Dean v. Nunnally

36 Miss. 358
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 Miss. 358 (Dean v. Nunnally) 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
Dean v. Nunnally, 36 Miss. 358 (Mich. 1858).

Opinion

SMITH, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action brought, ostensibly, for the recovery of a certain slave and two bales of cotton, which the plaintiffs claimed as the executors of the will of James B. Nunnally, deceased. The true object of the suit was to obtain an authoritative construction of the said will, in reference to the rights and authority of the executors.

The facts of the case are set forth in a special verdict. From which it appears that the said James B. Nunnally, having made and published his last will and testament, died some time in the year 1854; that by said will the testator declared it to be his desire that his widow, the defendant, should have his entire estate, real and personal, “ to have and to hold (and) to sell any part thereof as she might think best for her interest and the interest of his children during her natural life or widowhood;” that at the death or upon the marriage of his widow, certain children and a grandson of the testator should have certain specified slaves; that his entire estate should be kept together during the life or widowhood of the defendant; that if the defendant should survive until the testator’s two youngest children marry or attain their age of majority, that she should “ give them such property as in her judgment might seem best,” and that the specific legacy bequeathed to one of the testator’s daughters should be delivered to her upon her marriage; that the two youngest children of the testator should be educated out of his estate; that upon the death of his widow, testator’s land should be sold; that his entire estate should then be divided amongst his children, in the manner therein prescribed; and that Aaron Dean and James Bartlett Nunnally, the plaintiffs, “ should take his entire business in hand, and act as the executors of his will.”

It further appears that the will was duly probated in.July, [362]*3621855; and that the plaintiffs qualified as the executors, took out letters testamentary, and proceeded to act, and had acted as the executors from the time of their appointment down to the time of rendering the verdict; that the slave sued for, was the property of the estate, and passed under the testator’s will; and that the two bales of cotton claimed in the declaration, were produced on the testator’s land by the labor of his slaves; that the defendant was, when the verdict was found, and had been, since the grant of letters testamentary, in the full possession of the devised property; and that the possession of the property was not needed for the payment of debts, as no debts or demands were then existing against the estate.

It appears also that the entire property was permitted to remain in the defendant’s possession, without any demand, on the part of plaintiffs, for its delivery, until within a few days before the institution of this suit, which was not until after twelve months had elapsed from the grant of the letters testamentary.

Upon the foregoing facts, judgment was rendered for the defendant, and the plaintiffs sued out this writ of error.

The personal effects of a decedent vest in his executors or administrators ; first, as assets, for the payment of debts ; and then, for distribution under the will, or according to the statute. The title, therefore, to the personal property of the testator, vested in the plaintiffs in error, as his executors. They are, consequently, entitled to the possession, and to maintain an action to recover it, if withheld from them. Hence, assuming that, by the terms of the will, the executors were vested with the right to retain possession of the devised property after payment of the debts; and that it was the manifest intention of the testator that they should have the exclusive control and management of it during the life or widowhood of the defendant in error, the judgment was clearly erroneous.

But assuming the truth of the converse of this proposition, that is, that the defendant took, not simply a use in the property, or a right to the annual income, during life or widowhood, but a legal freehold in the property itself, hence necessarily excluding the right of the executors to retain possession after the payment of the debts, it is equally clear that the judgment was correct, upon the [363]*363facts above stated. For, upon those facts, one of two conclusions necessarily arises, to wit, that the whole property, embracing the slave in controversy, was delivered, by the executors, to the defendant, as the general legatee under the will, or that having taken possession of her legacy, she retained it with the consent of the executors. In either event, the court was bound to presume that the executors had consented to the legacy; and, by such assent, rendered the title of the defendant in error complete to whatever interest or estate was conferred by the will. Hence, upon the hypothesis that the defendant in error acquired a life estate in the devised property, it cannot admit of doubt that the plaintiffs were not entitled to judgment.

Upon this construction of the will, for another reason, the plaiñ-tiffs were not entitled to maintain this suit. The verdict showed that more than twelve months had elapsed, after the grant of letters testamentary to the plaintiffs. No debt or demand then existed against the estate ; consequently, if they had been in possession, instead of the legatee, a retention of the legacy could not have been justified upon the ground that the legacy, or any part of it, was required to pay the debts, or to meet any demands against the estate. Under such circumstances, the defendant in error being, according to the construction on which, at present, we are proceeding, the general legatee under the will, and the only party to whom distribution could have been made, was entitled to maintain an action at law to recover the legacy, although the executors had not consented to it, and there was no final settlement of the estate. Worten's Admr. v. Howard, 2 S. & M. 530; Magee v. Grigg, 11 Ib. 70.

In the case of Magee v. Grigg, last cited, it was held by this court, that the assent of the executor to the possession of a legacy by the legatee, is not necessary to enable the legatee to maintain an action at law for his legacy; and that the executor could not defend such an action on the ground that there had been no final settlement of the estate, unless he could also show debts unsettled, for Which the property might be required.

In the case before us it was shown by the verdict, affirmatively, that the property was not required for the payment of the debts, as there existed no claims or debts against the estate. It is mani[364]*364fest that the principle recognized in Magee v. Grigg applies, with great force, to the circumstances of this case, and proves clearly that if the situation of the parties were reversed in regard to the possession of the legacy, that the defendant in error could have recovered in an action at law, notwithstanding there had been no final settlement of the estate. It follows, therefore, that the' plaintiffs in error were not entitled to recover the property sued for. It would be absurd to hold that the same facts and circumstances which constituted title in the defendant as against the plaintiff, gave to the latter a right of recovery against the former.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Miss. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-nunnally-miss-1858.