Brunk v. Means

50 Ky. 214, 11 B. Mon. 214, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 17, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 Ky. 214 (Brunk v. Means) 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
Brunk v. Means, 50 Ky. 214, 11 B. Mon. 214, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 48 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1816, Samuel Alexander was appointed the guardian of Robert K. Means, Young J. Means, and Samuel E. Means, and executed a guardian’s bond with William Iloxie and Jacob Brunk as his sureties.

Jacob Brunk one of the sureties died in 1818, and his son Noah Brunk, who was his only child and heir at Jfiw, immediately after his death administered upon his estate. .Jacob Brunk at the time of his death was the owner of a tract of land, and some slaves and personal estate, all of which came to the possession of his son Noah Brunk; who as administrator made out and returned an inventory of the personal estate, and two slaves, which was duty recorded within a few months after his appointment as administrator.

In 1828 Noah Brunk conveyed to a trustee for the benefit of his vWe and children, all his property, consisting of the land and slaves derived from his father, and such other property as he had himself acquired.

In 1829, Robert K. Means having arrived at full age, commenced a suit in chancery, in his own name, and in the names of his two brothers, who were still infants, as their next friend, against Samuel Alexander their guardian, and William Hoxie one of his sureties, and Noah Brunk as the administrator of Jacob Brunk, the other surety in the guardian’s bond. During the pendency of that suit, Noah Brunk filed an answer in which he alleged that at the time the complainants exhibited their bill, and also at the time of filing his answer, he had no assets in his hands belonging to the estate of Jacob Brunk, having long before that time, fully administered and settled up the estate.

The allegation of the bill in this case.

In 1833 a decree was rendered in that suit, from which the following is a substantial extract: “The defendants, Samuel Alexander and William Hoxie, are decreed and ordered to pay the complainant Robert K. Means, the sum of $775 37 cents, with interest from the date of the decree. To the complainant, Young J. Means the sum of $775 37 cents and to the complainant Samuel E. Means, the sum of $382 47 with like interest on both the last mentioned sums. And it appearing to the Court that the defendant Noah Brunk hath no assets in his hands belonging to the estate of Jacob Brunk, deceased, it is decreed and ordered that in default of payment of all or any part of the above mentioned sums, by the defendants Alexander and Hoxie, then and in that case, should assets hereafter come io the hands of Noah Brunk, administrator, as aforesaid, that said administrator pay to the complainants the aforesaid sums respectively, or so much thereof as may remain unpaid, should assets come to his hands sufficient for that purpose.”

In 1847, Young J. Means and Samuel Means, together with Marion Means, the only child and heir at law of Robert K. Means, who had died in the mean time, brought this suit in chancery, and allege in their bill, that an execution issued upon the foregoing decree, and was returned “no property found,” and that the money decreed has never been paid, and cannot not be coerced from Alexander and Hoxie, both of them being insolvent. They also allege that Noah Brunk obtained by descent from his father Jacob Brunk as his heir at law, a tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres, being the same conveyed by him in trust for the benefit of his wife and children, and that he received as the administrator of his father, several slaves and a considerable personal estate, which were assets in his hands, and had not been legally administered at the time he filed his answer in the former suit, denying that there were any assets in his hands; that his answer was false and fraudulent, and he had by his false represen[216]*216tations, and his suppression of the truth in relation to the estate in his hands as administrator, fraudulently procured a decree to be rendered absolving him from liability, except as to assets that might afterwards come to his hands. They therefore prayed that the former decree might be overruled and vacated, and a decree rendered against him for the payment of the sums therein mentioned out of the assets in his hands, and that the tract of land that he acquired by descent from his father might be -also subjected to the payment of their demands.

Defendant Bnuik’s answer. Decree of the 'Circuit Court.

They exhibit in their bill, a copy of the inventory that he had made as administrator, and allege that the female slave Tiller therein mentioned, had since that time given birth to several children; that the deed of trust made by Noah Brunk for .the benefit of his wife and children, which embraced the slaves as well as the land, was merely voluntary and fraudulent against his creditors, and that they had only discovered the facts relied upon by them, and which established the fraud of said Brunks in the procurement of said decree, a short time before they commenced their suit.

The defendant Brunk in his answer, denies all fraud, relies upon the statute of limitations, the lapse of time, the staleness of the claim, and the laches of the complainants. He fails however to give a very satisfactory account of his administration of the assets which had come to his hands. He admits that the female slave Tiller is the mother of the other slaves as stated by the complainants, and that she belonged to his father Jacob Brunk, but attempts to set up claim to her, upon the ground that as administrator he had paid debts against his intestate, to the full value of the slave, and had on that account a right to retain her as his own; he has however introduced no proof to sustain this claim.

The Circuit Court dismissed the bill, so far as it sought to subject the land which had descended to Noah Brunk to the payment of the complainants demands, but rendered a decree, directing a sale of the [217]*217filavcs to be made for that purpose. To that decree Trunk ^ objects and has prosecuted a writ of error to reverse it. And the other parties also object to the decree, because it does not subject the land to sale for the payment of their demands, and assign cross errors.

The'heir at iatv cannot .maintain a suit for a personal demand due to his intestate -ancestor— the right belongs to the administrator. Tao statute of limitations of J838 bars anyao tion against the surety of a guardian after five years shall hav6 elapsed after the ward arrives at full age, and the administrator of the surety may avail himself of that bar.

If the decree were right in every other respect, it is clearly ei'roneous, in one particular. Marion White cannot maintain a suit in his own name for the money previously decreed to his father, upon the sole ground that he is the heir at law. The right to-the money -upon the death of Robert K. Means vested in his'personal representative, and not in the heir-at law. If in any state of caso, the heir at law could maintain a suit in that character, he would have to -make the personal-representative a party, and assign some cause tha-t made it necessary for him to bring the suit in his awn •name, which he has not done in the'.present case.

The main question however, is in relation to-the operation of the statute of limitations, and the effect -of time upon the relief asked for in the bill.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McDaniel, Sheriff v. Sams
82 S.W.2d 215 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1935)
Woollums v. Fowler
269 S.W. 721 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1925)
Bennett v. Bennett's Admr.
120 S.W. 372 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1909)
Miller v. Smythe
122 Ky. 699 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1906)
McLemore v. Sebree Coal & Mining Co.
88 S.W. 1062 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1905)
Ellis v. Kelly
71 Ky. 621 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1871)
Mitchell v. Berry
58 Ky. 602 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1859)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Ky. 214, 11 B. Mon. 214, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunk-v-means-kyctapp-1850.