Coates v. Muse

5 F. Cas. 1120, 1 Brock. 551
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 1120 (Coates v. Muse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coates v. Muse, 5 F. Cas. 1120, 1 Brock. 551 (circtdva 1823).

Opinion

MARSHALL, Circuit Justice.

On the 4th day of June, 1821, the court considering a hill filed in January, 1821, as being both a bill enjoining the decree rendered at the November term, 1S20, and a petition for a rehearing, opened the decree rendered in November, 1S20, and referred the accounts to the commissioner for a resettlement, with instructions to settle, also, the administration of the estate of Thomas Muse, by Elliott Muse. [Case No. 2,916.] In December, 1821, the commissioner made his report, which was taken up a few days thereafter, and a decree pronounced, directing Z. U. Crittenden, administrator. &e., of Elliott Muse, deceased, out of the assets of his testator, in his hands to be administered, to pay the plaintiff the sum of $3731.32, with interest on $3171.42, from the 20th of November, 1821, till paid; and the court reserved, to a future day, its decision on the ultimate responsibility of the parties. [Id. 2,917.] In May term, 1S22, the said defendant, Z. U. Crittenden, administrator, &c., produced two records of suits, pending against him as administrator, in the state court, in Williamsburg, on claims of the highest dignity, and prayed, that the inter[1121]*1121locutory decree of the preceding term, might be set aside. The court overruled this motion, and directed that decree to be satisfied out of the private estate of the said Crittenden, if assets of his intestate could not be found. The cause comes on again to be hearu on all the papers, and it is contended by the defendant, Crittenden, administrator, &C., of Elliott Muse, that the original decree, pronounced, in 1811, against Elliott Muse and Thomas Muse, administrators of Hudson Muse, has lost its dignity, as against the representatives of those defendants, in consequence of a receipt and agreement, in these words: “Elliott Muse, Esq., has adjusted with me, by securing the same to be paid, the amount of the decree against the administrators of Hudson Muse, deceased, and is entitled to the benefit of the decree, as to that part of the debt, but not as to the house and lot in TJrbanna, which is the fund for payment of the residue of the plaintiff’s demand. Win. C. Williams, Attorney for Plaintiff. ISth March, 1S13.” It was admitted before the commissioner, by the agent for the plaintiff, that a deed of trust or mortgage was, about this time, executed by the said Elliott Muse, to secure the payment of the decree, but that the said deed was held by the plaintiff’s attorney, was never recorded or enforced; and it is admitted by Z. U. Crittenden, that Elliott Muse after-wards sold the land.

The principle on which the decree of November, 1820, was opened in May term, 1821, was that the decree of May, 1811, ought to be apportioned equally on the estates of Elliott and Thomas Muse, unless the representatives of one of those estates, could show that the other ought to be charged with more than a moiety of that decree. That principle is still believed to be correct. The accounts, as now exhibited to the court, furnish no evidence on this subject, other than two entries on the books of Elliott Muse, as executor of Thomas Muse, in which he credits himself as follows: “1813, March Oth, to cash in discharge of testator’s proportion of decree, Coates’s Executrix v. Muse's Administrators, including interest and costs of suit, $2411.54%. June 10th, to amount of your proportion of a balance not charged in a former account of a decree in fed. ct. Muse’s Administrator v. Coates’s Executors, $1602.90.”

The respective liabilities of Elliott and Thomas Muse, having been known only to themselves, this is the only testimony now attainable on tills point. The entries of Elliott Muse cannot increase the liability of Thomas Muse, but may diminish .it. If, therefore, these two sums which were obviously intended to comprise Thomas Muse’s part of the decree be less than a moiety of the decree with interest and costs, these entries amount to an admission on the part of Elliott Muse, that the estate of Thomas Muse was not liable farther, and that he ought himself to pay the residue. This conclusion is rendered irresistible, by the circumstance, that at the date of the last entry, Elliott Muse considered the whole decree as being transferred to him by the paper of the ISth of March, 1S13, executed by the attorney of the plaintiff, and of course, charged the estate of his testator with the whole sum for which it was liable-on the decree. The deed of trust, which is supposed to be referred to in this paper of the ISth of March, 1S13, is prepared in, blank in one handwriting, and afterwards filled up in another. It is dated the ISth. of March, 1811, three months before the decree was rendered, and is filled up to John Gray, agent for the plaintiff. It was, obviously from the expressions of the deed, filled up in the year 1S13, before the 3d of June, and was probably filled up and executed on the 18th of March, 1S13, when the receipt or assignment was executed. This deed having never been recorded, and Elliott Muse having sold the land, and received the money, for which he has never accounted, it is obvious, that he must remain liable to the plaintiff in the same sum as if this transaction had never taken place. Were Elliott Muse alive and solvent, there-could be no difficulty in decreeing him to-pay the whole sum. But he is dead insolvent, and the whole difficult}' of the case consists in determining, how far the representative of Elliott Muse is chargeable with a devastavit for having paid debts of inferior dignity to the decree of the 3d of June, 1811. A decree is not, in law, assignable, but is like any other chose in action, transferable for a valuable consideration, and a court of equity will support the transfer. If, therefore, the estate of Thomas Muse, had been represented by any other than Elliott Muse, and such representative had, without knowledge of the fraud, paid his part of the decree to Elliott Muse, this court would unquestionably have sustained the payment. But as no money was really paid by the estate of Thomas Muse, nor any injury sustained by his estate. in consequence of this credit in his. account by Elliott Muse; as the person committing the fraud was the representative of Thomas Muse, it seems unreasonable to deprive the creditor of his recourse against Thomas Muse, for so much as was equitably due from his estate. Had Elliott- Muse never made this entry in his accounts, it would be admitted, that the liability of Thomas Muse remained; and I cannot think, that this entry changes his liability, unless it should appear that he has sustained an injury from it. The question of dignity is unimportant in this part of the case, because the estate of Thomas Muse is solvent. In a suit instituted in a court of chancery for the state, an account was taken of the administration of Elliott Muse, of the [1122]*1122estate of Thomas Muse, and tlie balance reported against the executor, is $314.54%. But this report is understood to credit the executor for the sum charged, as being paid to the executor of Coates. Those sums are, therefore, to be added to this balance, and they will leave Elliott Muse indebted to the estate of Thomas Muse, in the full sum now claimed by the plaintiff from the estate of Thomas Muse. This debt, from the representative of Elliott Muse, to the estate of Thomas Muse, is, undeniably, a debt of the first dignity.

It is contended on the part of the representative of Thomas Muse, that as all the parties are before the court, the representative of Elliott Muse, ought to be decreed to pay to the plaintiff, the sum due from the estate of Thomas Muse: and the court is of that opinion.

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Related

Coates v. Muse
5 F. Cas. 1116 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia, 1822)

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 1120, 1 Brock. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coates-v-muse-circtdva-1823.