Bedford Quarries Co. v. Thomlinson

95 F. 208, 36 C.C.A. 272, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1899
DocketNo. 558
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 F. 208 (Bedford Quarries Co. v. Thomlinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedford Quarries Co. v. Thomlinson, 95 F. 208, 36 C.C.A. 272, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457 (7th Cir. 1899).

Opinion

BUNN, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought by the Bediord Quarries Company, a corporation of Indiana, against Joseph Thomlinson, as executor, and Sarah Thomlinson, executrix, of the last will and testament of John Thomlinson, deceased,' residing at Chicago, 111., to require the defendants to satisfy a debt of $3,554.74 and interest owing by the decedent in his lifetime to complainants for stone delivered to him upon certain contracts for that purpose. After setting out the contract for the delivery of the stone on board the cars, the delivery thereof by the complainants, the amounts paid by the deceased, and the claim for balance due, the bill sets forth that during the lifetime of the decedent complainants had frequently requested payment of the demand, and that after his death, November 10, 1897, and since the defendants came into possession of his estate, they had requested the said executors to make some provision for the payment of said indebtedness out of the funds of the estate in their hands, but that defendants have been heedless of such requests, and that their acts and omissions tend to the manifest wrong of the complainants. These are, in substance, all the facts set forth [209]*209by the hill of complaint. There was a general demurrer to the bill, and the court below dismissed the bill for want of equity. It must be conceded that the bill is very meager in its allegations'of fact to bring the case within any principle of equity cognizance. There are two well-settled principles of jurisprudence which the bill seems in the main to ignore: The one is that equity will not afford relief where there is a full and ample remedy at law. The other is that in general the administration of the estates of deceased persons is left to the local law. There are no facts alleged to take the case from the operation of either of these well-settled principles of jurisprudence. The bill, no doubt, states a good cause of action at law against the decedent, and this is all. No reason is given why equity should take cognizance of the case. For aught that appears, the complainants have an adequate remedy at law for the collection of iheir debt. There are no allegations tending to show fraud or concealment on the part of the executors, or misappropriation of property, making a hill for discovery necessary. There is no showing that the executors had qualified or entered upon the duties of their office, that the will had been proven, or that the time had come when 1 he executors had any power or authority to act. For all that appears, the executors may have taken possession of the property merely to preserve it until the will should he proven, and the executors should qualify and enter upon the discharge of their duties, in which event they would have no authority or power to pay debts. The hill alleges that the executors had property enough in their hands to pay complainants’ debt, but fails to allege that there were not other debts to be paid, or, if there were, that: there was property enough to pay all the debts in full. What right would the executors have to pay the complainants’ claim in advance of any marshaling of the debts and assets of the estate, that it might be seen whether the creditors could all be paid in full? It is alleged that the will provided for the payment of debts. But that would not authorize the payment in full of debts as they are demanded, without some account being made of the condition of the estate, to see whether all creditors could he paid in full. If such a proceeding as this were allowable, any estate, however solvent under the usual prudent and orderly management which obtains in probate courts, might be ruined by an accumulation of bills in equity. If one creditor may thus pursue the estate, all may. A nonresident would have no advantage over resident creditors, .and all might go into equity with tlieir suits, and embarrass and overwhelm the estate with costs before time could be had to marshal the debts and assets. If such a bill as this could he maintained, there is no reason why the equity jurisdiction of the court might not: draw to itself the entire administration of the estates of deceased persons, thus taking it out of the hands of the courts of probate, where it has generally been so well and economically administered in this country under local law. There is nothing in this hill to show that if the complainants, at the proper time, had filed their claim in the probate court, it would not, in due course of the administration of the estate, have been paid. If the claim so filed were disputed, they would, being nonresidents of the [210]*210state, be entitled to their action at law in the United States circuit court to establish their claim. But, when so established, it should be filed with the other claims against the estate, and take its place on equal terms with them. Yonley v. Lavender, 21 Wall. 276; Williams v. Benedict, 8 How. 107.

In Yonley v. Lavender the supreme court lays down the rule as follows:

“Where a statute of a state places the whole estate — real and personal — of a decedent within the custody of the probate court of the county, so that the assets may be fairly and equitably distributed among creditors, without distinction as to whether resident or nonresident, a nonresident creditor may get a judgment in a federal court against the resident executor or administrator, and come in on the estate according to the law of the state for such payment as that law, marshaling the rights of creditors, awards to debtors of its class. But he cannot, because he has obtained a judgment in the federal court, issue an execution, and take precedence of other creditors who have no right to sue in the federal courts.”

Chancellor Kent states the rule correctly, but somewhat mildly, in McKay v. Green, 3 Johns. Ch. 56, as follows:

“I doubt whether a creditor ought to come into this court, in an ordinary case, and. without some special cause, to collect his debt from an executor or administrator. It would seem not to be enough to state that he is a simple-contract creditor, for this would invite all suits against executors in this court. The ordinary and proper, as well as cheaper and easier, remedy, is at law.”

The supreme court of New Hampshire, in Walker v. Cheever, 35 N. H. 345, lays down a similar rule, as follows:

“Under the English practice, courts of equity assume a very general jurisdiction over cases of administration, from the fact that the courts of common law and ecclesiastical courts in that country are held not to have powers adequate to give effectual relief. This jurisdiction is said to have been founded upon the principle that it is the duty of the court to enforce the execution of trusts. But it has also been said that other grounds exist, such as the necessity of taking accounts and compelling a discovery. With us there is no ner cessity for assuming such general jurisdiction in equity upon this subject. Our statutes providing for the settlement and distribution of estates in most cases give ample powers to the courts of probate and of common law to enforce all needful remedies to secure the rights of all parties, and, so far as the statutes may apply in the settlement of estates, they take from chancery its jurisdiction.”

In the state of Illinois, where this suit was brought, the statute gives the administration of estates of deceased persons to the probate courts of the several counties.

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Bluebook (online)
95 F. 208, 36 C.C.A. 272, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedford-quarries-co-v-thomlinson-ca7-1899.