Broome v. Alston

8 Fla. 307
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 Fla. 307 (Broome v. Alston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broome v. Alston, 8 Fla. 307 (Fla. 1859).

Opinions

PEARSON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Joseph Alston, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Augustus Alston, deceased, seets by his bill to recover the possession of certain slaves, with an account for their hire, conveyed in a deed of marriage settlement by Mary Helen Alston, the widow and first administratrix of Augustus Alston, deceased, to James E. Broome, as trustee, for the uses therein declared, in consideration of an anticipated marriage on her part with Sampson Butler. These slaves consisted of those allotted to the widow Alston as her dower or statutory portion of her husband’s slaves, in [317]*317•which she took a life estate only, a part of which were subject to a mortgage made by him in his life time to the Union Bank of Florida. This deed of settlement bears date the 29th November, 1813, and soon afterwards the contemplated marriage took place; but the slaves did not go into the actual possession of Broome until some short time after the death of Butler, which occurred in March, 1818, his wife dying about a month thereafter.

To the slaves mentioned in this deed of marriage settlement Mrs. Alston had two separate and distinct titles : to the slaves allotted her for dower an independent life estate in her own right, and, in addition thereto, in her character as administratrix, she held the legal title to the reversion and the equity of redemption of those mortgaged to the Bank. All the interest, then, attempted to be conveyed by this deed of marriage settlement belonged to the estate of Augustus Alston, except only her life estate in the slaves allotted to her under the statute in the nature of dower; and yet she contracts in her private right and character and without reference to her power or authority as administratrix to dispose of all these interests, and that too upon a consideration, however good and valuable in law, moving to her solely and in no wise to the estate of her intestate. Merely to state this point is sufficient to settle it. The numerous cases we find in the books of the mal-administration of assets and misapplication of funds seem to arise where the administrator acted or contracted in virtue of his character of administrator. Such cases have nothing to do with the question involving the validity of this deed. Here was an evident attempt to dispose of the assets of the estate in her private right and for her private use and benefit without the slightest reference or resort to her official character and authority. To allow such a procedure to stand would be to annul all distinc[318]*318tions between the property of tbe estate of an intestate and that of his administrator, and to go back to the dogma which prevailed in the ancient times of Mr. Justice Buller, who held that the property of an estate in the hands •of an administrator to be administered might be taken in execution for his, the administrator’s, private debt. This ■extreme doctrine was very soon modified by the good sense of the English Judges, and modern adjudications have rendered the whole doctrine conformable to principles of reason and justice. This deed, therefore, must be considered as absolutely void in so far as it attempts to convey any portion of the estate of Augustus Alston. The legal title remained in his estate and was succeeded to by his administrator de bonis non as a portion of his effects unadministered. This suit may, then, be well maintained by this complainant, and it only remains to examine what are the defences presented on the part of the defendants for the consideration of the Court.

It is alleged in the answer, amongst other objections to the complainant’s claims, that Mrs. Alston was in advance to the estate of her intestate to the full amount of the value of all the interests of the estate disposed of by her in the deed of marriage settlement. The proof of this, it is alleged, was of record .in the Probaté Court, and would have been presented to the Court but for the fact that the case was not set down for argument after Fisher and wife and Sampson Butler had, upon their petition, been made parties to the bill. Mrs. Fisher was a daughter - of Mrs. Butler by her first marriage with Alston, and Sampson Butler a son by her last marriage with Butler. Upon the hearing of their petition to be made parties counsel was heard, it was admitted, at bar, in explanation of their rights and interests. Their application being allowed, they were made parties, and within eight days thereafter [319]*319the Court proceeded to pronounce its decree without notice to them. It does not appear from the record that the case was set down for argument,' and the only evidence therein that these new parties were heard upon the merits is the recitation in the usual and formal manner at the beginning of the decree that the parties had been heard by their counsel. This, it is contended, is mere form and • was not intended to and does not preclude these parties from adducing such evidence as they may think proper in support of their claims. It may be so, and, in a matter of such doubt, we think they ought not to be debarred from the adduction of their proofs and a fall hearing upon the merits.

If the fact should turn out, as stated in the answer, that Mrs. Alston was in advance of the estate of her husband as administrator to the full amount of the assets of the estate disposed of by her in the deed of settlement, we wTill not decide in advance what effect it might have upon the validity and effect of that deed; but, in any event, whatever amount, if any, may be found due her from the estate, that will enure to the beneficiaries under the deed.-

There is another and very sufficient ground upon which the decree in this case should not be permitted to preclude the distributees of Mrs. Alston from a full hearing upon the merits. By a rule of this Court, adopted in 1851 and published in an appendix to the fifth volume of Florida Beports, it is provided “ that decrees, whether final or interlocutory, not embracing orders of course, shall be upon notice to the parties or their attorneys before making or pronouncing the same, and a statement by the Judge to the effect that notice has been given, shall be sufficient evidence thereof.” It does not appear in any wise that this rule has been complied with, and the parties complaining, [320]*320of the decree may well claim to have it opened upon this account.

It is further objected, that the compdainant should not be permitted to proceed with this cause, because he does not allege in his bill that he was prompted by persons interested in the estate of Alston, or moved by a personal interest or a sense of official duty, and the authority of Lord Eldon, in 17 Vesey, 171, and that of Chancellor Harper, in Riley’s Chan. Rep., 35 and 36, are quoted with much force upon this point. We think, however, that this case does not fall fully within the rule laid down by these eminent Chancellors. The rule seems to be founded upon two elements: the lapse of time, rendering the demand stale, coupled with the absence of any apparent necessity on the part of the administrator to prosecute the suit. Ordinarily, there is no legal necessity for an executor or administrator to show in whose behalf he seeks to obtain a recovery in behalf of the estate he represents.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Fla. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broome-v-alston-fla-1859.