Court Opinion

ID: 8315825
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 20:01:08.913497+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:55.964577
License: Public Domain

By the Maryland law of 1798, ch. 101, c. 8, § 17, “Judgments and decrees against the deceased shall be wholly discharged before any part of other claims.” “ But no executor or administrator shall be bound to discover what judgments have been passed against the deceased, unless in the high court of chancery or the general court of the shire, or the court of the county where the deceased last resided.” Id. ch. 101, c. 9, § 1. “ The voucher, or proof, of a judgment or decree, shall be a short copy thereof, under seal, attested by the clerk or register of the court where it was obtained, who shall certify that there is no entry or proceeding in the court to show that the said judgment or decree hath been satisfied.”
The difficulty which an administrator must have in ascertaining what judgments have been rendered before justices of the peace, (of which there is no record, technically speaking,) and of which, the justices in Maryland, in 1798, did not keep dockets, so as to avoid a devastavit; and such judgments being only primá facie evidence of debt, liable to be disputed upon the plea of nil debit, affords strong ground to believe that the legislature did not contemplate such judgments when they were passing the Testamentary Act of 1798.
This belief is corroborated by the nature of the voucher which the plaintiff must produce to the Orphans’ Court, and which it is impossible to procure of a justices’ judgment.
For these reasons the Court is of opinion, (nem. con.) that the sentence of the Orphans’ Court should be reversed.