Brinkley v. Willis

22 Ark. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 22 Ark. 1 (Brinkley v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinkley v. Willis, 22 Ark. 1 (Ark. 1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fairchild

delivered the opinion of the court.

Although this suit was brought by William K. Brinkley, and Nancy Brinkley, his wife, for themselves and for others, who are the children of a former wife of Willis, the principal defendant in this case, it must be treated as the suit of Brinkley and wife alone.

That there was a unity of legal interest between Brinkley ■and wife and the children of Ann Willis deceased, as legatees of the will 'of Alexander Floyd, did not authorize the former to institute a suit for the benefit of the latter.

Except in the instance of one or more creditors suing for all that may be interested in a fund, and in a few other instances, not including such a case as this, and not necessary to be mentioned here, persons whose interests are to be affected by a decree, should be made direct and original parties to a suit, so that they themselves, or their next friends, or legal representatives, may be liable for costs, and be personally subject to such orders as the condition of the case may require to be made upon the parties.

And no person is authorized to use the name of other persons interested in the subject of a suit, as acting for and on behalf of them, except for married women, infants, lunatics, or persons under some disability to sue for themselves; and in such case legal authority must be shown for interfering in their business. Otherwise, the persons who are to be co-plaintiffs must become so in their own persons, in their own names, and not by the intervention of an irresponsible person, who may be willing to urge a suit in their behalf. And if such as are interested with a plaintiff, will not unite with him in a suit, the rules of chancery practice afford a remedy by which his own interest need not suffer from their disinclination to sue.

In June 1831, Alexander Floyd, of Franklin county, Tennessee, made his last will, in which was the following clause, and upon which this suit.is founded:

“ Sixthly. I will that in twenty days after my burial, I wish all the balance of my personal property to be sold, and the amount thereof, together with all the balance of my effects or money I leave, to be equally divided amongst the surviving lawful heirs of my son William Floyd, deceased, and the heirs of my daughter, Ann Willis, deceased, intermarried with Anderson F. Willis.”

The above named Anderson F. Willis, defendant in this case, was appointed executor of the will.

On the 27th of May, 1833, the testator was dead, as his will was then offered for probate to the court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of the coupty before mentioned, but owing to a legal contest of the will, it was not established till the Juty term, 1835, of the Circuit Court of Franklin county, whither the contest had been taken by appeal of Willis, executor of the will.

Although at the same term, Willis seems to have failed to give the bond required of him as executor, yet there is an order showing that, on the 23rd of November, 1835, he qualified as executor in the court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions.

The records furnished to us are wholly silent in the description of any property that came to the hands of Willis as executor, only showing that David McElroy, who had charge of Alexander Floyd’s estate during the latter part of the contest about the will, had obtained Willis’ receipt in full for all moneys, bonds, and effects of the estate, the receipt feeing dated 28th November, 1835.

Mrs. Brinkley is the survivor of, and represents the interests of the heirs of William Floyd, at least such is the claim of the bill, and is not controverted in the answer of Willis; and the bill preferred for her, by her and her husband, claims that Willis, as executor of Alexander Floyd’s will, received in trust for the heirs of William Floyd, and of Ann Willis, seven slaves, none of which have ever come to the hands of Brinkley and wdfe, for which, and for their hire to the amount of twelve hundred dollars, Willis is charged to be liable, one-half to the use of Brinkley and wife.

For the times of the events related, reference has been made to the after papers of the case, as the bill seems to have been drawn without the date of the transactions it narrates, and probably for this, and for other defects of indefiniteness, could not, without amendment, be the foundation of any decree.

Although the answer of Willis and its attempt to account for the disposition of the slaves of Alexander Floyd’s estate, may be indefinite in many parts, and unsatisfactory when definite, it shows that whatever responsibility may attach to him, accrues not from bad faith or fraudulent action, but in consequence of having undertaken a trust, and of not procuring a legal discharge therefrom.

But before examining the facts which would determine the relative rights and responsibility of the plaintiffs, and of the defendant Willis, it may be well to ascertain whether the length oí time that intervened between the accrual of the right of the plaintiffs, and. its assertion by this suit, shall have the effect to make such examination unnecessary.

The defendant Willis, the executor of the will of Alexander Floyd, sometime after the will was made, appears to have married the widow of William Floyd, whereby Nancy Floyd, now Nancy Brinkley, became a member of the family of Willis, and was supported and treated by him as a child, till her marriage to William R. Brinkley, in February, 1841, -when she was still under twenty-one years of age.

It is abundantly shown by the evidence that in 1843, and before that time, William R. Brinkley was informed that his wife had a claim to negro property against Willis, under the will of Alexander Floyd, and that, in 1845, he employed alaw-yer to attend to this|interest. During this interval, from 1843, till the beginning of this suit in January, 1853, the parties were living in the same section of country, and no reason is shown why the suit could not have been as well begun at any time during the interval, as when it was begun.

While Nancy Floyd was an infant, the statute of limitations could not run against her; yet if it began to run before the marriage, it would not for that cease to run. Gould's Dig. ch. 106, sec. 31; Carter vs. Cantrell, 16 Ark. 165.

Though Brinkley and wife cannot have the benefit of different disabilities cumulative one upon another, it may not have any practical effect upon this case; because we are not certain that any cause of action existed against Willis concerning the slave George, till Willis had swapped him to Russey, which was about or near the time when the infant Nancy Floyd became Nancy Brinkley, and who thenceforward has been under the disability of coverture.

And more especially because the defendant Willis, as an executor and therefore a trustee, charged with the execution of an express trust till discharged therefrom by due course of law, would hold the property, or its proceeds, in trust for the legar tees, without he had by notorious acts hostile to their claim and right, renounced the trust and converted the property to his own use. Ferrill vs. Murry, 4 Yerg. 106; Kane vs. Bloodgood, 7 John. Ch. 124.

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