Case Name: Gregory Lynch, Administrator (Estate of Charles J. Drumm) v. Elizabeth A. Skelly et al.
Court: Connecticut Superior Court
Jurisdiction: Connecticut
Decision Date: 1951-04-10
Citations: 17 Conn. Supp. 225
Docket Number: File No. 18048
Parties: Gregory Lynch, Administrator (Estate of Charles J. Drumm) v. Elizabeth A. Skelly et al.
Judges: 
Reporter: Connecticut Supplement
Volume: 17
Pages: 225–226

Head Matter:
Gregory Lynch, Administrator (Estate of Charles J. Drumm) v. Elizabeth A. Skelly et al.
Superior Court New Haven County
File No. 18048
Memorandum filed April 10, 1951
James T. Healey, of Waterbury, for the Plaintiff.
Alfred L. Fin\elstein, of Waterbury, for the Defendants.

Opinion:
MURPHY, J.
The plaintiff has sued to recover certain moneys transferred by the decedent in his lifetime to one of the defendants and by her distributed with the other defendants after his death.
No inventory was filed in the Probate Court before suit was instituted and the claim upon which recovery is sought was not inventoried. The plaintiff has admitted these facts in his answer to the second and third special defenses of the defendants.
"In case the estate belonged to the intestate, the administrator could not prosecute his claim . . . until it was inventoried." Gold's Appeal, Kirby 100, 103. "Such inventory is the basis and foundation upon which all the other proceedings prescribed by statute, or requisite to be had, rest and depend." Frisbie v. Preston, 67 Conn. 448, 455.
It is a condition precedent to the institution of suit by an administrator that he file an inventory of the estate with the Probate Court and that it include the claim upon which suit is instituted.
Judgment will be entered for the defendants upon the pleadings.