Chaffin v. Chaffin, Jr.

22 N.C. 254
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.C. 254 (Chaffin v. Chaffin, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaffin v. Chaffin, Jr., 22 N.C. 254 (N.C. 1839).

Opinion

The bills then stated that the testator left a large personal estate, consisting of his share in the said partnership and of specific articles and debts; and that Nathan Chaffin, the younger, took the estate into his possession and disposed of the two tracts of land directed to be sold, and all the personalty, except the slaves bequeathed to the plaintiffs John A. and George H., who took them into possession, as legatees, by the consent of said Nathan, the younger; and that the assets, thus in the hands of the said Nathan, the younger, were of much larger amount than the testator's own debts, or any for which his estate ought to be liable. That in March, 1823, the said William W. Chaffin died intestate, and that administration of his estate was also taken by Nathan Chaffin, the younger, who reduced into possession his estate to a large amount. That as surviving partner of the firm of W. W. Chaffin Co., the said Nathan, the younger, also took into his hands, or might have collected, effects sufficient to discharge all the joint debts and leave a large surplus for division among the partners. *Page 214

The bills then charged that Nathan Chaffin, the younger, gave out that the separate estate of W. W. Chaffin was insufficient to pay his separate debts, much less any part of the debts of the firm; that he also gave out that he, Nathan, the younger, was not a member of the copartnership, and that the effects of the firm were insufficient to pay its debts; and that after applying all the assets of the firm, a large balance of their debts remained unsatisfied, for which he alleged the estate of his testator to be liable; and that, for the satisfaction thereof, he had applied the legacies to the plaintiff Mary, and other parts of the personal (257) estate, except the slaves bequeathed to the other two plaintiffs.

And as to them, the bills charged that a creditor of the firm had obtained judgment against the plaintiff John A. and the defendant Nathan, as executors of the testator, of which the beneficial interest was in the defendant Nathan, by assignment to a trustee for him, who had caused an execution to be levied on the said slaves so bequeathed to the plaintiffs, and threatened to sell them. The bills prayed an account of the estate of his testator, and that the legacies to the plaintiffs might be made good and the residue distributed according to the will; that if the said firm should be found to be insolvent, the defendant Nathan might be declared to have continued a partner up to the death of the testator; and that said defendant and William W. Chaffin might each be held liable for an equal third part of the deficit; and that the defendant Nathan might be held bound so to administer the estate of his intestate, William W., that it might be applied thereto.

The material parts of the defense set up in the answer of Nathan Chaffin, the younger, were that the copartnership formed in 1812 (of which he admitted himself a member) was dissolved on 8 May, 1818, by agreement between the partners; that he then received merchandise to the value of about $2,000, and that the other two partners received together to the value of $4,000, and then entered into a new business, in which Nathan, the elder, and William W. were the sole partners, under the same firm and name of W. W. Chaffin Co., which continued until the death of the said persons. The answer stated that up to May, 1818, the business had been profitable, though no account had been stated from which the profits might appear. That the books were retained by William W. Chaffin, who had been the active partner in the first firm, and was also such in the second, for the purpose of settling the business by collecting the debts owing to the concern, and paying those owing by it; after which he was to divide the surplus among the partners. That William W. collected the assets and paid all the debts thereout, as the defendant believes, from the circumstance that no person had, as a creditor of that firm, preferred any claim against him. That (258) he frequently called on William W. for a statement of the concern, *Page 215 as he was satisfied that money was coming to him on it, and that William W. did not pretend to deny the truth of his claim, but deferred the matter upon various pretexts.

This answer then stated an account of the administration of the estate of William W. Chaffin, and also an account of the last concern of William W. Chaffin Co., whereby it appeared that the separate debts of William W. would not be paid by his separate estate, and that the joint funds would not satisfy the joint debts of the partners, but that a large balance remained to be paid out of the estate of the testator, and that all the legacies would be required for that purpose, besides the fund provided in the will for the payment of debts.

Pending the preceding suit, Nathan Chaffin, the younger, filed his bill against John A. Chaffin and George H. Chaffin, and therein stated the devises in the will of the testator of the two tracts of land to be sold for the payment of the debts, and of the lands and slaves to the defendants respectively; that the executors, Nathan and John A., exposed the two tracts of land for sale, and sold one tract; but that John A. bid off the other, and refused to concur in a sale thereof, and had possession of it; that he had sold the land devised to him with the view of defeating the creditors of his testator, and particularly his coexecutor, Nathan.

The bill then stated the administration by this plaintiff of the assets of his intestate, William W. Chaffin, of the firm of W. W. Chaffin Co.,; and that, after exhausting all those funds, a large sum remained unpaid of the debts of the firm, for which the estate of the testator was liable; and that the same had been paid by the plaintiff, or were then reduced to judgments against the executors, whereby all the assets of the testator had been exhausted, and it was rendered apparent that it would require the whole estate of the testator, personal and real, to satisfy the debts so paid or so outstanding. This bill prayed that all the proper accounts might be taken, that the tract of land bid in by John A. might be resold, and that the legacies and devises to the two defendants might be declared liable to and disposed of for the satisfaction of the said unpaid debts.

The answers in substance set forth as defenses the matter (259) alleged by these defendants in the bill brought by them.

The causes were heretofore heard, and the court, upon the proofs, declared the copartnership, of which the defendant Nathan Chaffin, the younger, was a member, to have been dissolved on 8 May, 1818, as stated in the answer. It was then referred to the master to take an account of the testator's estate, and of the administration thereof by the defendant Nathan, including the interest of the testator in, or liability for, the firm of W. W. Chaffin Co. *Page 216

The master reported that the debts of W. W. Chaffin Co. paid by the defendant Nathan, amounted, over and above the assets of that firm that came to his hands, to the sum of $4,909.64; of which the one-half was immediately chargeable to the testator's estate, and the other half would be so chargeable, unless paid by the estate of William W. Chaffin. In order to ascertain how much of the loss that estate could pay, the master then proceeded to take an account of the estate of William W. Chaffin, and found that it had been fully administered in the discharge of his separate debts, and, indeed, that a balance of $620.25 was due to the administrator.

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22 N.C. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaffin-v-chaffin-jr-nc-1839.