Carnes v. Jones

1 Georgia Decisions 170
CourtMuscogee County Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedOctober 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Georgia Decisions 170 (Carnes v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muscogee County Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnes v. Jones, 1 Georgia Decisions 170 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

The demurrer admits the facts charged to be true; and we are, with this admission before us, to determine whether they contain sufficient equitable matter to justify the retention of the bill, and of the injunction. Many objections to the admissibility of the application of the complainants to have the demand in favour of .Tones, the defendant, entered as a credit, or partial payment, upon the one established by a portion of them against the administrator, are taken by defendants’ counsel. It is contended, that, by the Laws govern, ing the subject of set off, these demands cannot be opposed to each other for that purpose. It is unnecessary to pass upon each of these various objections in detail. As they take effect at Law, the objections are good. There is, upon the face of these demands, evidently no adaptation of the one to the payment of the other. In the decree rendered against the administrator, Wm. D. Carnes, Lucy E. Carnes, and George W. Dillingham, (by his guardian,) are the complainants, and John Dillingham is the defendant; in the case which is the subject of this injunction, Seaborn Jones is plaintiff, William D. Carnes, and Mrs. Lucy E. Carnes, and Mrs. Harriet C. Tick-tier, with their securities on appeal, are the defendants. Now, by the strict rules of the Law, other difficulties out of the way, even [173]*173“a joint and separate debt cannot be set off against each other.”— Montagu on Set off, 25. This is, however, not all decisive of the power of a Court of Chancery in the premises. Indeed, that the party seeking relief is remediless by the rules of the Law proper, is a leading — nay, in many cases, an indispensable ingredient in the jurisdiction of a Court of Chancery. Are there any equitable facts in the case made by this bill which will relieve the application of the complainants from the operation of the rules which obtain, ordinarily, in cases of set off? is the question. As we have seen, the note sued by Jones is represented in the bill to have been given by Mrs. Dil-lingham, the widow, and one of the distributees, to the administrator, in payment for a portion of the estate of her deceased husband, that it was transferred to Jones, with other assets, as a prospective indemnity against his liability as security on the administration bond, and without any other consideration ; that Jones received the same with knowledge of the fact that it did not belong to the administrator, but to the estate which he represented ; that complainants, Carnes, his wife, and the infant child, as the heirs and distributees of the administrator’s intestate, have recovered of the administrator, as their portion of the estate, seven thousand four hundred and twenty-five dollars and eighty-three cents, with costs; that the Sheriff is unable to make the money thus recovered ; that the administrator, and Jones the defendant, who is also one of the securities, and the estate of the only remaining co-security, so far as it is subject to the judgment of the complainants, are also insolvent, and that suit is now in progress against Jones, on his bond, predicated on the recovery had against his principal, the administrator. The mode in which Jones acquired the note in question, is relied upon to subject him to the relation in equity, of a trustee of this fund for the heirs and distribu-tees, who are seeking to have it appropriated to the partial payment of their demand now in suit on the administration bond. It is certainly true, that the note held by Jones, was, upon the execution of it, the right and property, in Law, of John Dillingham, to whom it was given. The circumstance of its having been passed in exchange for property of the estate of his intestate does not vary the usual consequence of the execution and delivery of it to him : it was still a contract to pay John Dillingham the sum specified in the paper. It is the property for which the note was given, that the administrator, and his securities, are, or would be alone liable in ordinary [174]*174circumstances ; and the legitimate consequence of that fact, is the right of the administrator to have and use the note taken by him in the course of Ms administration as his own. — 3 McCord, 371. 1 Hill's Ch. 25. 2 Hill’s Ch. 268. 1 Bail. 599. At the same time, this right of dominion over even the proceeds of property held in trust, by the administrator, is subjected in Chancery to wholesome restraints, “ It is true that the proceeds of such choses in action are in equity regarded as assets, and will be so treated, and considered in the hands of the executor or administrator to whom they were made payable, or any of his immediate representatives.” — 1 Hill's C. R. 25. “ So too, in all such cases they would be protected from being made liable by the process of the Law for the debts of the executor or administrator.” — Glass v Baxter, 4 Rep. 154. Talbot v. Harrison, 1 Bail. 599. “ And in all cases of fraudulent alienation, the Court would follow, and treat them as assets of the estate.”— 2 Hill's Ch. 271. And again : “ I have already said that an alienation of the bonds or notes payable to an executor or administrator ought not to be overreached or defeated, but by a Superior Equity, or by fraud.” Same : “ An abuse of a trust can confer no rights on a party abusing it, or on those who claim in privity with him. In Courts of Equity it (this principle) is adopted with a universality of application.”- — Story’s Com. on Equity, 503. “ Persons colluding with the executor or administrator in a known misapplication of the assets of the estate, are made responsible for the property in their hands.” — -2 Story’s Com. on Equity, 502. 7 Johns. Ch. 150. “ This author, so very full to the point, too, that it matters not how-many, nor what mutations the trust property may have undergone, so long as its identity cambe traced, it will be held responsible to the claim of whomsoever may in Equity be entitled to receive it.”— Same vol. 503. Can the claim of Jones to the fund in dispute, viewed in its most favourable light, be regarded as equal, in equity, to that of a portion of the complainants, taking as true all which is contained in this bill of complaint l I think not. But it is said, that the rendition of judgment on the note held by Jones, precludes all inquiry into the subject of its consideration, or the nature of the transfer of it to Jones ; that the complainants in the bill, who were sued upon it, are estopped by the judgment, from denying that they owe to Jones, both in Law, and Equity, the sum involved in this injunction. Estoppels are said in Law “ to be odious,” as lying in [175]*175the way of enquiry. But I think the doctrine has been stretched too far in the argument, which has been made by the defendants’ counsel in the case under consideration. That the adjudication of a cause by a Court clothed with competent jurisdiction, of the facts and prim ciples involved in it, is, as a general rule, a bar to subsequent litigation touching the same matter between the same parties as certainly true. And by the comity of Courts of Justice this bar or estoppel ⅛ not only respected in the Court, where the adjudication takes place, but equally by all other Courts : This, that there may be an end of controversy. “ Courts of Equity will not reiievemgainst a judgment at Law, where the case in equity proceeds upon a defence equally available at Law; but the plaintiff ought to establish some special ground for relief.” — 2 Story’s Equi. 178.

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

Related

Marine Ins. Co. of Alexandria v. Hodgson
11 U.S. 332 (Supreme Court, 1813)
Lorillard v. Coster
5 Paige Ch. 172 (New York Court of Chancery, 1835)
Lansing v. Eddy
1 Johns. Ch. 49 (New York Court of Chancery, 1814)
Field v. Schieffelin
7 Johns. Ch. 150 (New York Court of Chancery, 1823)
Simson v. Hart
14 Johns. 63 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1816)
French v. Garner
7 Port. 549 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1838)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Georgia Decisions 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnes-v-jones-gasuperctmuscog-1842.