Arnold's Ex'rs v. Arnold's Adm'r

50 Ky. 81, 11 B. Mon. 81, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 23, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 50 Ky. 81 (Arnold's Ex'rs v. Arnold's Adm'r) 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
Arnold's Ex'rs v. Arnold's Adm'r, 50 Ky. 81, 11 B. Mon. 81, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 24 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was formerly here under the name of Arnold's Heirs vs Arnold's Adm'r., &c., and the decree rendered in 1847, was reversed in an opinion reported in 8 B. Monroe, 202. From that opinion it appears that the decree then before the Court was reversed only because it gave to the widow of W. W. Arnold who had •died before his mother, dower in the home plantation in which he had by the will of his father John Arnold, only a vested remainder to take effect after the life estate devised to his mother. Some other matters were [82]*82noticed in which this Court approved of the decree, but all remaining questions were waived as not being finally settled by the decree, and a single suggestion was made as to the time when T. Arnold should make the election to take certain land at its value. On the return of the cause, and entry of the mandate, a decree was made to the effect that the former decree'be set aside as to the assignment of dower to the widow of W. W. Arnold, and as to the election required of T. Arnold as to which there was a modification accordant with the suggestion of this Court, and that in all other respects the former decree should stand, and the commissioner proceed as therein directed. In the decree thus reinstated, the Court had declared that W. W. Arnold was entitled to two-eighth parts of the proceeds of certain lands in Pulaski county, of which the will of John Arnold had directed a sale and a division of the proceeds among all his children, and also to two-eighth parts of the slaves which the testator had devised to his wife for life, to be divided on her death among all of his children, and the same decree further declared that these interests (one of which was decided to belong to W. W. Arnold in his own right as devisee, and the other by purchase and assignment from a devisee,) were subject to and included in the mortgage to A. Doty, the validity of which is recognized in the former opinion; and this interest of two-eighths subject to the life estate was directed to be sold for the satisfaction of the mortgage.

At a subsequent term, a decree was made, that it appearing that the Executor of John Arnold was unwilling to sell the Pulaski land, the same should be sold by the commissioner, who was also directed to sell the remainder in trust in the home plantation devised to W. W. Arnold, subject to the life estate of his mother. And at another term the commissioner having reported that he had made the sales of lands and slaves as directed, and having also reported upon the various other matters referred to him, he was by a decretal order directed to collect the proceeds of the sales made under [83]*83former decrees, and to “distribute the same according to-the rights and claims of the parties entitled thereto.”

A writ of error held not to be barred by a previous writ of error in the same cause, where there had been other decrees and proceedings, tho’ the same error might have been adjudicated, but were not considered or decided upon the former hearing.

The present writ of error is prosecuted for the reversal of so much of these decrees as directs a sale of the'Pulaski lands and of the slaves, for the benefit or as a part of the estate of W. W. Arnold, and for the reversal of the last decree, because in directing a distribution of the proceeds of these sales, it does not define the rights of the parties entitled thereto. The defendant in error pleads in-bar of this writ in substance, that as to a portion of the matters involved, the plaintiff prosecuted a former writ and the same was heard on the merits in this Court, and the decree was reversed as to the dower and election as above stated, and as to all other matters was not reversed, and that the opinion' of this Court was entered'as the decree of the Circuit' Court in which the cause was . redocketed, and is still pending, and that no final order or decree has been since rendered therein. The replication denies that there has been a former adjudication of this Court as to any of the matters complained of, and avers that the decrees sought to be reversed are final, and refers to the record by which the points in issue must be determined. Upon looking into the case as formerly presented, we find that one of the errors assigned questioned the propriety of decreeing that W. W. Arnold was entitled at his death to one-fourth of the slaves and 'of the Pulaski land, and in directing a sale thereof'as directed, which in fact comprises the errors now assigned with respect to the interest of W. W. Arnold in said land and slaves and with respect to the sale thereof, except that the sale of the Pulaski lands which was by the former decree directed to be made by J. Arnold’s Executor, was by the subsequent decree directed to be made by the Court’s commissioner, which is not complained-of. But it is clear that the question thus made in the case as formerly before us was not only not decided, but was not considered, and that if noticed at all it was ■then regarded as among the questions referred to as not [84]*84being properly before the' Court for decision, because' not finally disposed of by the decree then under revision, (8 B. Monroe, 206.) That this Court did not intend to affirm the decree as to this question is perfectly Certain. Because after noticing and deciding several' questions without noticing this, or saying any thing Which- could bear upon it, the following language is Used: “The other questions which have been made,Can not be considered5 Under the decree rendered5.-” And although it be' conceded that' the following sentence apparently intended to show why those other questions could not be considered,- applies only to so much of the decree as directs the Commissioner to ascertain and: report facts, and not to so much as settles the interest of W.-W. Arnold in certain property, and directs it to be sole} for a specific purpose, still the fact remains that, the Court did' not consider or decide upon this part of the decree, or at most that it only decided that this part of the decree was not final, and therefore not the proper subject of revision in the then existing state of the’ record.-

If it be conceded that under the general practice and' doctrines of this Court,, the decree might or even*should have been considered as final so far as it directed a sale' of the Pulaski land and two-eighths of the slaves, and determined the interest of W. W. Arnold in the proceeds, and that the question involved was therefore sufficiently presented for the'consideration of this Court,it Would1 not follow and cannot be admitted that the party is forever afterwards precluded froto making the satoe question,- when the' Court did not in fact decide it, but either' intentionally or inadvertently waived it as not being properly presented by the decree. The utmost effect that can in justice be given to this waivor' to the decision as to the nature of the decree upon* which it is supposed to have been founded, is that the*party is precluded from making the same question upon the same state of the record, and until the matters supposed to have been interlocutory only in the first decree [85]*85aré finally carried out and' acted on- by the Court.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ky. 81, 11 B. Mon. 81, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnolds-exrs-v-arnolds-admr-kyctapp-1850.