Chitty v. Gillett

1915 OK 232, 148 P. 1048, 46 Okla. 724, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1242
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 27, 1915
Docket4307
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1915 OK 232 (Chitty v. Gillett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chitty v. Gillett, 1915 OK 232, 148 P. 1048, 46 Okla. 724, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1242 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

BEETT, C.

This is a suit by M. A. Chittjr, the plaintiff in error, against the defendants in error, Mary P. Gillett et al., heirs of J. V. Gillett, deceased, to recover on a judgment of $3,075, with interest and costs, which was obtained by plaintiff in error on the 29th day of October, 1909, against the American Trust Company, Mary P. Gillett, administratrix of the estate of J. W. Gillett, deceased, F. P. Kibbey and R. C. Hess.

The petition alleges that on the 29th day of October ,1909, the plaintiff in error obtained judgment for $3,075 in the district court of Garvin county, Okla., against the American Trust Company, Mary P. Gillett, administratrix of the estate of J. W. Gillett, *726 deceased, F. 'B. Kibbey, and E. C. Hess, and attaches a copy of said judgment to his petition as part thereof. It further alleges that at the time of the institution of the suit in which said judgment was obtained J. W. Gillett was dead, and the defendant in error, Mary P. Gillett, was the qualified and acting administratrix of his estate, and that the cause of action was based upon a claim against the estate of J. W. Gillett, deceased, and Mary P. Gillett, admin-istratrix, was a party to said action; that while said suit was pending and before judgment was obtained, Mary P. Gillett, adminis-tratrix of the estate of J. W. Gillett, deceased, filed! her final account as such administratrix, had same allowed, and the estate partitioned, and the administration closed. That under the partition andi settlement of the estate, the pending suit was not taken into consideration and no provision was made for the settlement of the judgment which was subsequently obtained, but the entire estate of J. W. Gillett, deceased, was surrendered and delivered by Mary P. Gillett, as administratrix, to herself and the other defendants in error as heirs of J. W. Gillett, deceased, for distribution.

That defendant in error Mary P. Gillett, received as widow of deceased the sum of $12,794.72. Defendant in error Josephine Gillett, as an heir $7,765; Mary Gillett, $7,765; and Margaret Gillett, $7,765.

■ Plaintiff in error further alleges that the American Trust Company, since the rendition of' said judgment, has become insolvent and has no assets which can be reached to satisfy said judgment. That F. P. Kibbey is a nonresident, and has no property in the state subject to execution. That E. C. Hess is insolvent, and has no property subject to execution out of Which said judgment can •be satisfied. That no part of said judgment'has b'een paid and that there is now due thereon the sum of $3,075 with interest from February 15, 1907, at the rate of 6 per' cent, per annum.

That by reason of the preimses plaintiff in error is unable to collect said debt against the estate of J. W. .Gillett, deceased. That *727 the defendants became liable for the full amount of said judgment, which they refuse to pay and prays for judgment against each of the defendants in error, jointly and severally, for the amount of his judgment.

The defendants in error demurred to the petition upon three specific grounds. On a hearing the demurrer was sustained. ■ The plaintiff refused to amend, and judgment was rendered for the defendants, and from this judgment the plaintiff in error appeals to this court.

■ The judgment does not recite upon what particular ground or grounds the demurrer was sustained, and as defendants in error have specified three grounds upon which they attack the petition of: the plaintiff in error, we will consider each of these in the order in which- they are set -out in the demurrer.

First. The first ground is:

“That this effiurt has no jurisdiction to open and set aside a. judgment of the county court in deciding a distribution of the estate, and no sufficient reason is assigned to justify a disturbance of said judgment.”

As we understand it the petition does not seek to set aside the judgment of distribution, but seeks to recover from the heirs of the deceased the amount of the judgment which was determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to be due plaintiff from the estate of said deceased, J. W. Gillett.

The plaintiff pleads that each of the heirs, as beneficiaries, ■ received a sum from the estate greatly in excess of the amount found to be .due him by the estate. Does the fact that this estate was closed pending this litigation and that the heirs took over the entire property of the estate, both, real and personal, place it beyond the, jurisdiction of the district court to grant the relief prayed for by the judgment creditor, whosé claim did not ripen into an enforee *728 able liability before the estate was closed ? This is a question which has not often been adjudicated, and where it has been adjudicated there is-some conflict in the decisions, but the weight of authority is to the effect that where a claim has not accrued or become enforceable until after the administration of the estate is closed, a recovery array be had in an action against the heirs in the district court, to the. extent of the- assets received 'by them from the estate. Some of these decisions are based upon special statutes to_ that effect, while the reason'for this rule in others is based upon statutes similar to our own.

In Williams et al. v. Ewing & Fanning, 31 Ark. 229, the court announces this doctrine and bases its reason upon section 68 Gantt’s Digest, which reads as follows:

“Lands shall be assets in the hands of the executor or administrator, and shall be deemed in their possession and subject to their control for the payment of debts.”

The court holding that by virtue of this statute when such lands descend to the heir, the equitable right to subject them to the payment .of the debts of the deceased follows. In that case John Ewing and Talbot Panning and John Waters, deceased, had in 1858, signed the note of Alexander Pall as sureties. In 1867 John Waters died in Arkansas, leaving a will which was duly probated. In 1872 judgment was obtained against Ewing and Fanning for $5,991.71, the balance due on said note after deducting the payments made thereon by Fall, the principal debtor, who had in the meantime died insolvent. The estate of John Waters, deceased, had been closed, and $40,000 or- $50,000 worth of land and $5,000 in money had passed into the hands of one John Waters as heir at law of said estate. John Waters, deceased, had paid no part of this debt, but plaintiffs as sureties had been compelled to pay the whole amount, and they brought suit against John Waters, the heir at law of John Waters, deceased, for $1,997.14, one-third of the amount paid by them as sureties.

*729 The court, in passing upon their right to recover against this heir of their cosurety, says:

“It is not often that we find a clearer case of equity made than the one here presented. There were three securities; one of them died without having paid any part of the security deht. It is equitable and just that the estate of the deceased security should be held responsible for the payment of his part of the security debt.

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 232, 148 P. 1048, 46 Okla. 724, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chitty-v-gillett-okla-1915.