Barnes v. Crain

8 Gill 391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 8 Gill 391 (Barnes v. Crain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Crain, 8 Gill 391 (Md. 1849).

Opinion

Frick, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

Samuel Bond, by his last will and testament, bequeathed to his grandniece, Mary C. B. Barnes, a pecuniary legacy of $3,000, and also one-fourth of his slaves. Two of the co-executors of the will having died, John Barnes, the surviving executor, (and the father and guardian of the legatee,) passed his first and final administration account, with the orphans court, by which, as guardian, he came to the possession of the said $3,000, and the further sum of $2,337.50, the estimated value of the slaves so bequeathed to his daughter.

[396]*396Mary C. B. Barnes intermarried with William P. Compton, and both Compton and wife aflerwards died, leaving Barnes Compton (one of the complainants,) their only child and heir at law, and John Barnes, the grandfather, was duly appointed his guardian.

The said John Barnes, the guardian, some few years after, also died, leaving the defendants, Richard Barnes and Robert Fergusson, his executors, who, in that character, came to the possession of his estala.

Peter W. Crain and Henry G. S. Key, the complainants, then sued out letters of administration upon the estate of Mary C. B. Compton, and, in that right, uniting with them Barnes Compton, (for whom they sue as his next friends,) they file the present bill of complaint.

The bill admits, that Barnes, the guardian, accounted to Compton and wife for her proportion of the estimated value of the slaves, but charges that he never paid to them, ia whole or in part, the legacy of $>3,000, which is now sought to be recovered by these complainants.

The bill further charges, that as the next, friends of Barnes Compton, the complainants, Crain and Key, applied to the defendants to pay the aforesaid legacy, but that they refused to do so, because of their doubt whether the same could be accounted for and paid over to any other than an administrator of the said Mary C. B. Compton; and that they, thereupon, sued out letters of administration on her estate, to secure the defendants, and afford them the necessary indemnity against future responsibility for any sum which (hey may be decreed to pay, either to Barnes Compton, the minor,or to them, as administrators of the mother, Mary C. B. Compton.

The bill charges, also, that in a certain book of account, or memorandum, in the possession of said executors of Barnes, the entries importing the indebtedness of their testator, will be found, intended by him as the evidence and acknowledgment of his continued liability for said legacy, in the event of his death, and concludes with a prayer for such relief as equity may require.

[397]*397The answer admitting the bequest by Samuel Bond, the grandfather, the marriage and successive deaths stated in the bill, the birth and minority of Barnes Compton, and the sufficiency of the estate of the testator, referring to the book of accounts invoked in the bill, (which is produced as a part of the evidence,) and to other testimony to be produced by them, avers that the legacy has been paid, if not the whole, at least in part, to Compton, (he husband of the legatee, in his lifetime, and insists, that no such relief ought to be granted, as is prayed by the bill.

Before we enquire whether this defence is sustained by the testimony submitted, we proceed first to dispose of the óbjections which have been taken to the form and character of the proceeding.

It has been contended, that there is no jurisdiction in this case in a court of equity, and that full relief might be administered at law.

It is ordinarily true, as a general proposition, that where there is effectual and complete remedy at law, and no ground is shown for going into equity, a court of chancery will not entertain a bill. 1 H. & G., 221, Drury vs. Conner. But one of the most important functions of a court of chancery, is the care of the rights and the property of infants, and the jurisdiction of these courts to superintend the administration of assets, and decree distribution among legatees and distributees, is now fully established. 1 Story’s Eq., sec. 502. Every guardian, however appointed, is under the superintendance and control of the court of chancery, and may be there held responsible for his conduct, upon application of the infant by prochein ami. 1 John. Ch. Cas., 99, and 2 P. Wms., 107, Eyre vs. The Countess of Shaftshury. And a bill in equity may be filed during the infancy, and the court will hear any one on behalf of the infant. Macpherson on Infants, 115, 348.

In this character, these parties, Crain and Key, as the next friends of the ward, first applied to the appellants to account for said legacy j and the payment being declined, on the ground that, in that character, they could not indemnify the executors [398]*398of Barnes, they sued out these letters of administration, as a sufficient, security to the appellants, in accounting for and paying to them, in that character, the legacy due- by their testator, and which, when recovered, Barnes Compton, the ward, will be entitled to receive from their hands.

It is thus a bill filed by the representatives of the ward, against the executors of a guardian, in whose hands the estate of the infant remained unaccounted for at his death. It claims the liquidation of an account over which the court of chancery, in the lifetime of Barnes, had original jurisdiction, and full power to afford redress. The intervention of a remedy at common law, against the representatives of Barnes, since his. decease, cannot be made to control the original relief which chancery had the power to afford; and the case is still essentially that of a ward seeking relief in chancery, against the perversion of a trust in the hands of the guardian, for which his estate is responsible.

The argument of the appellants’ counsel is, that as the right of action at law, for the recovery of this legacy on the executor’s bond, is complete and undoubted, and as our acts of Assembly give this right to sue and recover legacies at law, the resort to chancery is excluded. But where the authority and jurisdiction of the court of chancery is original and established, it does not result that such jurisdiction is ousted by a statutory provision that gives to courts of law power over the same subject. And the case of Drury vs. Conner, 1 H. & G., 220, before referred to, shows distinctly, that chancery will entertain a bill which, on its face, discloses a complete remedy at law, where sufficient ground is shown for going into equity. And such grounds, we apprehend, are sufficiently shown by the facts in the case, which we propose to examine.

The material fact, that the legacy was bequeathed by Samuel Bond to his grandniece, the mother of Barnes Compton, is admitted by the answer, which further avers, that it was paid, if not in whole, at least in part, to Wm. P. Compton, the husband of the legatee, in his lifetime.

[399]*399To sustain the defence thus set up, the appellants file the fceek of accounts invoked by the complainants, which is endorsed, “ Book of accounts of

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Bluebook (online)
8 Gill 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-crain-md-1849.