at Common Law, allowed such payment in passing his accounts ; and now under the Judicature Acts, inasmuch as in case of variance and conflict the rules of Equity are to prevail, he would be allowed such payment, even though he had notice of the action before makiag it.^ IV. Other debts of record, viz., statutes and recognizances. The former may be considered obso- lete. Recognizances are enrolled acknowledgments of a debt being due, made before some judge or magistrate, and conditioned like an ordinary bond for the performance of certain acts. They are most familiar in the Chancery Division in the case of re- ceivers, who are required by the Court to give their own recognizances, with those of two sureties, for double the amount of rental or property likely to be got in by them. Hence, when a receiver is directed to be discharged, it forms part of the order that the recognizances entered into by him, together with his sureties, are to be vacated. V. Debts by specialty, i.e., those debts which were created by instruments under the seal of the debtor, ,as, e.g., bonds or covenants for value. It is im- ^ Mitclielson v. Piper, 8 Sim. 64 ; Irhy v. Iriy, 24 Beav. 525. " Eiiropean Assurance Sodeti/ v. Radcb'ffe, 7 Ch. D. 734. c 18 ORDEK OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. portant to observe the word " created," for, in order to constitute a specialty debt, it was necessary that the instrument should not merely be evidence of, but should itself contain, the obligation to pay. It is not sufficient, therefore, that there should be a mere recital or admission of the debt, unless from the context, or the absence of any collateral object for the deed, an intention to contract for payment, and, therefore, to convert the debt into a specialty, could be implied.^ Specialty debts are of two kinds : (i.) those in which the heirs of the debtor are ex- pressly named and bound, e.g., a covenant by A. and his heirs, or a bond in which the obligor bound him- self and his heirs; and (ii.) those which do not expressly bind the heirs. Under section 75 of the Companies Act, 1862,^ the liability of any person to contribute to the assets of a company in the event of its being wound up is to be deemed to create a debt of the nature of a specialty debt, accruing due from such person at the time when his Hability commenced, but payable at the time or respective times when calls are made for enforcing such liability. And under section 76 the personal representatives, heirs, and devisees' of a deceased contributory are made liable in a due course of administration to contribute to the assets of the company in the discharge of the habihty of such deceased contributory.^ ' Ivm V. Ehms, 3 Dr. 25. "^ 25 & 26 Vict. c. 89. ' Burl- V. Rnbson, 10 Eq. 629. SIMPLE CONTRACT DEBTS — VOLUJSTTAKY BONDS, ETC. 1 9 A debt for arrears of rent of lands in England was also held to rank as equal in degree to a specialty debt, even though the lease might have been by parol. It is not, strictly speaking, a specialty, but its priority is said to have arisen from what is called in law privity of estate — a doctrine connected pro- bably with the old feudal tenure, and with the right, which the landlord had in ancient times, of coming on the land and ousting the tenant. The rule, there- fore, does not apply to a claim for rent of lands situate abroad, which would be a debt arising not from privity of estate, but only from privity of contract.^ YI. Unregistered judgments against the deceased debtor, and simple contract debts, as, e.g., debts due on bills of exchange or promissory notes ; or in respect of breaches of trust, where the trustee has not entered into any express covenant under seal.^ It should be observed, however, that an executor was not held hable, if he paid simple contract debts of his testator in priority to contingent specialty debts, as, e.g., indemnity bonds, before the contin- gency had actually occurred.^ VII. Voluntary bonds or covenants. These were looked upon as intermediate between debts and legacies, being so far in the nature of legacies that they were postponed to any debts for valuable con- 1 dough V. French, 2 Coll. 277 ; Vivmit v. Goil-nm, 4 D. M. & G. 4.56. = Adey v. Arnold, 2 D. M. & G. 432. ' Atl-iiisou V. Gri'ij, 1 Sm. & Giff. r)77. 2 20 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. sideration.^ But as a person, who claimed as a volunteer by an instrument, which transferred a right in the lifetime of the obHgor or covenantor, was con- sidered to have priority over one, who merely claimed by a testamentary instrument, which took effect only from the time of death, such voluntary creditors were paid before legatees, and even at the expense of specific legatees and appointees under a general power. ^ If this had not been the rule, such voluntary creditors would have been most seriously injured by being deprived of their Common Law remedies, and being driven into a Court of Equity. For at Common Law a bond or covenant was a contract, which de- rived its vahdity merely from its form, without the necessity of any consideration, and judgment accord- ingly could have been obtained against the personal representative in an action at Common Law by the voluntary obligee or covenantee. Equity, therefore, though in consequence of the absence of considera- tion she refused to allow such voluntary creditors their full legal rights, and postponed them to creditors for value, still recognized them as creditors, and to some extent deviated in their favour from her ordi- nary practice of not aiding volunteers.^ " If," says Lord Hardwicke,* " a man has a specialty, he does ' Fry V. Lowndes, 19 Eq. 456. ' Patch V. Shore, 2 Dr. & Sm. 589. ' Fletcher v. Fletcher, 4 Hare, 74 ; Lomas v. Wrnjhf, 2 M. & K. 775. ■> Williamson v. Codrin^tnn, 1 Ves. Sen. 514. VOLtJNTABY BILLS OF EXCHANGE, ETC. 21 not want proof of consideration, but may come into equity as well as law to have satisfaction of that debt on that specialty out of assets, and then the Court will not send it to law, but will judge whether he has a specialty or not. Indeed, if it appears doubtful to the Court whether it is a specialty on which an action at law could be maintained, or the damages so uncertain that it could not be settled without being tried by a jury, the Court will, as in other cases, have the aid of a Court of Law; but unless such a necessity, wdl not send it to law to make two suits out of one." The rule, therefore, as to voluntary bonds and covenants is based to a great extent upon the principle that equity follows the law, and in conformity with this view, it has been held that such voluntary debts are sufficient to sustain a creditor's suit,-^ and that in the administration of assets a voluntary bond is to be preferred to interest upon debts not by law carrying interest, which is payable under the 46th Order of August, 1841.2 But the Common Law rights of holders of volun- tary bills of exchange and promissory notes were very different. In their case consideration was, indeed, primd facie presumed, but only until the contrary was shown ; and the party sued was always at liberty to rebut the presumption by proving the absence of consideration, after which the transaction would be reduced to a nudum pactum, no longer capable of ^ Watson V. Parker, 6 Beav. 283. ^ Garrard v. Lord Dinorben, 5 Hare, 213. 22 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. being enforced by action. '^ To treat, therefore, such, instruments as voluntary was, ipso facto, to treat them as unenforceable at law. I have referred to this difference, because a question has arisen, whether in the administration of assets by a Court of Equity, the holder of a voluntary bill of exchange or promissory note stands in the same position as the obligee or covenantee in a voluntary bond or covenant. In a recent case 2 Vice-Chancellor Stuart expressed a strong opinion that the same principle was applicable to all alike. " In the case," he said, " of a bond, want of consideration is no objection at law, yet this Court, in an administration suit, treats a voluntary obligation, not according to its legal force as a specialty debt, nor even as equal to a simple contract debt for valuable consideration, but as payable in priority to any legacy. If a voluntary obligation in the nature of a debt is treated as payable in preference to legatees, who are also mere volunteers, without anything in the nature of an obligation or debt binding the' testator himself, the principle would seem to apply as much to a promissory note, by which the testator voluntarily bound himself, as to the voluntary obligation by bond. The volunteer, claim- ing under an instrument by which the testator binds himself as a debtor, may reasonably be paid before the volunteer claiming merely by a testamentary gift." ■^ Hollidaij V. Atkinson, 5 E. & C. 503 ; Milncs v. Dawson, 5 Exch. 948. ' D'lirson V. Kcartuii, 3 Sm. & Giff. 191. VOLUNTARY BILLS OF EXCHANGE, ETC. 23 The above passage must, however, be regarded rather as a dictum of the judge than as an actual decision, for the case itself was mainly decided upon the ground, that the promissory note in question was not in fact a voluntary instrument. The same point was sug- gested by Vice-Chancellor Wigram,i but without any expression of opinion on his part; and it may, I think, be considered as at present unsettled by judicial decision. It seems very questionable on principle, why Equity, with her instinctive aversion to assisting volunteers, which controlled as to voluntary bonds and covenants her desire to follow the Common Law, should go out of her way to treat as in the nature of debts payable out of assets, other voluntary contracts, which, from the absence of consideration, would have been incapable of being enforced by the volunteers, had they been left to their Common Law remedies. And the difficulty is increased by the fact, that Equity must either divide volunteers into different classes as to priority, or must put all into the same category, the anomalous result of which may be, that claims which could have been recovered at Common Law may be treated as payable rateably with, and liable to abate rateably with those, which, at Common Law, would have been practically irrecoverable. It will be observed that it is only the voluntary 1 Cox V. Barnard, 8 Hare, 310. See also Lloyd v. Ghune, 2 Giff. 445 ; and see Lewin on Trusts, 7th edition, p. 73 ; and May on Voluntary Deeds, p. 147. 24 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. creditor who is postponed, and an assignee therefore for valuable consideration, of an equitable interest in a voluntary bond, was held entitled to rank against the obligor's assets as a specialty creditor for value. ^ Such, then, would be the due course of administra- tion in which the debts would be payable out of legal assets, in the simple case which I have hitherto been assuming. I supposed the testator to have died before the year 1870, because as to any person who died after the commencement of that year, a very important alteration has been introduced by the 32 & 33 Yict. c. 46. By that statute it is enacted that "in the administration of the estate of eveiy person, who shall die on or after the 1st day of January, 1870, no debt or liabihty of such person shall be entitled to any priority or preference by reason merely that the same is secured by, or arises under, a bond, deed, or other instrument under seal, or is otherwise made or con- stituted a specialty debt ; but all the creditors of such person, as well specialty as simple contract, shall be treated as standing in equal degree, and be paid accordingly out of the assets of such deceased person, whether such assets are legal or equitable, any statute or other law to the contrary notwithstanding. Pro- vided always that this Act shall not prejudice or affect any lien, charge, or other security, w^hich any creditor may hold or be entitled to for the payment of his debt." ' Payne v. Mortimer, 4 De G. & J. 447. STATUTE 32 & 33 VICT. c. 46. 25 Witli respect, therefore, to cases falling witMn this statute, there is no longer any distinction between specialty and simple contract creditors as to the order of priority of payment out of legal assets. There never was any such distinction as regarded equitable assets, and the reference therefore to them may be treated as surplusage. It has already been stated, that Crown debts take precedence over any other debts of equal degTee, and it would seem therefore, that where this statute applies, a simple contract debt due to the Crown would have priority over a specialty debt due to a subject. There is nothing in this statute to affect judgment creditors, and it has therefore been held, that in the administration of the estate of a person who died after the year 1869, the right of priority, which a creditor acqtdred by having been the first to obtain judgment, though unregistered, against a legal personal repre- sentative, remained unaffected, even though the result might be, that a judgment against an executor for a simple contract debt might thus indirectly obtain priority over specialty debts. ^ It is clear that this statute includes the liability to contribute to the assets of a company under sections 75 and 76 of the Companies Act, 1862; and in the case therefore, of a contributory who died after the year 1869, his executor would not be liable for a ^ Williams v. Williams, 15 Eq. 270; Hanson v. Stubh; 8 Ch. D. 154. 26 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. devastavit, if he paid out of legal assets any simple contract debt before any call was made. An attempt was made to exclude from the operation of this statute arrears of rent, on the ground that though rent had, as regarded priority, the privilege of a specialty debt, it was not really such, but was only a debt incident to tenure. It was held, however, that if not strictly a specialty, it was a claim which came within the definition of being " otherwise made or constituted a specialty debt," and had accordingly in cases within this statute no preference over simple contract creditors.'' We shall find that with respect to certain persons who died insolvent after the 1st of November, 1875, further alterations are introduced by the Judicature Acts. But, apart from these alterations (which we shall consider hereafter), there is nothing in the Judicature Acts to alter the pre-existing procedure of the Courts of Equity with reference to administra- tion. The rule of Equity is to prevail, but that rule, except as modiSed by the 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46, was to administer legal assets according to legal priorities. With respect to interest on debts, in the case of all testators or intestates who died before the 1st of November, 1875, and of all who died after that date (except those whose estates being insolvent are administered by the High Court), interest is always computed up to the day of payment, as to such debts as bear interest, at the rate they respectively ' Shinrffv. Hastings, 6 Ch. D. 610. EFFECT OE FOREIGN DOMICIL, 27 carry, and as to all others at the rate of 4 per cent, from the date of the decree or judgment. i Such last- mentioned interest, however, is only to be payable after previous satisfaction of all the costs of adminis- tration, of all the debts, and of the interest on such debts as by law carry interest.^ A different rule, as we shall hereafter see, prevails, where the testator or intestate died after the 1st of November, 1875, in- solvent, and his estate is being administered by the Court. I have hitherto assumed that the testator had an English domicU, and that all his assets were at the time of his death to be found exclusively within the jurisdiction of the forum, which constituted his per- sonal representative in this country. Personal pro- perty, however, is often spoken of as having no situs of its own, but as merely following the law of the domicil of its owner, in conformity with the maxim " mobilia sequuntur personam." "It is a clear proposition," said Lord Kosslyn/ " not only of the law of England, but of every country of the world, where law has the semblance of science, that personal property has no locality. The meaning of that is, not that personal property has no visible locality, but that it is subject to that law which governs the person of the owner. With respect to the disposition of it, with respect to the transmission ' Cons. Order, 42, r. 9. ' Cons. Order, 42, r. 10. ' Sill V. Warwixk, 1 H. Bl. 690. 28 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OE DEBTS. of it, either by succession or the act of the party, it follows the law of the person." Hence all questions connected with the validity or construction of a will, or as to the persons beneficially entitled to legacies or residuary personal estate, would be governed by the lex domicilii ; but it is the primary duty of the personal representative, subject to the superintendence and authority of the tribiinal, from which he derives his title, to discharge the debts of the deceased out of the assets recoverable by him ; and, therefore, if a testator had a foreign domicil, and left personal assets recoverable in this country, as well as in the country of his domicil, it would be necessary to constitute an Enghsh personal repre- sentative, and it would be the duty of such repre- sentative to pay the testator's debts, and only after that was done, to transmit the surplus (if any) to the foreign representative, so that it might be distributed by him according to the lex domicilii. But the payment out of personal assets, of the debts in this country and of the interest in respect of them, is a matter of procedure, for which the Enghsh representative would be responsible, and which would be governed by the lex fori ; and the order, therefore, of priority between the English creditors would be regulated, as to the Enghsh assets, by the English rules as to administration. This was the principle upon which Vice-Chancellor Kindersley decided the case of Cook v. Gregson} where ^ 2 Dr. 286. See also Wilson v. Lady Dunsany, 18 Beav. 293 EIGHT OF RETAINER. 29 the testator had an Irish domicil, and left property both in Ireland and England, and the same persons were executors in both countries ; and it was held, that an Irish judgment had priority over Enghsh simple contract debts as against Irish assets, which had been remitted to England by the executors, and were being administered here. The ground of the decision was, that the Irish assets ought not to have been remitted until the Irish creditors had been paid, and that those assets ought, therefore, to be administered as if they had remained in Ireland. There would have been no reason for limitiag the order to Irish assets, if the priority of creditors were decided solely by the law of the domicil.^ It should also be observed that the " due course of administration " above referred to may be to some extent modified by the right of retainer possessed by an executor, who is also a creditor of the testator. That right gives the executor no hen upon the assets, but merely arises from the fact, that he could not bring an action at Common Law against himself for his own debt ; and he was therefore held at liberty to retain its amount out of the testator's legal assets in his hands, in priority to any other debt of equal degree. It was essentially a legal right, and was not favoured by Courts of Equity ; and an executor could (where the marginal note appears to be stated too broadly), and Hamilton v. Dallas, 26 W. E. 326. ^ See also De la Vega v. Vianna, 1 B. & Ad. 288, and Sx parte Melbourn, 6 Ch. App. 64. 30 ORDER OF PRIORITY IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS. only retain out of equitable assets, which might happen to come into his possession, a proportionate part of his debt with the other creditors,^ ■ on the principle that a person in a fiduciary position would not be permitted for his own benefit to violate the rule of equality. The right of retainer remains unaffected by a judgment in an action for administration, or by the payment of assets into Court, as neither of these ^3er se abrogates the powers of the executor. It can only be defeated by that which necessarily supersedes his functions, as by the appointment of a receiver of the personal estate, which could only take place either with the executor's consent, or in consequence of his misconduct.^ ^ Bain V. Sadler, 12 Eq. 570; and see In re Morris' Estate, 10 Ch. App. 72 ; Tallot v. Frere, 9 Ch. D. 568 ; Lee v. Kuttall, 12 Ch. D. 61. ^0 ^'-^7 ^ ^- y - ^ ^---? y^ - ' Richinond v. White, 12 Ch. D. 361. A 31 CHAPTEE III. SECURED AND UNSECURED CREDITORS. Before I leave the consideration of the various species of debts, it may be well, even at the risk of anticipating a part of my subject, to advert to another broad distinction which exists between what are called " unsecured " and " secured " creditors. The former are those who have only a claim upon the general assets of their debtors, derived from the obligation, expressed or imphed, into which every debtor enters, of paying his debts out of his property. The latter are those who, in addition to this general claim, have a specific lien or charge for the payment of their debts upon aU or some particular parts of the debtor's property, real or personal. To the former class would belong creditors by specialty and simple contract, and mere judgment creditors, while the latter would comprise mortgagees, legal or equitable ; persons entitled to any equitable charge ; and creditors who, by force of statute or otherwise, have obtained, apart from c Dady v. Hartridge, 1 Dr. & S. 236 ; Barnioell v. Iremonger, ib. 242 ; Hensman v. Fryer, 2 Eq. 627. ^ Rotheram v. Rotheram, 26 Beav. 465 ; Betliell v. Green, 34 Beav. 302. ' Eddels V. Johnson, 1 Giff. 22; Pcarmnlnx. Twiss, 2 Giff. 130; Cktrk-v. Clark, 4 Giff. 702. 4 3 Ch. App. 420. 5 7 Eq. 371. « 10 Oh. App. 136. RESIDUARY DEVISE SPECIFIC. 85 devisee must contribute rateahly with the residuary devisee. With reference to the 24th section of the Wills Act, Lord Cairns says (p. 141): — "The effect of it is, that the Legislature attributed to the will a con- tinuing operation, as if the devise were repeated every moment until the testator's death ; so that as to all the property, it must be taken as if he made it the moment before his death. If we realize this hypothesis of the Legislature, the result is, that this residuary devise must be taken as having been made the moment before the testator's death, but as a devise specific in its nature. There is nothing in the Act to alter the well-settled rule as to the effect of a residuary devise, when you know the time at which it was made ; viz. , that for the purpose of payment of debts it is to rank, pari j^cissu, with the specific devises." There appears to have been no pecuniary legacy given by the will in Lancefield v. Iggidden, and the second branch of the decision, therefore, in Hensman v. Fryer, did not actually come under review. The reasoning, however, which confirmed the first branch would necessarily lead to a conclusion opposed to the second ; and it has been since held by Y.-C. Malins,^ following an earlier case of his own,^ and one of V.-C. Stuart,^ that the decision in Lancefield v. ' TomJcins v. Colthurst, 1 Cli. D. 626. ' Dugdale v. Durjdale, 14 Eq. 23-1:. '' Gollms V. LeioU, 8 Eq. 708. 86 ORDER OF APPLIOATION OF ASSETS. Iggulden only affirmed Hensman v. Fryer on the first point, and that it is still the rule in the administra- tion of assets, that where the earlier funds are insuf- ficient to pay the debts, the deficiency must be made up by pecuniary legatees in priority to residuary devisees. A similar decision was arrived at by V.-C. HaU in Farquharson v. Floyer.^ We may assume, therefore, that pecuniary legatees remain in the Vth class. VI. Specific devises, residuary devises, and spe- cific bequests, not charged with debts. All these contribute rateably, inter se^ their respective values being taken as at the death of the testator.^ VII. Real and personal estate appointed by the will, under a general power of appointment,* and it has been held that the power must be actually exercised.® There seems, however, little reason why an appoint- ment under such a power should have any special pre- ference, or, at any rate, any preference over specific devises or bequests. The property appointed is only treated as assets, because by the exercise of the power the donee has virtually made it his own ; and the ^ 3 Ch. D. 109. " Tombs V. Roch, 2 Coll. 490; Jaclcson v. Pease, 19 Eq. 96. ' Fielding v. Preston, 1 De G. & J. 438. ■* Fleming v. Buchanan, 3 D. M. & G. 976 ; Junney v. Andrews, 6 Madd. 264. =* Holmes v. Goghill, 12 Ves. 206 ; In re Dudes' Trusts, 13 Eq. 163. MESNE RENTS AND PROFITS, HOW APPLIED. 87 appointees therefore really only take by bounty a specific part of the testator's general assets. And it must be borne in mind, that by the 27th section of the Wills Act (l Vict. c. 26), any property, real or personal, over which a testator has a general power of appointment, is held to be inclvided in a general devise or bequest, unless a contrary mtention appears. It is important to observe that except in the case of estates devised in trust to pay debts, where the trustee is of course bound to account for all that he receives, the mesne rents and profits of real property, which accrued between the death of the testator and the actual administration, cannot be resorted to for payment of debts, until the corpus of the property from which they arose has previously been exhausted.^ Thus no account of the mesne rents of real estates descended would be directed, until the corpus of those estates had been applied. ^ Stratford v. Ritson, 10 Beav. 25 ; Schomherg v. Iliiinfi-ey, 1 Dr. & W. 411 ; Stronge v. Haiukes, 4 De G. & J. 655. See Form of Decree- in Davies v. Tojpp, Setoii, 4th ed. p. 981. CHAPTER VIII. MARSHALLING AND CONTRIBUTION. Such is the successive order of priority in wtiicli the different kinds of assets are applicable in payment of debts. But, as I have already said, this order is very seldom practically followed. Suppose, for instance, that a testator left personal estate, and lands descended, and gave a pecuniary legacy. The property descended to the heir would be applicable for payment of the debts, before so much of the personal estate, as was required for the payment of the legacy. But it would obviously be most inconvenient, if not impossible, to defer the application of the whole of the general personal estate, so far as it might be required for the payment of the debts ; and accordingly it has always been the practice of the Court, when administering an estate, to direct the whole of the personalty to be applied, if necessary, in payment of the funeral expenses and debts, leaving the rights of pecuniary legatees, if thus interfered with, to be protected afterwards by the process of marshalling, of which I now propose to speak. When a creditor who has a right to resort to WHAT IS MARSHALLING. 89 several funds for the payment of his' debt has -re- course to that fund, which, as between himself and some other creditor or some person beneficially inte- rested in the estate, is not primarily liable to pay it, or is the only fund to which such other creditor or person is entitled to resort, " marshalling of assets " means the right of the person, whose fund has been thus applied out of its proper order or exhausted, to be replaced in the same position which he would have occupied, if the assets had been applied in their strict order of priority.^ The principle of the rule is thus laid down by Lord Eldon in Aldricli v. Cooper, " that a person having two funds to satisfy his demands shall not by his election disappoint a party who has only one fund," and by V.-C. Knight Bruce in Tombs v. Roch,^ " every will ought to be read as in effect embodying a declaration by the testator, that the payment of his debts shall be so far as possible so arranged as not to disappoint any of the gifts made by it, unless the instrument discloses a different intention." There are therefore two essential requisites for marshalling : (i.) That the creditor, who has been paid out of one fund, should have had the right of recourse to the other ; (ii.) That the creditor or other person who has been disappointed should have a right to the fund, out of which the other creditor has been paid. ' See White & Tudor's L. C. in Equity, under Aldricli v. Cooper, and Dolphin v. Aylward, L. E. 4 E. & I. App. 505. ^ 2 Coll. 490, 502. 90 MARSHALLING AND CONTRIBUTION. Thus if out of legal assets, part of their debts have been received by judgment creditors in priority to other creditors, or (in cases not falling within the 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46,) by specialty creditors in priority to simple contract creditors, it is the invariable rule of Equity that the creditors, who have thus been paid in preference, are not allowed to receive anything out of equitable assets, until they shall have brought into hotchpot whatever they have so received.^ A person is said to " marshal " against those assets, which he is entitled to have applied in priority to his own particular fund. So in the case which I just now mentioned of the pecuniary legatee, he would be entitled to marshal against the descended estate, and the judgment in the action would contain a direction that in case the creditors of the testator should have exhausted the general personal estate, the pecuniary legatee is to stand in the place of such creditors, and receive a satisfaction pro tanto out of the real estate descended ; or if there were also lands devised in trust to pay debts, he would be also entitled to stand in like manner against them in their order of priority.^ So again if a testator bequeathed a specific legacy, which at the time of his death was incumbered with a pledge or mortgage, the specific legatee is entitled to have that specific legacy free from the debt, and 1 Davies v. Topp. See Seton, 4th ed., p. 982. "" Foster v. Cook, 3 Bro. 0. C. 347 ; Paterson v. Scott, 1 D. M. &G. 531. RULE OF CONTttlBUTION. '01 can therefore marslial against the first five classes of assets.'^ There is one important exception to this rule of marshalling, viz., that assets, if not marshalled by the testator himself, are never marshalled in favour of a charity. If, therefore, a testator bequeaths to a charity a legacy payable out of a mixed fund con- sisting of real estate and pure and impure personalty, the charity will not be entitled to marshal so as to throw the legacy exclusively upon the property out of which it can legally be paid ; but the legacy will fail in the proportion which the real estate and im- pure personalty bear to the pure personalty.^ Another rule of great importance in the adminis- tration of assets is the rule of " contribution," which has been frequently referred to, and which rests upon the general principle of equality being Equity. Thus in the case, which I have previously supposed, of two different estates both charged Avith payment of debts, but devised to different persons, if a pecuniary legatee marshalled against them, he would take a rateable proportion out of each — in other words, each would contribute its rateable proportion. But the above rules of marshalling and contribution must be taken in connection with and subject to the operation of the 17 & 18 Vict. c. 113, and the two subsequent statutes which amended it. * Bothamleij v. Sherson, 20 Eq. 304. 2 Hobson V. Blackbwn, 1 Keen, 273 ; Beaumont v. Olivelra, 4 Ch. App. 309. 9::^ MARSHALLING AND CONTRIBUTION. Equity, following in this respect the principle of the Roman Law, was from early times in the habit of regarding a mortgage as only in the nature of a collateral security for the debt, the debt being the principal, and the mortgage being the accessory. And as the debts were primarily payable out of the personal estate, it considered the heir or devisee of the deceased mortgagor entitled (apart from a clear expression of intention, or necessary implication to the contrary) to have the mortgage debt satisfied out of the personal estate. But this rule has been com- pletely reversed by the statutes just referred to, the guiding principle of which is, that every mortgaged estate is primarily to bear its own burden. By the 17 & 18 Vict. c. 113 (commonly called Locke King's Act), it is provided " that when any person shall after the 31st December, 1854, die seized of, or entitled to any estate, or interest in any land, or other hereditaments which shall at the time of his death be charged with the payment of any sum or sums of money by way of mortgage, and shall not by his will, or deed, or other document have signified any contrary or other intention, the heir or devisee, to whom such lands or hereditaments shall descend or be devised, shall not be entitled to have the mortgage debt discharged or satisfied out of the personal estate, or any other real estate of such person, but the land or hereditaments so charged shall, as between the different persons claiming through or under the deceased person, be piimarily LOCKE king's act. 93 liable to the payment of all mortgage debts with, which the same shall be charged, every part thereof according to its value bearing a proportionate part of the mortgage debts charged on the whole thereof Provided always that nothing herein contained shall affect or diminish any right of the mortgagee on such lands or hereditaments to obtain full payment or satisfaction of his mortgage debt either out of the personal estate of the person so dying as aforesaid, or otherwise. Provided also that nothing herein contained shall affect the rights of any person claiming under or by virtue of any will, deed, or document already made, or to be made before the 1st of January, 1855." This statute was held to extend to copyholds and to equitable mortgages, but not to leaseholds,^ nor to lands subject to a trust for conversion, where the legatee took the interest as money, not as land,^ nor to a general charge of debts on real estate by the will.^ It was also held that where real and personal estate are comprised in the same mortgage, there is nothing in the Act to throw the primary liability on the real estate, but that the mortgage debt must, as between the devisees of the realty and the legatees of the ' Solomon v. Soloman, 12 W. K. 540; Hill v. Wormsleij, 4 Ch. D. 665. " Leivis V. Leiois, 13 Eq. 218. •* Hepworth v. Hall, 30 Bcav. 476. 94 MARSHALLING ANI1 CONTRIBUTION. personalty, be borne rateably by the real and personal estate subject thereto. i Bnt various difficulties arose upon the construction of this statute. The word " mortgage " only was used, and not a general word like incumbrance or charge, and it was therefore thought that the Act did not apply to a vendor's lien for unpaid purchase money.^ The decisions were also in direct conflict as to what was sufficient to indicate a " contrary or other intention," especially whether a general direction for payment of the debts, or all the debts, or for the pay- ment out of the personal estate or out of real estate, would suffice for that purpose.^ With the avowed object of solving these difficulties, the statute of the 30 & 31 Vict. c. 69 was passed, in the year 1867, which provided (section 1) that in the construction of the will of any person' who might die after the 31st December, 1867, a general direction that the debts, or that all the debts of the testator, should be paid out of his personal estate, should not be deemed to be a declaration of an inten- tion, contrary to, or other than the rule established by Locke King's Act, unless such contrary or other intention should be further declared by words ex- ^ Trestrail v. Mason, 7 Ch. D. 655 ; Lcoiiino v. Leonitio, 10 Ch. D. 460. = Hood V. Hood, 3 Jur. N. S. 684; Baruirell v. Iremonger, 1 Dr. & S. 260. '^ Eno V. Tathani, 3 De G. J. & S. 443 ; Wooldcncroft v. Woolsten- croft, 2 De G. F. & J. 347. 30 & 31 VICT. c. 69. 95 pressly, or by necessary implication, referring to all or some of the testator's debts or debt charged by way of mortgage on any part of his real estate ; and by section 2 (which is not confined to future wills), that in the construction of Locke King's Act, and of this Act, the word " mortgage " should be deemed to extend to any lien for unpaid purchase money upon any lands or hereditaments purchased by 'a testator. Now, a,s to the vendor's lien, the difiiculty had arisen from the restricted interpretation put upon the word " mortgage," and the later Act only pur- ported to extend its meaning. But Locke King's Act had referred to " any person" dying, and to the right of the "heir," as well as the devisee ; and yet, apparently, by a mere oversight, the Act of 1867 only extended to lands purchased by a testator ; and it was accordingly held that a lien for unpaid purchase money was not a charge by way of mortgage within that Act, when the purchaser died intestate.^ The first section of the Act of 1867 was confined in terms to directions as to the payment of debts out of the personal estate, and contained no express enactment as to the efiect of directions to pay debts out of any particular real estate, or out of real and personal estate, or out of residuary real estate, though some of these points had been mooted." In the case, ' Harding v. Harding, 13 Eq. 493. 2 See Newman v. Wilson, 31 Beav. 33 ; Broionson v. Lawrance, 6 Eq. 1 ; Snrliville v. Smythe, 17 Eq. 153. 96 MARSHALLING AND CONTRIBUTION. however, of Newmarch v. Storr,'^ the Court of Appeal considered that these questions, as to real estate, were virtually decided by this Act. " It is true," said the Master of the Eolls (p. 18), "that the Act of 1867 only refers to a direction to pay debts out of personal estate, but the reason for that was that there had been a decision of the Court on that point. But is it possible consistently to hold that a direction to pay debts out of the personal estate does not evince a contrary intention to the rule estabHshed by Locke King's Act, and that a direction to pay them out of real estate, or out of a mixed estate of realty or personalty, does evince such a contrary intention '{ I think not. The ground of the deci- sions of the Court of Chancery was that 'just debts' was a known term, and that it included mortgage debts. That ground must be considered to have been done away with by the Act of 1867, because that Act said in effect that the word debts was not to include mortgage debts unless there were ex- press words showing an intention that it should do so. This enactment must be considered as imported into the original Act. It is impossible not to hold that the same words that are insufficient to charge the testator's personal estate are in- sufficient also to charge his other real estate. I, therefore, take it to be clear that a charge of debts on personalty or on realty does not now sufficiently ' 9 Ch. D. 12. 40. & 41 VICT, c 34. 97 indicate an intention to exonerate the mortgaged estate."^ The aid of the Legislature was, however, again invoked, and the 40 & 41 Vict. c. 34, has enacted that the two previous Acts " shall, as to any testator or intestate dying, after the 31st of December, 1877, be held to extend to a testator or intestate dying seized or possessed of, or entitled to any land, or other hereditaments of whatever tenure, which shall at the time of his death be charged with the pay- ment of any sum or sums of money by way of mort- gage, or any other equitable charge, including any lien for unpaid purchase money ; and the devisee, or legatee, or heir, shall not be entitled to have such sum or sums discharged or satisfied out of any other estate of the testator or intestate, imless (in the case of a testator) he shall, within the meaning of the said Acts, have signified a contrary intention ; and such contrary intention shall not he deemed to be signified by a charge of, or direction for, payment of debts upon or out of residuary real and personal estate or residuary real estate." And there matters rest for the present. ^ See also Gale v. Fenwiak, 43 L. J. JST. S. (Ch.) 178 ; RossHer V. Rossiter, 13 Ch. D. 355. H 98 CHAPTER IX. EFFECT OF JUDICATUEE ACTS. I NOW come to the alterations made in the adminis- tration of assets by the Judicature Acts. By the 10th section of the Judicature Act, 1875, which is substituted for sub-s. 1 of the 25th section of the previous Act of 1873, it is enacted as follows : — " In the administration by the Court of the assets of any person who may die after the commencement of this Act, and whose estate may prove to be insuffi- cient for the payment in full of his debts and liabilities [and in the winding up of any company Tinder the Companies Acts, 1862 and 1867, whose assets may prove to be insufficient for the payment of its debts and liabilities and the costs of winding up] the same rules shall prevail and be observed as to the respective rights of secured and unsecured creditors, and as to debts and liabilities provable, and as to the valuation of annuities and future and contingent liabilities respectively, as may be in force for the time being under the law of bankruptcy with respect to the estates of persons ad.judged banki'upt, and all persons who in any such case would be entitled to 10th sect, of judicatuee act, 1875. D9 prove for and receive dividends out of the estate of any such deceased person [or out of the assets of any- such company], may come in under the decree or order for administration of such estate [or under the winding up of such company], and make such claims against the same as they may respectively be entitled to by virtue of this Act." I shall confine myself in considering this section to the administration of estates of deceased persons, and I have, therefore, included in brackets those parts of it M'hich relate only to insolvent companies, and vs^hich were in fact introduced for the first time by the Act of 1875. The effect of this 10th section may be shortly stated thus. That wliere the High Court is adminis- tering the assets of an insolvent person who died after the 1st of Nov., 1875, the rules of bankruptcy are to be adopted instead of the previously existing rules of Equity as to three particulars : — ■ 1. As to the respective rights of secured and un- secured creditors. 2. As to debts and liabilities provable. 3. As to the valuation of annuities and future and contingent liabilities respectively ; and that all per- sons who would in case of bankruptcy be entitled to prove and receive dividends may come in under the order for administration and make such claims as they may be entitled to under the Judicature Act, 1875. Now, with reference to this section, it may be observed : 1st, that it only applies to the adminis- H 2 100 EFFECT OF JUDICA.TURE ACTS. tration of the estates of persons who die after the 1st of Nov., 1875 ; 2ndly, that it only applies to the estates of those persons if they prove insolvent, and that there is nothing to alter the rules of ad- ministration with reference to solvent estates ; 3rdly, that it only applies to those insolvent estates when they are being administered by the Court, and it would seem, therefore, that the rules and practice of Equity would remain unaffected until a judgment for administration had been actually obtained ; 4thly, that where the 10th section applies, it does not pur- port to import all the rules of bankruptcy generally into the administration of assets, but only those which relate to the three particulars specified above. Bearing these general observations in mind, we may consider the 10th section first as regards the respective rights of secured and unsecured creditors. 1. Who are meant by secured creditors, and what are their rights ? There appears to be no substantial difference be- tween those who were treated by the Courts of Equity as secured creditors, and those who are so considered according to the existing rules and practice of bank- ruptcy. The Bankruptcy Act, 1869^ (section 16, sub- s. 5), defines a secured creditor to be " any creditor holding any mortgage charge or lien on the bankrupt's estate, or any part thereof, as security for a debt due to him." I may refer back, therefore, to the cases which have been previously mentioned with reference ' 32 & 33 Vict. v.. 71. AS TO SECURED CREDITORS. 101 to secured creditors, and whicli, while they illustrate the general law, chiefly arose in bankruptcy, and with reference to bankrupt estates. In every case the question would be, whether the person who claims to be a secured creditor is such by virttie of some mortgage charge or lien upon the debtor's property, which was existing at the com- mencement of the bankruptcy. If his right as against the bankrupt's estate was at the time of the adjudication only inchoate, so that something more was requisite before it could ripen into a charge, he would not be deemed a " secured " creditor, though if the bankruptcy had not intervened he might have been in the way of becoming so ; and in like manner a creditor under the 10th section of the Judicature Act, 1875, would only be considered " secured " if, at the date of the judg- ment for administration, he was in that position which would have constituted him a " secured " creditor according to the practice of bankruptcy. Thus in In re Printing and Numerical Registering Company,'^ where creditors of a; company had taken the property of their debtor in execution before the commencement of the winding up, the Master of the Rolls held that they were secured creditors within the meaning of the 10th section, though he considered that, under the cir- cumstances, they had lost the benefit of their security. " The first question," he says, " T have to consider is, are the creditors in question secured or unsecured ? ' 8 Ch. D. .535. 102 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. They are certainly secured in a sense l)y having taken the property of the company, the debtor, in execution. Under that execution they were entitled to sell the property and pay themselves out of the proceeds : they are secured in that way ; they are not secured under contract. Persons holding security, whether under an execution or a garnishee order, or by judg- ment or tort, or by contract before judicial inter- position, are secured creditors." What, then, was the previous rule of Equity as to secured creditors before the Judicature Act, 1875 ? In conformity with the equitable principle that a mortgage was regarded merely as a collateral security for the debt, Equity held that a mortgagee was entitled to pursue all his remedies concurrently. If his mortgage contained a covenant to pay, he could sue the mortgagor upon the covenant, while at the same time he could enter into possession of the mortgaged property, and file his bill for foreclosure. The death of the mortgagor made no difference. The creditor whose debt was secured by a legal or equit- able mortgage could go in under an administration decree and prove for the whole amount of his debt, retaining his mortgage as security for any balance which the mortgagor's general estate might be unable to discharge. This was the rule laid down in the case of Mason v. Bogg,^ where Lord Cottenham said : " It is to be observed that a mortgagee has a double security. He has" a right to proceed against both, 1 2 M. & C. 443, 448. RESPECTIVE iiul:e:s op equity and bankruptcy. 103 and to make the best he can of both. "Why he should be deprived of this right because the debtor dies and dies insolvent, it is not very easy to see."^ If, there fore, a mortgagor died insolvent, the mortgagee had a right to prove for the full amount of the debt against the mortgagor's estate, and to take his dividend out of it, and he might then realize his mortgage security, and thus very often obtain even oiit of an insolvent estate payment in fuU.^ It was a rule which conferred a great benefit on the secured creditors at the expense of the general body of the creditors. Now the rule of bankruptcy in the case of a secured creditor was the exact converse of this. It wiU be found in the Bankruptcy Act, 1869, and the General Eules made in pursuance of it. Under section 40 of that Act, the secured creditor has one of two alternatives. He may either prove for his whole debt on giving up his security upon the estate, or he may prove for the balance which remams due to him, after realizing or giving credit for the value of his security in manner and at the tune pre- scribed by the Act. If he does neither, he is to be excluded from aU. share in any dividend. The secured creditor would generally adopt in the administration of assets the second alternative, i.e., 1 See also Ann-strong v. Storer, 14 Beav. 538; Ttwkleij v. TJwmpson, IJ. & H. 126. ^ So also in the case of insolvent companies. See Kelloclc's Case, 3 Ch. App. 769. 104 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. of realizing or giving credit for the value of his security. If he preferred to realize there is no rule in bank- ruptcy which could compel him to seek for that pur- pose the aid of the Court, if he were able to do it by himself, as under a power of sale. The Act of 1869 has in terms enacted that which was the universal principle of administration in bankruptcy ; viz., that the rights which a creditor had acquired under hia security should not be prejudiced (see section- 12) ; and by the 78th General Rule it is provided that though the creditor may apply to the Court to realize his security, it shall not be imperative upon him to do so. It is of course assimaed that the security is not reahzed in a fraudulent or improvident manner, other- wise the Court would institute an inquiry, and prevent the creditor from proving for more than the proper bala.nce. ^ But when the application is made to the Court the General Rules lay down the course of procedure. The 78th and 79th General Rules are to the effect that upon application by any person claiming to be a secured creditor, the Court is to inquire as to the title of the claimant and the nature of his security, and if he is found entitled, then an account is to be taken of the principal, interest, and costs due thereon, and of any rents, profits, dividends or interest received by such claimant, in case he shoidd have been in jDossession, and then there is to be a sale of the pro- ' Exxiarta GeUcr, 2 Madd. 262, 267. BANKRUPTCY ACT, 1869. 105 perty comprised in the security, in which all proper parties are to concur. The 80th General Rule is to the effect that the proceeds of such sale are to be applied after payment of certain costs, in satisfaction, so fax as the same shall extend, of what shall be found due upon the security, and that the surplus (if any) shall be paid to the trustee in bankruptcy ; but that in case such proceeds shall be insufficient to pay the secured creditor in full, then that he shall be entitled to prove as a creditor for such deficiency, and receive dividends thereon rateably with the other creditors, but so as not to disturb any previous dividend. If instead of realizing his security the creditor prefers to give credit for its value, then, by the 99 th General Rule, he is required, before he can be allowed to prove, to state the par- ticulars of his security, and the value at which he assesses it, and he is to be deemed a creditor only in respect of the balance due after deducting such assessed value. The interests of the general body of creditors are protected by the 100th and 101st General Rules, under which the trustee in bankruptcy is to have the power of redeeming at any time before reahzation, upon payment of the assessed value of the security ; and the creditor, if the security ultimately realizes a less sum than the assessed value, is not permitted to increase his proof; while if it realizes more he is bound to pay over to the trustee the difference, between the assessed value and the amount actually produced. 106 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. The 136tli General Rule contains special provisions as to the mode of determining the value of the security before a creditor, who is desirous of giving credit for its value, can receive a dividend upon the balance of his debt, with a proviso, that if the trustee or any other creditor shall be dissatisfied with the value put on the security, the trustee may require the security to be realized. The above are the chief rules of bankruptcy with reference to the rights of secured creditors which appear applicable to administration under the 10th section of the Judicature Act, 1875, and it is important to observe that those rules which relate to the assessment of value are very rigidly enforced. See Ex parte King, In re Palethori^e^ where some of the above rules were considered. It follows from the principle, that the Court of Bankruptcy never prejudiced the right of a secured creditor to realize or deal with Ms security,^ that a creditor holding a security was considered entitled to apply it in discharge of whatever liabihty of the bankrupt debtor he might think fit. Thus where a creditor had a security for a debt, part only of which could be proved under the bank- ruptcy, he was allowed to apply his security in pay- ment of that part which was not provable, and to prove upon the estate for the remainder.^ But it was 1 20 Eq. 273. ^ See 12th section of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869. « Ex parte Johnson, 3 De G. M. & G. 218. OBJECT OF THE IOTH SECT. OK J. ACT, 1875. 107 as clearly established, that, subject to the rights of a secured creditor, the Court of Bankruptcy always favoured the interests of the general body of creditors ; and it was accordingly held that if a first mortgagee elected to give up his security, and to prove for the whole of his debt, the security so given up did not naerge in the equity of redemption, and thus improve the position of a subsequent mortgagee, but that n.nder the operation of the statute the trustee stood in the place of the first mortgagee for the benefit of the general body of creditors.^ It is hardly necessary to add, that the security intended always meant a security upon the estate out of which the debt is payable, and had no application to a security upon another person's estate.^ So far, then, as regards the interests of seciired creditors, the 10th section of the Judicature Act, 1875, certainly introduced a very important and useful alteration, but considerable doubts have arisen as to the proper construction to be put upon the whole clause, "the respective rights of secured and un- secured creditors." There would be no real difficulty if it were held that the only object of this branch of the 10th section is to substitute in the case of secured creditors the rule of administration in bankruptcy for the rule of Mason v. Bogg, which had been previously established in Equity. ^ Graclcnall v. Janson, 6 Ch. D. 735. 2 See Ex parte Brett, 6 CL App. 838. 108 EFFECT OF .(UDICATUBE ACTS. It would then only affect the amounts of the debts provable, and the consequent proportion of the dividends ; and would leave the mode in which the provable debts were to be paid, inter se, still governed by the previous practice. And this construction would be in harmony with the rest of the section, for it is not said that the persons, who under the preceding words may have acquired the title to prove and receive dividends, are to make the claims which they would be entitled to make according to the bank- ruptcy rules, but are to make those claims to which they would be entitled under the Judicature Act, i.e., according to the rules and practice of Equity. It cannot, however, be disguised, that this limited construction can hardly be adopted without doing considerable violence to the words of the Act ; for if that were the only object intended, the expression " the respective rights of secured and unsecured credi- toi's," ought to have been their " relative rights," or more properly, " the rights of secured creditors in respect of their securities ;" and as the section stands, the rights of unsecured creditors would seem, grammatically speaking, to be as much broiight under the Rules of Bankruptcy, as those of secured creditors. There has been at present no judicial decision precisely defining the limits within which this part of the section is to operate ; but all the cases which have occurred have shown a strong disposition to adopt the more limited construction suggested above, OBJECT OF THE IOtH SECT. OF J. ACT, 1875. 109 however inconsistent it may be with the strict gram- matical interpretation. Thus, in the case of Lee v. Nuttall,'^ Lord. Justice James expressed his opinion- respecting it as follows : "The sole object of the 10th section [relating to secured and unsecured creditors], as it appears to me, was to get rid of the rule in Chancery under which a secured creditor could prove for the full amount of his debt, and realize his security afterwards, and to put him on the same footing as in bankruptcy, where he was only entitled to prove for the balance after realizing or valuing his security." And a somewhat similar view seems to have been taken by the Master of the Rolls,"^ by Vice-Chancellor Malins,^ by Vice- Chancellor Hall,* and by Fry, J.^ If the clause is to be construed in its literal sense, we must ascertain the rights of the unsecured creditors, or, more correctly, of all the creditors in respect of the debts which are provable, by reference to the 32nd section of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869. By that section it is enacted, that two classes of debts (which are preferential but clearly not "secured" debts) are as between themselves to rank equally, and are to be paid in priority to all other debts ; the first class consisting of certain rates and taxes, and 1 12 Ch. D. 61. 2 In re Priniing and Numerical Registering Co., 8 Cli. D. 5.35. ' la re Coal Consumers' Association, i Ch. D. 630. * In re Tai/Jor, 8 Cli. D. 188. = In re Richards ^ Co., 11 Cli. D 681 In re We.si of England Banlc, 12 Ch. D. 82ri. 110 EFFECT OF JQDICATURE ACTS. the second of certain wages and salaries, and " save as aforesaid all debts provable under the bankruptcy shall be T^&id pari jjassu." If we therefore suppose the rights of unsecured creditors in the administration of insolvent estates to be governed by the rules of bankruptcy, as laid down in the 32nd section, it is difficult not to give a similar priority to the preferential debts mentioned in it, the exception being as integral a part of the clause as the subsequent direction that the other creditors are to be paid equally. And yet it would be a singular anomaly if a clause of the Judicature Acts, obviously intended to benefit the general body of creditors, were to have the effect of introducing a novel form of preference into the administration of insolvent estates, and it was accord- ingly decided in the case of the Albion Steel and Wire Company,^ that the provision in bankruptcy giving this priority to rates did not, under section 10 of the Judicature Act, apply to a company in hquida- tion, and would not by parity of reasoning apply to the administration of an insolvent estate. ^ It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the difficulties which beset the attempt to assimilate the adminis- tration of the estates of deceased persons to the various provisions, as to unsecured creditors, which are 1 7 Ch. D. 547. " See also In re- Goal Consumers' Assoeiaiion, 4 Ch. D. 625 ; In re Knott, 7 Ch. D. 549 ; In. re StoMon, Intii Fnrmice Co., 10 Ch. D. 335; In re Brichjwufrr Eni/iiiccriii:/ Co., 12 Ch. D. 181. OBJECT OF THE IOTH SECT. OF J. ACT, 1875. Ill applicable in tlie case of bankruptcy. It would be impossible to apply the bankruptcy rules in certain cases, and yet there is no discretionary power vested by the statutes in the judge, which could regulate the time or mode of their application. And the results would very often involve simple absurdity. I will confine myself to one illustration, though many others might be adduced. In a recent case in bankruptcy it was held, that by virtue of the 32nd section of the Act of 1869, voluntary debts by bond or covenant, which had always previously been post- poned in bankruptcy to debts for value, are now payable pari passu, with the other creditors.^ If, therefore, the bankruptcy rule is to be applied to unsecured creditors under the 10th section, its effect would be to abrogate, with reference to volunteers, the long-established principle which has been univer- sally adopted by Equity and Common Law alike, in the administration of estates ; and a voluntary creditor who, if his debtor's estate were being administered out of Court, would (whether the assets were legal or equitable) be postponed to every creditor for value, could, if he had reason to believe the estate insolvent, bring an action for administration, and thereby obtain, in consequence of that very insolvency, pay- ment ^a« passw with the other creditors. On the other hand, if the more limited construction is to be adopted, it may be regretted that the Legislature, while curtailing the rights of secured creditors for the ^ E.c parte Pottinger ; la re Stetciirt, 8 Cli. D. G21. 112 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. benefit of the general body, did not go a step further, and direct that in case of insolvency all the assets were to be administered as " equitable assets," which would prevent judgment creditors, who had not acquired any specific security, obtaining payment out of legal assets in priority to specialty and simple contract creditors.^ It must be admitted, that the 10th sect., as it at present stands, is in any view open to much criticism. It is difiicult to see on what principle the rights of secured creditors should be made to depend upon the accident, whether the debtor's estate is being admi- nistered out of, or by, the Court ; or why an executor, who might be the only person who knew of the in- solvency, should be at liberty to go on paying the secured creditors according to the pre-existing rules of Equity, until some creditor or other person chose to obtain a judgment for administration ; so that if there were the slightest possible chance of an estate proving insolvent, it would become almost obligatory on any unsecured creditor for his own protection to put the administration of his debtor's estate under the control of the Court. And even when the assets are being administered by the Court, great practical difficulty will necessarily arise, when it is uncertain whether the estate will ultimately prove insolvent or not, and whether, therefore, the bankruptcy rules will, or will not, apply. But I pass to the second particular, "Debts and ' Smith V. Morgan, 5 C. P. D. 337. DEBTS AND LIABILITIES PROVABLE. 113 liabilities provable ; " in other words, what debts and liabilities may be proved; it being the object and scope of this part of the section to allow anything which would be capable of being proved in a bank- ruptcy to be proved in the administration of an insolvent estate, whether it be strictly a debt or not.^ And, of course, if a debt or liability were not capable of being proved in bankruptcy, there would be no remedy in respect of it in such an administration. The description of debts and liabilities provable in bankruptcy will be found in the 31st section of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869. The first clause of that section enacts that, " demands in the nature of unli- quidated damages, arising otherwise than by reason of a contract or promise, shall not be provable ; " thus excluding any claim for damages recoverable in any action of tort, unless judgment be actually signed before the adjudication, so that a debt had already arisen.^ The 2nd clause of the same section enacts that, " save as aforesaid, all debts and liabilities present or future, certain or contingent, to which the bank- rupt is subject at the date of the adjudication, shall be provable debts." And in the last clause liability is defined thus : " Liability shall for the purposes of this Act include any compensation for work or labour done, any obligation or possibility of an obligation to 1 Per Fry, J., In re West of England Baii7,\ 12 Cli. D. 825. ^ In re Newman , Ex jinrtc Broole, 3 Ch. D. 494. I 114 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. pay money, or money's worth, on the breach of any express or implied covenant, contract, agreement, or undertaking, whether such breach does, or does not, occur, or is, or is not, likely to occur, or capable of occur- ring, before the close of the bankruptcy ; and, gene- rally, it shall include any express or implied engage- ment, agreement, or undertaking to pay, or capable of resulting in the payment of money, or money's worth, whether such payment be, as respects amount, fixed -or unliquidated ; as respects time, present or fature, certain or dependent on any one contingency, or on two or more contingencies ; as to mode of valuation, capable of being ascertained by fixed rules, or assess- able only by a jury, or as a matter of opinion." It is scarcely possible to conceive a more com- prehensive enactment, for, with the one exception specified, it excludes nothing which is not absolutely incapable of valuation. " In order," said Lord Justice Mellish,! "to justify us, under section 31, in rejecting the proof, we must find expressly, that the -value of the contingency is incapable of being fairly •estimated ; " and, accordingly, in that case, a proof •was admitted for the value of the future payments of an annuity, the duration of which depended upon the contingency of the annuitant (a widow) marrying .again. The 3rd particular mentioned in the 10th section 1 Ex parte Bluliemore, 5 Ch. D. 372 ; and see In re Westhoume Orove Drapery Co., ibid., 248 ; and & parte Need, 14 Ch. D. 679. VALUATION OP ANNUITIES AND CONTINGENT DEBTS. 115 is as to the valuation of annuities, and future and contingent liabilities respectively. With reference to them, the 3rd clause of the Slat section of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869, provides, that " an estimate shall be made according to the Rules of the Court for the time being in force, so far as the same may be applicable, and where they are not applicable at the discretion of the trustee, of the value of any debt or Hability provable as aforesaid, which by reason of its being subject to any contin- • gency, or contingencies, or for any other reason, does not bear a certain value." And by the 4th clause of the same section power is given to any person aggrieved by any estimate to appeal to the Court, which may either declare the debt to be one not provable, or may in manner therein specified direct a new assessment. No general rules have been made on this point, but the 78th section enacts, that "until rules have been made in pursuance of this Act, the principles, practice, and rules, on which Courts having jurisdiction in bankruptcy have heretofore acted in dealing with bankruptcy proceedings shall be observed by any Court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy cases under this Act." This throws us back upon the earlier Acts, and as to the valuation of annuities, it was provided by the Bankruptcy Act, 1849, section 175,^ that the value of an annuity should be ascertained by the Court, > 12 & 13 Vict. c. 106. I 2 116 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. regard being had to the original price given for it, and deducting therefrom such diminution in the value thereof as should have been caused by the lapse of time since the grant thereof to the date of the adjudication. In Equity there had been several decisions as to the mode of valuing annuities, but they occurred in cases where the annuities were bequeathed, and the estates having proved insufficient for the payment of the legacies and annuities in full, it became necessary to make a valuation of the latter, in order to effect a proportionate abatement. Under these circumstances the original price could not form a datum of calculation ; and it was settled, after some fluctuation of opinion, that the proper mode of valuation was to add the actual amount of the arrears to the then present value of the annuity.^ In cases within the 10th section of the Judicature Act, 1875, the rule laid down in the 17 5th section of the Act of 1849 will, it is presumed, be followed, where the annuity has been purchased. But where this is not the case, as in annuities granted under settlements, the same rule will probably prevail, which has been adopted in Equity.^ As to future and contingent debts and habillties 1 See Potts V. Smith, 8 Eq. 683, following Todd v. Bieliy, 27 Beav. 353. 2 See -Ex j^'^f'is Naden, 9 Ch. App. 670 ; Ex parte Neal, 14 Ch. D. 579 ; and Ex parte Scuv, 2 D. & C. 172. ADMINISTRATION OF PARTNER'S ESTATE. 117 they were always assessed under the direction of the Courts, or by a jury, and the same rule will be still adopted with the assistance of actuaries or other experts, skilful in estimating the chances of contin- gencies happening.^ The effect of the 10 th section wUl also be to import the rules of bankruptcy into the administra- tion by the Court of the estate of an insolvent deceased partner. It has long been the established practice in bank- ruptcy that the joint debts of a partnership are to be paid out of the partnership assets, and the separate debts of each partner out of his own estate ; and tliat no joint creditor can prove against the separate estate of one of the partners in competition with the separate creditors of that partner. The intro- duction, however, of this rule will occasion very little practical alteration, for, as we have seen, the Court of Chancery, except in cases where the estate was solvent, or where there was no joint estate, never allowed joint creditors to receive any payment out of the estate of a deceased partner until all his separate debts had previously been discharged. The 10th section has also introduced an important alteration in the computation of interest upon debts in the administration by the Court of the estate of a ^ See Ex parte Bates, 11 Ch. D. 914; and as to the risk of executors of solvent estates, see Tmjlor v. Taylor, 10 Eq. 477 ; Jerois v. Wolferstan, 18 Eq. 18. 118 EFFECT OF JUDICATURE ACTS. person who died insolvent after the 1 st of November, 1875 ; for it has been held that a creditor on such an estate, whose debt bears interest, is no longer entitled to interest up to the day of payment, but only to the date of the judgment for administration, which, by virtue of the above section, is equivalent to an adjudication in bankruptcy.^ ^ In re Summers, 13 Ch. D. 136 ; Seton on Decrees, 4tli ed., vol ii., p. 1674. As to the effect of the 10th section upon the operation of the Statutes of Limitations, see infra, p. 144. 119 CHAPTER X. STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. It is often an important question in the adminis- tration of assets in favour of creditors, wlietlier debts claimed to be proved are or are not barred by the Statutes of Limitations, and I accordingly propose to point out a few leading principles, by which those questions may be solved. All such statutes have the same object, viz., the prevention of disputes and the repression of fraud, by fixing, instead of vague presumptions, certain defined limits of time, within which all persons are to be bound to assert their respective claims to pro- perty "ne lites," as one of the jurists says, " immortales essent, dum litigantes mortui sunt." The Statutes of Limitations in force with reference to debts are the 21 James I. c. 16, which relates to simple contract debts ; the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, which relates to real property and moneys charged on land, and which, since the 1st of January, 1879, has been modified by the 37 & 38 Vict. c. 57 ; and the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 42, which relates chiefly to specialty debts. There are certain main points com- 120 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. mon to all these statutes, to which it may be well to advert, before we consider some of the points on which they differ. 1. All Statutes of Limitations fix a certain period of time within which *a claimant is to assert his right. Two things therefore must in every case be ascertained; (i.) the duration of the period, and (ii.) the time from which it begins to run. 2. If the statutory period has once begun to run nothing can stop it, even though subsequent events may render it impossible for the claim to be asserted. See Beckford v. Wade,^ where the extreme case is put of Courts of Justice being closed in time of war. 3. Before the statutory period can begin to run there must be (i,),a claim, or a cause of action or suit ; (ii.) a person capable of asserting the claim, or a person to sue; and (iii.) a person against whom the claim can be asserted, or a person capable of being sued. 4. When the statutory period has expired, the claim can be successfully resisted. But between these different statutes there exists a distinction of extreme importance. A Statute of Limitations may effect its object in one of two ways, either by destroying the right itself at the expiration of the prescribed period, or, while it leaves the right itself untouched, by pre- ' 17 Ves. 93. EXTINGUISHMENT OF DEBT — BARRING OF REMEDY. 121 venting that right being asserted in a Court of Law ; in the former case extinguishing the debt, in the latter case only barring the remedy. It follows that in the former case, when the time has once run out, no debt can be claimed, simply because there is no longer any debt in existence ; in the latter case the debt still exists, though the Court, exercising the jus fori, may refuse to enforce its recovery. The Statutes of James I. and of the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 42, only bar the remedy, the other two statutes extinguish the debt. There is in consequence of this distinction a very material difference as to the mode in which the benefit of these respective statutes may be invoked. Suppose that an action for administration were brought by a simple contract creditor, whose debt had been, barred by the Statute of James I. He would sue in respect of an existing debt, which would be perfectly good, unless the defendant chose to set up the statute against it. In such a case, therefore, the statute must be expressly pleaded, for there would be nothing on the face of the writ or statement of claim to show that the debt would not sustain the action. But if the action were brought by a creditor in respect of a debt which was barred by lapse of time under the Statute of 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, the debt itself would be extinguished, unless the creditor could bring himself within some of the exceptions, which would take his case out of that statute ; and if he did not show this on his statement of claim it would be 122 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. apparent on the face of it that his title to sue was extinguished!, and accordingly that Statute of Limitations might be raised by demurrer.^ It should also be borne in mind that the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27 was the first Statute of Limitations which applied in terms to equitable rights and bound Courts of Equity. But Equity had long previously followed in matters of this kind the analogy of exist- ing statutes, and adopted them as her rule of pro- cedure, on the sunple principle, that it would have been an act of inconsistency on her part, if, while she exacted extreme vigilance from her own suitors, she had countenanced a delay beyond the period, which the statute law itself prescribed for the assertion of legal demands.^ Lord Redesdale indeed says, in Hovenden v. Lm"d Annesley:^ " I think it is a mistake in point of language to say that Courts of Equity act merely by analogy to the Statutes of Limitations ; they act in obedience to them." But he is there referring to legal demands administered in Equity ; as to eqiiitable claims it would be more correct to say "they act in deference to them," for Equity remained free, and not unfrequently asserted in very unmistakable terms her liberty. We may now consider shortly the Statute of 21st 1 Dawldns v. Lord Penrliyn, 4 App. Ca. 51, 59. See also for the difference in such oases between the lex fori and the lex loci contractus, Harris v. Qidne, 4 L. E. Q. B. 653. 2 Smith V. Clay, 3 Bro. C. C. 639 ; and Knox v. Gye, 5 L. E. E. & I. App. 674. ' 2 Sch. & Lefr. 630 ; see Foley v. Hill, 1 Ph. 405. STATUTE 21 JAMES I. C. 16. 123 of James I. c. 16, as it bears upon the administration of assets in the payment of simple contract debts. That statute requires all actions for simple contract debts (but not including Crown debts) to be com- menced within six years next after the cause of action or suit has arisen and not after. It merely prescribes the time within which actions are to be brought, and, therefore, only bars the remedy. Now, as we might expect, the fact of the debt itself being unaffected leads to many important results. If an executor before decree chooses to pay a debt which is barred by this statute he does not commit a devastavit, for he is in no case bound to set it up ;i and if he has in his hands money of a debtor to his testator, he may retain it in payment of a statute-barred debt, for he is only obtaining, other- wise than by action, the payment of an existing debt;^ So an executor has been held entitled to set off the amount of such a debt to the testator's estate against a legacy due from the same estate to the debtor.^ On the same principle an executor who is a creditor of the testator is at hberty to retain out of legal assets his own debt, though statute-barred ;* and, on the other hand, when he is indebted to the testator's estate, he, upon taking out probate, is considered to have the amount of the debt as assets in his hands, ^ Lowis V. Rumney, i Eq. 451. ^ Courtenay v. Williams, 3 Hare, 551. ' In re Gordioell's Estate, 20 Eq. 644. ' Hill V. Walker, 4 K. & J. 169. 124 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. and from that time, therefore, the statute cannot run against the testator's estate. This led to a rather curious result in the case of Ingle v. Richards,'^ where a testator left three executors, two of whom proved at once and afterwards died. The third executor owed the testator a sum of money upon a promissory note, and he, after the death of the other two executors and fourteen years after the testator's death, proved the will. If he had not proved, he might have set up the statute as a bar to any claim made against him for his debt. But as probate of a will relates back to the testator's death, the third executor was assumed to have had from that time the amount of his debt as assets in his hands, and was accordingly held liable to account for it. This is obviously right, for if it were otherwise an executor might protect himself from payment of a debt which he owed to the testator's estate, merely by delay in proving the will. So, again, the Court of Probate has granted administration to a simple contract creditor, whose right of action was barred by this statute, though in that case it put him upon the terms of distributing the assets without giving any prefer- ence to his own debt.^ And as a decree for administration in a creditor's suit was considered a judgment in favour of all the creditors, it became a well-estabHshed rule, that after decree any person interested either as creditor or ' 28 Beav. 366. '■' Goomhs V. Coomhs, 1 L. R. P. & D. 288. WHAT IS CAUSE OF ACTION. 125 volunteer might set up the statute against a debt if the executor did not himself choose to do so/ except, indeed, against the debt of the plaintiff, on the basis of which the decree was made.^ Hence it followed that after such a decree an executor was not allowed himself to vary the rights of the creditors, and could not give any promise which would take a debt out of the statute. Nor could he after decree pay a statute-barred debt ; or at least if he did so he could only stand in the place of the creditor whom he had paid, and the statute could be pleaded as successfully against him, as it could have been against the creditor himself^ It would seem, however, that if neither the executor nor any other person interested who was before the Court chose to set up the statute, the Court itself would not do so in the interest of absent parties.* The remedy is barred under this statute unless proceedings are taken within six years next after the cause of action. The question, therefore, becomes of great import- ance, what constitutes this cause of action ? Now it clearly arises when the person entitled is for the first time in a position to sue, i.e., as soon as a breach of the promise to pay has occurred. ' Shewen v. VanderJiorst, 1 E. & M. 347 ; Moodie v. Bannister, 4 Dr. 432. 2 Briggs v. Wilson, 5 De G. M. & G. 21. 3 Philips V. Beal, 32 Beav. 26 ; and see Mitclielson v. Piper, 8 Sim. 64. * Aston V. Trollope, 2 Eq. 205. 126 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. In this rfespect there was an important conflict and variance between Common Law and Equity, which the Jtidicature Acts have now settled in favour of the latter. Suppose a cause of action had arisen, but it was concealed through the debtor's own fraud, Common Law after some fluctuation decided that the fraudulent concealment would make no difierence, but that the words of the statute must prevail, and that the time, therefore, began to run from the moment when the cause of action actually accrued.^ Equity, however, which was not bound by the terms of any statute, but acted by analogy and upon the principle of discouraging laches, always held that in such a case time only began to run from the moment when the fraud was, or with reasonable diligence ought to have been, discovered.^ A cause of action must be that on which an action can be grounded, and an action must necessarily be by some one capable of suing against some one capable of being sued. Suppose a debt payable to A. at the expiration of two years, and A. dies intestate at the end of one year ; the money will be payable at the end of a year after A.'s death, but payable only to his personal representative. But if administration is not taken 1 Imperial Gas Go. v. London Gas Co., 10 Excli. 39. 2 South Sea Company v. Wymondsell, 3 P. Wms. 143; Blaii- v. Bromley, 5 Hare, 559; 2 Phill. 354; Ecclesiastical Covimissioners V. North Eastern Railway Co., 4 Ch. D. 845; Trotter v. Maclean, 13 Ch. D. 574. HOW EIGHT OF ACTION KEPT ALIVE, 127 out to A. till three years after his death, there is in the meantirae no one to sue, and time, therefore, only begins to run from the grant of the administration.^ Had A. left an executor, inasmuch as that executor might have commenced an action before probate, there would have been always a person capable of suing. Suppose, on the other hand, the debt had been due from A., there would then have been no person capable of being sued until the grant of administration, and the cause of action would have first arisen upon such grant being made.^ But if the six years have expired since the original cause of action, is there any kind of promise or acknowledgment which would keep the right of action ahve, and thus take the case, wholly or partially, out of the operation of this statute ? The Statute says nothing about any promise or acknowledgment of the debt which would have the effect of extending the time for suing. It makes, on the contrary, the statutory period only date from the cause of action, which must be either a cause spring- ing out of the original contract, or out of some subse- quent promise to pay, which would itself constitute a new contract, and from which, therefore, the new period would be held to commence.^ Such a promise might have been by parol, until 1 Murray v. East India Co., 5 B. & Aid. 214 ; Burdich v. Garrick, 5 Ch. App. 241. •' Story V. Fry, 1 Y. & C. C. C. 603. ^ Moodie v. Bannister, 4 Dr. 439. 128 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. Lord Tenterden's Act (9 Geo. IV. c. 14, s. 1), which required it to be in writing, signed by the party chargeable, or, in cases within the Mercantile Law Amendment Act (19 & 20 Vict. c. 97, s. 13), by an agent of the party charged thereby. A mere admission, therefore, or acknowledgment of the existence of the debt, might be clearly insufficient to constitute a cause of action ; for the existence of the debt is perfectly compatible with the incapacity of enforcing it under this statute. To be of any avail it must amoimt (whatever be its form) to a promise in writing to pay ; and to constitute such a promise there must be one of three things — either an acknow- ledgment of the debt, from which a promise to pay must be implied, or an unconditional promise to pay the debt, or a conditional promise to pay it and evidence that the condition has been performed, i Now if such a new promise is requisite it is difficult to understand how an admission made to a third person can be held sufficient, for an acknowledgment made by A. to a stranger, however unqualified or unconditional it may be, that he (A.) owes a debt to B., does not in itself imply any promise on the part of A. that he will pay it to B. On this point, how- ever, there has been some conflict of opinion. In Courtenay v. Williams,^ Vice-Chancellor Wigram ^ Tamier v. Smart, 6 B. & C. 603 ; Cliascmore v. Turner, 10 L. E. Q. B. 500; In re River Steam Co., Mitchell's Claim, 6 Ch. App. 822; MeyerlwffY. Froelivh, 4 C. P. D. 63. ■' 3 Hare, 549. PAYMENT OP INTEREST. 129 appears to have considered that an acknowledgment to a third party might be sufficient ; while the con- trary, and probably the truer view, is maintained by V.-C. Kiudersley in Moodie v. Bannister} Payment of interest (being the price paid by the debtor for the creditor's forbearance in not calling in the principal) has always been held to imply, not only an admission of the existence of the debt but a pro- mise to pay it. And the same effect has been given to payment of a part of the principal, provided such payment is clearly in the nature of a partial discharge, for it is obvious that the mere payment of a sum of money in itself aflPords no presumption, that any further amount is due.^ This payment of interest has often had a very important bearing upon the administration of assets by the Court. Suppose, for instance, that a testator died possessed of personalty, and having devised his real estate, and being indebted to a simple contract creditor, and that the executor for four years from the testator's death paid the simple contract creditor interest upon his debt; as a new cause of action would arise upon every payment of interest, the six years would begin to run from the last time of payment, as regarded the personal estate. But suppose that nine years after the testa- tor's death the simple contract creditor (finding that the personalty had been exhausted in paying other 1 4 Dr. 439 ; and see Fuller v. Redman, 26 Beav. 620. "" Tippets V. Heane, 1 Cr. i\r. & E. 252 ; Coope v. CremreV, 2 Eq. 119. 130 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. debts) brouglit his action against the devisee, for the purpose of having the real estate administered in payment of his debt, but that the devisee had given in the meantime no promise to pay the debt, which could affect the operation of this statute. The ques- tion would arise whether the promise of the personal representative would keep the right of action alive, as against the devisee of the real estate ? It was decided that it did not do so, in Putnam v. Bates,^ a case which has sometimes been called in question, but was cited as perfectly good law by V.-C. Turner, in Fordham v. Wallis,^ and which rests upon the broad principle that a promise by an executor to pay a debt, which gives a new cause of action against him, cannot constitute a promise by the devisee to pay it, so as to give any new cause of action against such devisee. It would be to hold, as was said by Lord Westbury, L. C, that, according to the true intent and meaning of the statute, the right of one man may be taken away by the act of another. ^ A simple contract debt, therefore, may be barred as against the real estate, while it remains recoverable from the personal assets. The establishment of this rtde led to a further question. Suppose that in a case where the testator died before 1870, a simple contract creditor, whose ^ 3 Euss. 188. In this case the admission bound of course the real estate devised to the executor, but no other real estate. ^ 10 Hare, 227. ^ See Boldivg v. Lane, 1 De G. J. & S. 122. CAN STATUTE-BAREED CREDITOR MARSHAL? 131 right against the executor remained unaffected, but whose right was barred as regarded the devisee, ascertained that specialty creditors, who were en- titled to come against the real estate, had been paid their debts otit of the personalty, why should not the simple contract creditor be entitled to marshal against the specialty creditors, and to stand in their place against the real estate, to the extent to which they had received the personal assets ? V.-C. Turner, in Fordham v. Wcdlis,^ considered, that where a simple contract creditor was barred from all rehef against the land by the Statute of Limitations, he could not obtain relief indirectly through the process of marshalling. " Simple contract creditors have now," he said, " a direct right against the real estate in case of a deficiency of the personal. They do not require the aid of this Court to marshal the assets, in order to give them a remedy against the real estate." He also suggested that the consequence of holding otherwise would be " that in all cases where there are specialty debts, the simple contract creditors would be entitled to sue the real estate at any time within which the specialty creditors could have sued ; in effect, to create in Equity the same limitation as to simple contract debts, as the statute has pre- scribed as to specialties." The correctness of this view has been questioned, ' 10 Hare, 217, 229. K 2 132 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. and not without reason.^ There would no doubt be ground for refusing to the simple contract creditor the benefit of the equitable rule of marshalling, if he could be considered guilty of misconduct or laches ; but such a construction could hardly be put upon the mere omission on his part to make any claim against the real estate, whUe the executor, who was the primary person to pay the debt, was himself promis- ing to pay it. And apart from this view, why should the mere fact that the simple contract creditor had by lapse of time lost a right against the real estate, which he had previously possessed, make any differ- ence as to the right of marshalling 1 That right assumes the non-existence of any title on the part of the creditor who marshals to the fund which is being marshalled, and only permits him to take out of the assets, which otherwise are not applicable for his payment, so much as he woiild have been absolutely entitled to take out of his own proper fund, if it had not been previously exhausted. The difficulty therefore suggested by V.-C. Turner would hardly seem to arise, for if the simple contract creditor sought to marshal against the real estate after his right of action had been, barred against the personalty, there would be ground for contending that he had lost his right of domg so, for he could only marshal on the assumption that the fund, which the specialty creditors had exhausted, would ' Diirby and Bosnnquct on Statutes of Limitations, p. 87. CAN STATUTE-BARRED CREDITOR MARSHAL? 133 have been his if it had remained intact ; whereas after the statute had run against him it would only have been his, provided the executor, or the other creditors, or any other person interested, did not choose to plead the statute, and he would not there- fore have had an absolute, but merely a contingent and uncertain right to it. The point, however, remains undetermined. Lord St. Leonards^ says : " Whether the right to have the assets marshalled gives to a sunple contract creditor more time than the statute aflPords to him is not a point satisfactorily settled." And although in cases falling within the 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46, there can now be no question of marshal- ling, as between simple contract and specialty credi- tors, a similar question may still arise, as regards judgment creditors. How far an acknowledgment given to the creditor by a devisee, who has only a limited interest in the real estate devised by the testator, would bind the remainderman, is a question which will be better considered with reference to the other statutes. ■*■ Eeal Property Statutes, 2iid ed., p. 131. 134 CHAPTER XI. STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS — Continued. I NOW proceed to the two other statutes, the 3 & 4 Wm. lY. c. 27, and the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 42. The latter, which I Avill refer to first, relates to specialty debts not charged on land, and the 3rd section of it enacts (amongst other things) that all actions of covenant, or debt upon any bond or other specialty, shall be commenced and sued within twenty years after the cause of such action or suit, but not after. This statute resembles that of James I. in simply barring the remedy, but it differs widely with reference to the acknowledgment required to take a case out of it. The 5th section of the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 42, pro- vides to the effect, that if any acknowledgment shall be made, either by writing signed by the party hable, or his agent, or by part payment, or part satisfaction on account of principal or interest, the action may be brought within twenty years after such acknowledg- ment, or part payment, or part satisfaction. It will be observed, that the effect of an acknowledgment under this section is not to raise a new cause of action 3 & 4 WM. IV. C. 42. 135 by a new promise to pay the debt, but to extend the period during which the action could be brought on the original obligation, a difference arising from the distinction between simple contract and specialty debts, for although a promise to pay a simple contract debt would constitute, in itself, a contract of precisely the same kind as the original debt, a promise to pay a specialty debt, if not under seal, could not constitute a specialty debt.^ This section, accordingly, makes no mention of the person to whom the acknowledgment is to be given, and it has been held that any admission made, even to a third person, of the debt being due, is sufficient to take a specialty debt out of its operation, or rather to create a new starting point, from which the twenty years is to begin to run.^ The section also only speaks of the " party liable ; " but suppose that there are several parties either concurrently or successively liable, what is the effect on the creditor's right of an acknowledgment by one of them ? This point arose in the case of Roddam v. Morley,^ where a testator owed a debt on a bond binding the heii's, and devised his real estate to A. for life, with remainders over. A. paid interest to the bond creditor, and the question was, whether in conse- •quence of such payment by the tenant for life, the bond debt "was to be considered as a debt still 1 See observations of Williams and Crowder, JJ., in Roddam v. Morley, 1 De G. & J. 1, 15. ^ Moodie v. Bannister, 4 Dr. 4-32, 441. ' 1 De G. & J. 1. 136 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. recoverable as against -the devisees in remainder ; and it was held that it was to be so considered, on the ground that the successive devisees were the " persons liable " by virtue of the bond. In Coope V. Cresswell ^ V.-C. Kindersley stated, that in his opinion the result of the decision in Roddam v. Morley was, that if there were several persons liable, whether it be the case of several obligors in a bond, or the case of a deceased debtor having left personalty and devised realty, in short, wherever there was a case of several persons liable, although the language of the statute had not expressly provided for that case, yet according to its true construction the " person hable " meant each and every one of the several persons liable, and an acknowledgment or payment by any one of them within twenty years prevented the statute from running in favour of any of them. The Vice- Chancellor, accordingly, held in Coope v. Cresswell, that payment of interest by an administrator and trustees of an estate devised for the payment of debts took the case out of the statute, as agaiast the devisees of another estate. This decision was reversed on appeal by Lord Chelmsford, L. C.,^ who dissented from the reasoning in Roddam v. Morley, and held that that case rested upon the special relation of- tenant for hfe and remainderman existing in the same estate, and would not apply to devisees of different ' -2 Eq. 106. - 2 Cli. App. 112. ACKNOWLEDGMENT BY ONE OF SEVERAL DEVISEES. 137 estates ; following in this respect Dickenson v. Teas- dale,^ where Lord Westbury had decided, that an acknowledgment by one devisee did not prevent another devisee from pleading this statute. "The last point," he says, " relates to the acknowledgment, and it is said, that an acknowledgment by one of several devisees of distinct estates extends to all the devisees under the will. But that which is totally unreason- able in point of principle derived no suppoi-t from Roddam v. Morley, which in its circumstances had not the remotest possible bearing on the present. In that case there was an acknowledgment by a devisee for life of an estate, and the question was as to the effect of such an acknowledgment as affecting those entitled in remainder to the same estate." So far then as Roddam v. Morley decided that payment of interest by a tenant for life of a devised estate keeps a specialty debt binding the heirs ahve against the person entitled in remainder to the same estate, it may be considered a case of unshaken authority. 2 To this extent Lord St. Leonards^ speaks of the decision as settled law, and says: "although the acknowledgment is by one of the parties only, yet it sets the action free generally, and payment by one of the parties, e. g. the tenant for life of the property, keeps ahve the right of action in its integrity." But where the estates are distinct, it M De G. J. & S. 52. '' Pears v. Laing, 12 Eq. 56. '^ Eeal Property Statutes, 2nd ed., p. 145, 149. 138 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. would seem that the rule, as laid down in Dickenson V. Teasdale and Coope v. Cresswell, must be held to prevail.^ The statute of the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. C. 27, diiFers from the other statutes, as it not only bars the remedy but extinguishes the debt itself, after the prescribed period has elapsed. See section 34, which enacts, " that at the determination of the period limited by this Act to any person for making an entry or distress, or bringing any writ of quare impedit, or other action or suit, the right and title of such person to the land rent or advowson for the recovery whereof such entry, distress, action or suit respectively might have been made or brought within such period, shall be extinguished." Section 40 is repealed by section 9 of the 37 & 38 Vict. c. 57, but is re-enacted in the same words by the 8th section of that statute, with the substitution of twelve for twenty years, which provides " that no action or suit, or other proceeding, shall be brought to recover any sum of money secured by any mortgage judgment or lien, or otherwise charged upon or payable out of any land or rent at Law or in Equity, but within twelve years next after a present right to receive the same shall have accrued to some person capable of giving a discharge for or release of the same, unless in the meantime some part of the principal money, ^ As to acknowledgments by one of several co-contractors or co- debtors, see 14th sect, of 19 & 20 Vict. c. 97 (Mercantile Law- Amendment Act). 3 & 4 WM. IV. c. 27. 139 or aome interest thereon, shall have been paid, or some acknowledgment of the right thereto shall have been given in writing signed by the person by whom the same shall be payable, or his agent, to the person entitled thereto, or his agent, and in such case no such action or suit, or proceeding shall be brought, but within twelve years after such payment or acknowledgment, or the last of such payments or acknowledgments, if more than one was given." The 42nd section of the earlier statute, which is un- repealed, provides that no arrears of interest in respect of money charged on land are to be recovered but within six years next after the same shall have become due, or next after an acknowledgment of the same in writing shall have been given to the person entitled, or his agent, signed by the person by whom the same was payable, or his agent. Except, therefore, as to the length of time, the 40th section of the Act of the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, remains in terms unaltered. It had been held that that section applied to judgments, not only where they were sought to be enforced against the land of the debtor, but when in consequence of the nature of the assets they would not affect land, but could operate on the personal estate only.^ This is not in strict conformity with the words of the section, which speaks of money secured " by judgment, or otherwise ^ Watson V. Birch, 15 Sim. 523 ; Lord St. Leonards' Eeal Pro- perty Statutes, 2nd ed., p. 127; and Henry v. Smith, 2 Dr. & War. 391. 140 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. cliarged on the land ; " but it arises from the fact that the right against the land is extinguished when the prescribed period has expired, and a judgment creditor, therefore, seeking to enforce his claim against the personal estate after the expiration of that period, would be met by the objection that he was bringing an action to enforce a debt which under that statute had already ceased to exist. The 25th section of the 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, was to the effect, that as between any trustee holding upon an express trust and his cestui que trust, time woidd not run until there had been a conveyance for valuable consideration to a purchaser. This section was held not to apply to a mere charge of debts, which fell within the 40th section,^ but there were cases in which, though there was in form a charge, the will was construed to impose on the devisees of the land subject to it a personal obligation, which amounted to an express trust, and therefore came within the 25th section.^ To obviate the difficulties which arose from these intermediate cases it was provided by the 37 & 38 Vict. c. 57, s. 10, that after the 1st of January, 1879, no action, suit, or other proceeding, is to be brought to recover any suiij of money or legacy charged upon or payable out of any land or rent at Law or in Equity, and secured by an express trust, or to recover 1 Dickenson v. Teiisdale, 1 De G, J. & S. 52. ' Bmnwcs v. Gore, 6 H. L. Ca. 907, 961. RULE IN STERNDALE V. HANKINSON. 141 any arrears of rent or interest in respect of any sum of money or legacy so charged or payable and so secured, or any damages in respect of such arrears, except within the time within which the same could be recoverable, if there were not any such trust. This section in fact constitutes an exception to section 25, sub-section 2 of the Judicature Act, 1873, which enacts " that no claim of cestui que trust against his trustee for any property held on an express trust, or in respect of any breach of such trust, shall be held to be barred by any Statute of Limitations." A question of some practical importance has also arisen upon the Statutes of Limitations, whether when a creditor comes in to prove his debt under an order for administration, time ceases to run against him from the commencement of the action. In a case of Sterndcde v. HanJcinson^ it was held, that when a creditor on behalf of himself and all other creditors filed a bill for administration of the testa- tor's estate, every creditor had an inchoate interest in the suit from the moment of the bill being filed, to the extent of the bill being considered as a demand, and that therefore a simple contract creditor, who came in under the decree, was allowed to prove for his debt, though more than six years had elapsed 1 1 Sim. 393. Tlie case is a striking illustration of the rapidity of Chancery proceedings in the beginning of the present century, for the testator died in 1810, the creditor's suit was commenced in 1813, the usual decree was made in 1818, and an order was made upon exceptions to the Master's Report in 1827. 142 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. between the filing of the bill and the date of the decree. It was a rule adopted by Courts of Equity, when they were not bound by any Statute of Limitations, and was treated by the Vice-Chancellor as a rule of convenience ; for if it had been held otherwise, there would have been imposed upon every creditor who had the least risk of being barred by lapse of time the obhgation of himself instituting legal proceedings. But at the same time it is not very easy to see why, on principle, the mere commencement of such an action by one creditor, who, though nominally sxiing on behalf of others, has until decree the abso- lute dominion over the suit, should affect the legal status of the other creditors.^ In cases which came under the 40th section of the 3rd & 4th Wm. IV., c. 27, and which would now come under the 8th section of the 37th & 38th Yict., c. 57, there is a positive bar to all claims after the twelve years, with certain specified exceptions (the commencement of an action not being one of them); and when therefore a judgment creditor at the expiration of more than twenty years from the date of his judgment ascertained that a suit had been coramenced on behalf of the plaintiff and all the other creditors before the twenty years had expired, and that a decree had been made which was also within the prescribed period, and sought to come ia and prove his debt under that decree, it was held that he 1 Handford v. Stork; 2 S. it S. 19G. RULE IN STERNDALE V. HANKINSON. 143 was barred by the statute, as no exception which could take the case out of it was pleaded, and the right itself had become extinguished.^ These last-mentioned cases were decided upon the express terms of the statute, which bound Courts of Equity, and have no real bearing on decisions which depend upon the application of the broad principles of Equity to a still existing debt. Nothing has occurred to destroy the rule, as laid down in Sterndale v. Hankinson, with reference to any debt not within the 3rd & 4th Wm. IV. c. 27, or the 37th & 38th Yict. c. 57; although, according to the view taken by Lord St. Leonards,^ that rule must be applied with extreme caution, and " where the suit is in effect the suit of the creditor making the claim, or under which he would have a clear right to prosecute his demand, and of which he was fully aware, and where his demand was such as would not have been barred if he had himself filed the bill actually before the Court; and irrespective of the statute, he would be bound in order to avail himself of the suit to conform to the General Orders of the Court, and not to be guilty of gross laches." This view almost reduces the operation of the rule in Sterndale v. Hankinson to cases in which the parties, who could otherwise have availed themselves of the statute, are equitably estopped from raising it against a ' Berringfon v. Evans, 1 Y. & C Ex. 434 ; Lord Sf. John v. Boughton, 9 Sim. 219, and Watsoit v. Birch, 15 Sim. 523. = Eeal Property Statutes, 2nfl ed., p. 126. 144 STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. creditor, wlio had only forborne to institute proceedings himself because he had notice of an existing action, which would provide for the payment of his own debt. It is a settled rule in bankruptcy, that no debt is provable which at the date of the adjudication was barred by any Statute of Limitations ; ^ and as in cases coming within the 1 0th section of the. Judica- ture Act, 1875, the rules of bankruptcy are to be adopted as to debts and liabilities provable, and the judgment for administration is held to be equivalent to an adjudication, it would seem to follow, that the rule in Sterndale v. HanJcmson cannot apply in the case of an insolvent estate which is being adminis- tered by the High Court under that section. We have seen, that a judgment for administration in a creditor's action is a judgment for the benefit of all the creditors, who prove under it. No Statute of Limitations therefore, which merely bars the remedy, can run against the claim of a creditor, who comes in to prove a debt not statute-barred at the date of the judgment.^ It will be seen that, under the 42nd section of the 3rd & 4th Wm. IV. c. 27, no more than six years' arrears of interest can be recovered in respect of any sum charged upon land, although twenty years' arrears would be recoverable in the case of an action upon a covenant or debt upon specialty.^ 1 Ex parte Dewdney, 15 Ves. 479. ^ In re Great Rolling Stock ComjMny, 7 Ch. App. 646. ' Oreemoay v. Bromfield, 9 Hare, 201, and see Hunter v. NocJmUs, 1 Mac. & G. 640, and Round v. Bell, 30 Eeav. 123. 145 CHAPTER XII. FURTHER CONSIDERATION AND COSTS. The preceding chapters will have shown in outline the nature of the debts provable under a judgment for administration, and the order and mode in which, having regard to the rules and procedure of the Court for the time being, the assets, real and personal, are applicable for their payment. I now revert shortly to the simple form of judg- ment which I gave in the supposed case of a creditor's action, where the testator, being solvent, had left personal estate, and devised his real estate to a devisee.^ The chief clerk would in pursuance of such judg- ment make his certificate, which, after being signed and adopted by the judge and filed, would, if no summons were taken out to vary it, become binding on aU parties to the action. In that certificate, the amounts due to the respective creditors who had come in and proved their claims, for principal money and for interest computed up to its date, would be certified, as well as the amounts of the funeral and testa- ^ See pp. 8, 74, supra. 146 FURTHER CONSIDERATION AND COSTS. mentary expenses, which are generally allowed to the executor as items in his accounts. The certificate would also state the result of the account which had been taken of the receipts and pay- ments by or on behalf of the executor in respect of the personal estate, and the balance due to or from him (as the case might be) upon the footing of such account. It would then give the particulars of the outstanding personal estate. And assuming that the personal estate so ascertained appeared insufficient for the payment of the debts, the certificate would then go on to answer the several inquiries and accounts which were directed as to the real estate and its incumbrances ; it would next state the particulars of the sale of the real estate and the payment into Court of the purchase moneys to the separate account, and its subsequent investment to the like account in Government securities. Such a certificate would, of course, be somewhat different, as regarded the debts and liabiHties and the interest due upon them, if it related to the administration of the estate of a deceased person who died insolvent after the 1st November, 1875. The first judgment having been thus worked out in chambers, the action would come on to be heard on further consideration, and by the order then made the Court would direct the balance (if any) found due from the executor to be paid into Court to the credit of the action, and to be invested. Taxation woidd then be directed of the costs of all parties ORDEE, ON FURTnER CONSIDERATION. 147 (those of the executor as between solicitor and client). Subsequent interest (the estate being solvent) would be ordered to be computed upon the debts as from the date of the chief clerk's certificate, and the total amount due in respect of them to be certified. Then so much of the several funds in Court, as with any cash or money on deposit, would be sufficient to pay the costs and the debts, and the balance (if any) due to the executor, would be directed to be realized by the sale of any stock standing to the general credit of the action, and by the sale of a sufiicient pai^t of the invested proceeds of the real estate. Out of the moneys thus available there would be ordered to be paid, first the costs to the respective solicitors of the parties and the balance (if any) due to the executor, and then the amounts certified to be due to the creditors respectively. Any part of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate not required would be left or placed to the same separate account, subject to provision for legacy or succession duty, with hberty to apply ; or, if the devisee were competent, might, subject to Hke provisions, be directed to be transferred or paid over to him. If the above funds proved insufficient for the pay- ment of all the costs and debts, there would be a direction that the mesne rents and profits of the real estate received since the testator's death by the devisee should also be applied for that purpose, and an account of them would accordingly be directed, L 2 148 FURTHER CONSIDERATION 'AND COSTS. and upon their amount being ascertained and paid into Court, they would also be applied in making good the deficiency. If it were doubtful whether the estate would or would not prove insolvent, it was the usual practice to draw up the order in the alternative, either direct- ing payment of the debts, or an apportionment of the assets, so far as they would extend, amongst the respective creditors, as the case might be. There must, I presume, be a somewhat similar procedure in a like case, where the testator or intestate died after the 1st November, 1875, though as the question then may involve much more serious difference, it may be necessary to provide for the alternative in an earlier stage of the action. The efiect of the order on further consideration is to give the creditors whose debts had been certified by the chief clerk's certificate, a vested interest in the moneys directed to be paid to them, and if their debts were not paid in full, in any other moneys, which might become subsequently distributable ; and from the date of the certificate any creditor who had not proved would primd facie be excluded from the benefit of the order, and would not afterwards be allowed to go in and prove his debt, unless he could make out a special case and submitted to such terms as the Court might think fit to impose.^ Subject to this possible chance of having his right, so far as it had not been actually worked out, divested 1 Brown v. Lake, 1 D. G. & S. 150, and supra, p. 56. KIGHTS OF CREDITORS UNDER ORDER. 149 pro tanto by the admission of other creditors, each creditor, who had proved, was thenceforth entitled to his proportion of the fund appHcable for the pay- ment of the debts. Hence, when a fund in Court had been ordered to be distributed amongst a body of ascertained creditors, in payment, as far as it would go, of their respective debts, and many years afterwards a further fund became distributable, and advertisements having been issued a part only of the ascertained creditors came in to claim, it was held that only the proportion of the further fund, which the debts of those who claimed at the subsequent period bore to the entirety of the ascertained debts, could be paid, and that the rest must be retained in Court.^ " The creditors," says L. J. Baggallay, delivering the judgment of the Court, " who have been discovered will get everything to which they became entitled under the decree and order of the Court, and we can give them no more. And the remainder of the fund, which belonged and belongs absolutely to the other creditors judicially ascertained and declared, must remain until some persons entitled come forward to claim it. If A. chooses to leave his property in Court, it does not thereby become the property of B." The costs of an administration action, though, as a general rule, payable out of assets, are by no means necessarily payable out of the same assets as the ^ Ashley v. Ashley, 4 Ch. D. 757. 150 FURTHJEIl CONHIDEIIATION AND COSTS. debts of the testator. Their mode of payment may be regulated by the terms of the will, but they are held not to come under the word " debts," ^ though the words "testamentary expenses" would include them. 2 Where a testator has given no direction, express or implied, respecting them, they would be ■paid primarily out of the general personal estate, even though the effect of the suit might be to benefit a devisee of the realty,^ except when the real and personal estate are blended together in one mixed fund, in which case the costs are generally apportioned between them;* or where special costs are incurred with respect to some particular part of the real estate, which in that case has to bear its own burden.* When there is no personal estate, and the ques- tions decided in the administration action are between the heh and the devisee, so that both derive benefit from it, it depends upon the special circumstances of each case whether the costs are to be borne pro ratd,^ or whether the descended estate is to be applied in priority. '^ The same rule is applicable as between several devisees. 1 Stringer v. Harper, 26 Beav. 585. " Harloe v. Harloe, 20 Eq. 471 ; MUps v. Harrhon, 9 Ch. App. 316 ; Penny v. Penny, 11 Ch. D. 440. 3 Ripley v. Moysey, 1 Keen, 578 ; Pickford v. Brown, 2 K. & J. 436. " Christian v. Foster, 2 Phill. 161. ^ Barnwell v. Iremonger, 1 Dr. & 8. 255. « Bagot V. Legge, 2 Dr. & S. 259; Jarkson v. Pease, 19 Eq. 96. ' Scmdars v. Millar, 25 Beav. 154; Roiv v. Row, 7 Eq. 414. COSTS OF ADMINIS'I'RATION ACTION. 151 Where the estate proves deficient for payment of the creditors in full, the whole of it belongs of course exclusively to them, and the fund administered being thus a creditors' fund, it has been considered in- eqiiitable that the general body of creditors should take advantage of the exertions of the particular creditor who brought the action, and through whose instrumentality the fund has been recovered, without paying him all his costs. Where, therefore, in a creditor's action for administration, the estate turns out to be insolvent, the plaintiff has always been held entitled to his costs as between solicitor and client.^ The same principle does not apply where the action is brought by one of the next of kin, or by a legatee, who in the event has no interest in the fund ; but it has been held to apply in the case of a creditor who obtained the conduct of an action originally commenced by a legatee or next of kin.^ The order on further consideration becomes of course of a much more complicated character, where the rehef given by the earlier judgment was of a more special nature. For instance, there would be under such an order proper directions for working- out the result of any particular accounts or enquiries as to interest, profits, or otherwise ; and where a receiver had been appointed, there would be the necessary directions either for his continuance, or his discharge after passing his final accounts. And in 1 Thomas v. Jones, 1 Dr. & Sm. 1.34, 136. ^ Richaitlson v. Riclmnlson, 14 Cli. I). 611. 152 FURTHER CONSIDERATION AND COSTS. cases where the estate was solvent the order would generally go on to distribute the remaining assets amongst the various parties beneficially interested, according to their respective rights, and would adjust those respective rights inter se by marshalling or otherwise, wherever they had been disturbed by the mode in which the debts had been paid. But this would more properly belong to the administration of assets in favour of legatees and devisees, which does not come within the range of my present subject. INDEX. A. Action. — See Administration. Account usual against personal representatives, 10. with wilful neglect and default, 51. principle of, ib. how obtained after judgment, 52. under Judicature Acts, ib. by defendants, 53. Administration, action for, assigned to Chancery Division, 4. of personal estate by single creditor, 8. on behalf of all the creditors, 9. judgment in, 8, 9. ^ by specific incumbrancer, 39, 40. creditor in respect of partnership debts, 42 — 47 official liquidator, 48, 49. of real estate, 74. must be on behalf of all creditors, 78. Administrator. — See Personal Representative. Alienation by heir or devisee before action brought, 64 — 67. what constitutes it, 66, 67. Annuities, valuation of, in Bankruptcy, 115, 116. in Equity, 116. Appointed, real and personal estate in what order applicable for debts, 86. Assets, meaning of, 4, 5. personal, what, 4. real, what, 5. legal, what, 5, 6. 154 INDEX. Assets, equitable, what, 7. different Isiuds of, 79. order of application of, in payment of debts, 74 — 87. general personal estate, see Peesonal Estate. real estate devised in trust to pay debts, 81. descended, ih. or personal estate, charged, 82. pecuniary legacies, ib. residuary real estate, specific devises and specific bequests, 86. real and personal estate appointed, ib. rents and profits, 87. marshalling of. — See Maeshallins. B. Bankruptcy, rules of, as to secured creditors, 103 — 107. debts and liabilities provable, 113, 114. valuation of annuities, 115, 116. of future and contingent liabilities, ib. debts, statute-barred, not provable in, 144. C. Ceetipioatb, chief clerk's, 145 — 6. Chanceet Division. — See Administeation. Ohaeges for payment of debts, what constitutes, 68, 69. what does not, 69, 70. how carried into effect under 22 & 23 Vict, u. 35, 70—72. whether on corpus or rents, 72, 73. as between tenant for life and remainder- man, 73. Chaemng order. — See Judgments. Class inquiries, what, 77. Companies Act, 1862.— See Specialty Debts. INDEX. 155 Contingent liabilities. —See Bankkuptot. Contribution, rule of, 91 . Costs of administration action, how payable, 149. not included in word " debts," 150. but in testamentary expenses, ib. when estate insolvent, 151. Ceeditoks. — See Administration. secured, who are, 31, 100 under Bankruptcy Act, 1869, 100. 10th sect, of Judicature Act, 1875, 101. previous rule of Equity with reference to, 102. rules and procedure of Bankruptcy with reference to, 103—107. unsecured, who ^e, 31. rights of, in Bankruptcy, 109, 110. are they affected by 10th sect, of Judi- cature Act, 1875 ? 110—112. rights of, against estate of deceased partner, 42 — 46. out of what assets paid, 46. distinction between joint and separate credi- tors when not made, 48. undistributed assets, 56. under order on further consideration, 149. Cbown debts. — See Debts. effect of 32 & 33 Vict. t. 46 upon, 25. D. Debts, paid pari passu out of equitable assets, 7. what provable under judgment for administration, 13. order of priority in which payable, 13. Crown debts, 13, 25. having priority under particular statutes, 13. judgment. — See Judgments. rank equally, inter se, 14. registration of, why necessary, ib. recovered against personal representative of deceased debtor, 15. Decrees and Orders of the Courts of Equity in the nature of, 14, 15. results arising from it, 16, 17. recognizances, what, 17. 156 INDEX. Debts, by specialty. — See Specialty Debts. what are, 17. how created, ib. simple contract and unregistered judgments, 19. real estate liable to them, 62. voluntary bonds or covenants, 19 — 21. effect of domicil on payment of, 28. personal estate primary fund for payment of, 57. partnership, how payable. — See Ckeditoes. land aliened, when not liable for, 64, 66. what provable in Bankruptcy, 113. admission of, by personal representative, 8. what effect in keeping debt alive against devisee, 130. Deoebes of Courts of Equity. — See Debts. Delivery in execution, what, 36. Domicil, how far personal estate follows the law of, 27, 28 . effect of foreign, 27 — 29. as to discharge of debts, 28. priority between creditors, ib. E. Elegit, writ of, what is, 34. its effect on lands of debtor, 34, 35. under 1 & 2 Vict. c. 110, 35. when not necessary, 39. Equitable execution, what, 37 — 39. ExBCUTOK. — See Peesonal Kepeesentativb. F. Fi. Fa., writ of. — See Judgments. Feaudulbnt Devises, Statute of, 59. Fuethee consideration, orders on, 146 — 148. effect of, 148. rights of creditors under, 149. Funeral expenses, 12. FuTUBE debts and liabilities. — See Bahkkuptcy. INDEX. 157 G. Garnishee order. — See Judoments. H. Heie, inquiry as to, 77. devise to, 81. Inquiries, class. — See Class. Interest, what, postponed to voluntary bond or covenant, 21. on debts, 26, 27. how affected by Judicature Acts, 117. payment of, effect of, as to Statute of Limitations, 129. J. Judgment, form of, in creditor's action for administration of personal estate, 9. no exception of specifically bequeathed personalty, ih. does not affect powers of personal representative, 10. form of, in action by specific incumbrancer, 40. in action by creditor of deceased partner, 46, 47. in creditors' action for administration of real estate, 74—77. where debtor died intestate, 76. inquiries directed in, 77. Judgments. — See Debts. creditors by, not affected by 32 & 33 Vict. u. 46, 25. how can obtain a specific charge, 32. by seizure under writ of execution, ib. by service of garnishee order, ib. by charging order, 33. how made charge on real estate, 34, 35. under writ of elegit. — See Elegit. 1 & 2 Vict. >;. 110, 35. 27 & 28 Vict. c. 112, ib. delivery in execution, what, 35, 36. equitable execution, what, 37 — 39. 158 INDEX. JuDioATUKE Act, 1875, eectiou 10, effect of, 99. to what estates it applies, 100. construction of, as regards rights of secured creditors. — See Ceeditoes. to what extent it aSecta unsecured cre- ditors. — See Ceeditoes. suggested construction of section, 107, 108. diiEculties as to its construction, 108 — 112. as to debts and liabilities provable, 112 —114. as to valuation of annuities, future and contingent liabilities, 115, 116. effect of, on administration of estate of deceased partner, 117. effect of, on computation of interest, ib. effect of, on rule in Sterndale v. Han- kinson, 144. Jurisdiction in Chancery over assets, origin of, 2, 3. Just allowances. — See Peesonal Eepeesentative. L. Lapse, effect of, as to share in residuary personal estate, 80. as to real estate charged with debts, 82. Leoaoies, pecuniary. — See Assets. Liabilities. — See Bankeuptot. Limitations, Statutes of, objects of, 119. to what they respectively relate, ib. points oonunon to all, 120. distinction between statutes destroying right, 121. barring remedy, 121, 123, 134. which must be pleaded, 121. when Equity iirst bound by, 122. how far she acted by analogy to, ib. statute of James I., v.- 16, 123. who may set it up, 125. INDEX. 159 Limitations, Statutes of, cause of action, what, 125, 126. effect of fraud, 126. what constitutes new promise, 127, 128. can it be made to a third person, 128. payment of interest, effect of, 129. payment of interest by personal representative, will it keep debt alive against devisee, 130. statute of 3 & 4 Wm. IV. o. 42, 134. what amounts to acknowledgment within it, 135. who is "party liable," 135 — 138. of 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 27, 138. of 37 & 38 Viet. c. 57, ib. as to express trusts, 140. effect of commencement of creditor's action, 141 — 143. effect of judgment for administration, 144. Liquidator, official. — See Administkation. Locke King's Act, 92. construction of, 93 — 94. statute of 30 & 31 Vict. c. 69, 94. construction of, 95. 40 & 41 Vict. c. 34, 97. M. Marshalling, doctrine of, 88, 89. principle and requisites of, 89. not in favour of charity, 91. by statute-barred creditor, qucere, 131 — 133. Mason v. Bogg, rule in, 102. Mesne rents and profits, when applied for debts, 87. O. Outstanding personal estate. — See Personal Estate. P. Partners, surviving, when necessary parties to action for administration of estate of deceased partner, 47. and since Judicature Acts, ib. 160 INDEX. Partnership debts, how far joint and several, 44 — 46. — And see Creditors. Personal estate, specifically bequeathed, not excepted in judgment for administration of personal estate, 9. outstanding, directions as to, 10. general, primary fund for debts, 57, 80. how exonerated, 80. how affected by domicil. — See DOMIOIL. effect of lapse of share of residue of. — See Lapse. Personal representative, is in position of gratuitous bailee, 10. just allowances entitled to, ib. his powers not superseded by judgment, ib. when charged with wilful neglect and default, 51. special forms of relief against, 53. in what cases not necessary party to action, 53—56. in what cases general administrator necessary party, 50. executor de son tort not sufficient, ii. retainer by. — See Retainer. powers of, how affected by Statute of Limitations, 125. B. Heal estate, application of, for payment of debts, 57. descended estate, where bond or covenant binding the heirs, 57, 58. Statute of Wills, 58. Fraudulent Devises, 59. Sir S. Eomilly's, 60. 11 Geo. IV. & 1 Wm. IV. o. 47, 61. 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c. 104, ib. effect of, 63, 64. alienation by heir or devisee, effect of, 64. what constituted, 64, 65. deposit of title deeds by heir or devisee, effect of, 65—67. statute 32 & 33 Vict. c. 46, 67. order of application of real estate in payment of debts. — See Assets. residuary, specific, 83^86. INDEX. 161 Rents, arrears of. — See Specialty Debt. effect of 32 & 33 Vict, c 46, 26. See Mesne Rents and Profits. RESiDnARY devise, specific. — See Real Estate. Retainer, right of, 29, 30. how defeated, 30. S. Seouked, — See Creditok. Simple contract debts. — See Debts. Specialty debts. — See Debts. those in which heirs are bound, 18. debt for arrears of rent, ranked as, 19. assignee for value of voluntary bond ranked as specialty creditor, 24. effect of statute 32 & 33 Vict. u. 46, 24, 2.5, 67. liability to contribute under Companies Act, 1862, is in the nature of, 18, 25. Specific bequests. — See Assets, Judgment. Specific devisee. — See Assets. Stebndale v. Hankinson, rule in, 141 — 144. how affected by 3 & 4 Wm. IV. c, 27, 142. Testamentary expenses not mentioned in judgment for administration, 9. what, 12. include costs of administration action, 150. Trusts for payment of debts, 68. — And see Assets. U. Unsecured.— See Creditor. V. Valuation.— See Annuities, Bankruptcy. M 162 INDEX. Voluntary bonds and covenants, 19 — 21. in what order paid, 19. ' reason of preference over legatees and appointees, 20, 21. sufficient to maintain creditor's suit, 21, 41. preferred to interest, when, 21. — See Specialty Debt. VoLDNTAKY bills of exchange and promissory notes. Are they payable out of assets? 21—23. assignee of debt, action by, 41. W. Wilful neglect and default, what, .51. accoimt with. — See Account. THE END. STEVENS ANT) niOHAHDSON, PRINTERS, 5, GREAT QUEEN STREET, W.C.