Clark v. Hornthal

47 Miss. 434
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 Miss. 434 (Clark v. Hornthal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Hornthal, 47 Miss. 434 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Peyton, C. J.:

Edward M. Lane, being possessed of a large estate in his own right, consisting of real and personal property, on the 27th day of September, 1860, made his last will and testament, and appointed his wife, Laura, sole executrix, with full power and authority to manage and control his estate.

The second clause of the will contains the following language: “ I wish all my debts to be paid as soon as possible.”

By the fifth clause, the testator devised to his wife, for the term of her natural life, the property in controversy, being his lot and residence in the city of Vicksburg.

The sixth clause is as follows: “ Should my wife desire to sell said lot and residence, she’is hereby authorized to do 'so, upon such terms and conditions as she may deem most advantageous, and to make a deed therefor as executrix, fully binding my heirs, the proceeds thereof to be invested, either in the purchase of another residence, or in land and negroes, the use and benefit of which shall be enjoyed by her during the term of her life.”

The seventh clause provides as follows “ Should my wife not sell said residence and lot, at her death my executors, hereinafter named, are hereby authorized to sell the same, and for that purpose they are hereby invested with full power to sell upon such terms and conditions as they may deem most beneficial to my estate, and to invest the proceeds in land and negroes, to be divided as my other property hereinafter mentioned.”

And the twelfth clause contains the following provision : “ At the death of my wife, I appoint as guardian of my children, N. V. Lane, and as the executors of my estate, N. V. Lane and John L. Lum, and request they may act without security; and I do hereby give them all.the power and discretion to act in the premises as I* [468]*468have herein given to my wife as sole guardian and executrix.”

At the November term of the probate court of Warren* county, 1870, the said will was admitted to probate, and the execution of the trusts of the same was committed to said Laura as executrix. And after her death letters testamentary were granted by said probate court to the said Newi't Y. Lane to execute the trusts of said will, the said Lum declining to act and refusing to qualify according to law.

And on the 18th day of April, 1868, the said Newit Y. Lane and John L. Lum sold and conveyed to Julius Hornthal and Marcus H. Blakemore, for the sum of $20,000, the said lot and residence, in the city of Yicksburg, and which is now the subject of litigation in this suit.

The heirs of said testator filed their bill of complaint in the chancery court of the said county of Warren, against the said Hornthall and Blakemore, and others claiming under them, to set aside, annul and cancel the deed, executed by said Lane and Lum to said Hornthal and Blakemore, as casting a cloud over the title of the complainants to said real estate, that the possession of the same may be restored to them, and that Hornthall and Blakemore may be required to account to complainants for the profits and income of said property.

To this bill the defendants filed a demurrer, which was sustained by the court and the bill dismissed. And hence the cause comes to this court by appeal for revision.

This cause has been argued with great ability by counsel, and presents for our consideration questions of no ordinary interest and importance, involving the construction of the testator’s will, as to the powers conferred by it upon the executors named therein.

The main questions, involving the testamentary powers, are two. 1. Do the words “I. wish all my [469]*469debts to be paid as soon as possible,” give the executors a power, by implication, to sell the real estate for the payment of debts? 2. Is the conveyance of the house and lot in controversy by Lane and Lum, to Hornthall and Blakemore, a valid execution of the power given them as executors by the 7th and 12th clauses of the will ? These questions will be considered in the order in which they are above stated.

At common law, the personal estate, only, of a deceased person was liable for his debts, unless they were debts by specialty, or matter of record. However large his real estate might be, no recourse could be had to it to pay simple contract debts, although his personal property was utterly insufficient to meet them. The common law, in this respect, has been changed in England, by the statute of the 3d and 4th W illiam IV, ch. 104, by which real estate in that country has been made assets for the payment of debts in aid of the personal estate.

If a will gives a power of sale to pay debts and legacies* or for distribution, without stating by whom the sale is to be made, it has been held, that the executor takes the power by implication, because this is necessary to carry out the provisions of the will. It is his duty under the will to ¡Day the debts and legacies, or make distribution. If a testator should order his real estate to be sold for the payment of his debts, without saying who should sell, in such a case, a clear trust would be created. And although a court of law will not, in such a case, take cognizance of the trust, a court of equity will not hesitate to declare who is the proper party to execute the trust; or if no one is designated, it will proceed to execute the trust by its own authority, and decree á sale of the land. In the case put, of á trust for the payment of debts, if executors are named in the will, they will be deemed, by implication, to be the proper parties to sell; because in equity, when lands [470]*470are to be sold, they are treated as money; and, as the executors are liable to pay the debts, and if the lands were money, as they would be .the proper parties to receive it for that purpose, courts of equity would hold it to be the intent of the testator, that the parties, who are to receive and finally execute the trust, are the proper parties to sell for the purpose. 2 Story Eq. Jur., 278, § 1060. In these cases there was a power of sale given by the will to pay debts in the first, and in the other, an order by the testator to sell his real estate for the payment of debts. The power and authority in these cases were given by the will for the specific purpose of paying debts, and were not derived, by implication, from a general charge of debts upon the estate of the testator.

There can be no doubt that in England, prior to the above mentioned statute, making lands assets fpr the payment of debts, the words in this will, “ I wish all my debts to be paid as soon as possible,” would have created a general charge upon all the lands of the testator, which could have been enforced only in a court of equity. They would have given no power, by implication, to the executors to sell.

In this country there is no necessity to resort to implied powers, as the real estate of the decedent, by force of the statutes in all the states, become assets in the hands of the personal representative, for the payment of debts in all cases where the personal estate is insufficient for that purpose. 3 Redf. on Wills, 238 ; 2 Dev. 288.

It has been determined that a mere charge upon real estate cannot give the executors a legal power to sell it. Doe v. Hughes, 6 Exch. 231. In this case, the court held that a charge had no operation in law, but must be.enforced in equity, from which it follows that the executors could not sell without a license or decree of court. .And Mr. Lewin thinks this was a sound [471]

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Bluebook (online)
47 Miss. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-hornthal-miss-1872.