Anderson v. Miller

29 Ky. 568, 6 J.J. Marsh. 568, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 257
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 19, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ky. 568 (Anderson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Miller, 29 Ky. 568, 6 J.J. Marsh. 568, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 257 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Judge Underwood,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon the death of George Stigall, his widow, Ann Stigall, and Jonn Wilkerson, were appointed his administratrix and administrator. Whereupon they executed an administration bond with John Kincaid and Hezekiah Fares, their sureties, dated in 1816.

Miller and his wife, and Eliza Jane, a.daughter of [569]*569George Stigall, deceased, filed their bill in 1825, against Ann Stigall, who at the filing of the bill was Ann Anderson, (she having married since the istration granted to her) and her husband James W. Anderson; also against William Faris and Henry Baughman, the executors of the will of John Wilkerson, then deceased, who was administrator, ds aforesaid; and likewise against Kincaid the surety, and the other distributees of said George Stigall, for the purpose of having a settlement of the estate, and obtaining their distributable share.

Hezekiah Faris was not made a defendant, and as a reason for not having done it, the bill alleges that he died insolvent in Texas, a proyince of Mexico, and that no administration had been granted to any one.

It seems that Ann Anderson, the administratrix, died pending the suit. That before her death, and whilst she was a feme covert, she made a will, devising her estate to Wilkerson Anderson, the issue of the second marriage; and appointed her husband, James W. Anderson, her executor. From said Ann’s will, it appears that the estate devised to her son Wilkerson, consisted, in part, at least, of a tract of land which her father, John Wilkerson, had devised to her, in addition to all her interest in her father’s estate. Other lands are mentioned, but how she derived her title, is not stated.

By a supplemental bill, Wilkerson Anderson is made a party defendant. It is alleged in the supplement, that the estate of said Ann, either passed by her will or descended to her heirs, of whom the complainant Eliza was one. James W. Anderson, the executor, is made a party; and in answer to a call on him, he states that his testatrix (as he was informed) had sufficient money and personal property coming to her from her father’s estate, to satisfy any demand against her; and he prays that the complainants may be compelled to resort first to that fund, before touching the realty devised by her will to Wilkerson Anderson.

The accounts were referred to auditors for a settlement and repórt.

From their report it seems that administrator and administratrix were chargeable with $523 05 cents, [570]*570on account of the sales and property belonging to the intestate, with interest from the 5th of October, 1819, and $803 for the hire of slaves, with interest on two-thirds thereof, from the 5th of October, 1819, and interest on the residue, from the 1st of January, 1820. The auditors charge for the hire of slaves, an additional sum of $107 50 cents, with interest on two thirds from 5th October, 1819, and on the balance from 1st January, 1820. Some other items are reported which we deem it useless to notice. Of the sums reported the complainants were entitled to the sixth part.

Decree,which directs prop-hands'ofan administrator taken to *° satisfy the de-faleation of mi^istrator8U erroneous.

[570]*570The court decided in favor of the complainants $321 82, to be levied of the goods and chattels, in the hands of John W. Butcher, administrator de bonis non of the estate of George Stigall deceased, (said Butcher having been appointed alter the death of Ann Anderson, and made party to the suit) and in the hands of James W. Anderson, executor of the estate of Ann Anderson, deceased; also (of) the goods and chattels in the hands of William Paris, and Henry Baughman, executors of the last will of John Wilkerson, deceased, which remain in their hands unadministered; also of the estate, goods and chattels descended from Ann Anderson, deceased, to the defendant Wilkerson Anderson, and of the estate, goods, and chattels of the defendant John Kincaid, &c.”

The decree then provides that if Kincaid is compelled to pay the money, in that event he shall have a decree over against the executors of John Wilkerson, he having induced Kincaid to become surety; and this branch of the cause is retained and kept open, and made dependent upon the collection of the money. Time is given Wilkerson Anderson to open the decree after his arrival at full age. The refunding bond executed by M. C. Miller, is approved, and costs given against all the defendants except the guardian of the infant distributees.

The foregoing decree is erroueous in several respects, and must be reversed.

So much of the decree as directs a levy upon the goods and chattels in the hands of Butcher, is clearly erroneous. The amount of the $321 82 cents is made [571]*571up of items with which Butcher never had any concern, and if there was property in his hands belonging to the estate of his intestate, we do not perceive reasonable ground upon which that property could be taken to satisfy the defalcations of the deceased administrator and administratrix. Such a course might operate to the destruction of half the distribu-ttibie fund. To produce such a result it would only be necessary for the first administrator to waste half the assets and then die, let the administrator de bonis non reduce to possession the other half, and when a decree is obtained for the half wasted, have it satisfied out of the property in the hands of the administrator de bonis non. If a deceased administrator has wasted the assets, it constitutes a personal charge upon him and his sureties for their value. If the administrator de bonis non is compelled to pay this decree, he would have no remedy against the representatives of the deceased administrator and administratrix, to recover the amount of sales from them; see Slaughter &c. vs. Froman and wife, V. Mon. 20; and Graves vs. Downey, III. Mon. 356.

When there a<l-bounTin the same bond, ea°b is liable uteaTfor'the* acta of the other.

This last cited case shews likewise, that the admin-trator de bonis non could have no remedy, against a previous administrator, for money collected for the hire of slaves belonging to the estate.

We approve so much of the decree as holds the executor of the administratrix, and the executors the administrator Wiikerson and John Kincaid,jointly responsible, to the extent of assets left by the intes-tateStigali. Such responsibility results from the nature of the administration bond, and is clearly settled in the cases of Moore &c. vs. Waller’s heirs, I. Marsh, 491, and South’s heirs vs. Hoy’s heirs, III. Mon.95. This last was a case founded upon an executor’s bond, but the same principle growing out of the statute regulating the condition of the bonds of executors and administrators, applies with equal force to the bonds of the latter, and where there are two administrators bound in the same bond, as here, renders each liable to distributees for the acts of the other. The case of Moore’s administrator vs. Tandy, &c. III. Bibb, 98, only shews that a devastavit by one administrator will not fix a devastavit on his co-administrator, accord[572]*572ing to the principles of the common law, although may ^ave executed an administration bond jointly.

Hire or profits of slaves accruing while trator «tains (and has gal right to

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29 Ky. 568, 6 J.J. Marsh. 568, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-miller-kyctapp-1831.