Deans v. Wilcoxon

25 Fla. 980
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 980 (Deans v. Wilcoxon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deans v. Wilcoxon, 25 Fla. 980 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

I. The complainants, as shown by the statement, claim to be the heirs and distributees of Jacob Foreman, and the parties defendant against whom relief is sought are Hartridge and L’Engle, as administrators of Sanderson, who, at his death, in June, 1871, was administrator de bonis non of Foreman, under an appointment made August 6th, 1860, and George Wheaton Deans, as administrator de bonis <ion of Foreman, by appointment made February 21st, 1881, and the surieties on Deans’ bond as such administrator, and the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company and Knox, its Commissioner.

(a) The grounds of relief set up as to the administrators of Sanderson are substantially as follows:

The sale of Lot 7, of Block 31, made by Mrs. Foreman, as administratrix of Jacob Foreman, under an order of the Probate Court of September 27th, 1856, and the conveyance of the same and lot 8 by Sanderson, as administrator de bonis non, in execution of such incomplete and alleged sale, and the conveyance of said lots to Sander-son individually. It is charged in the bill that lot 8 was never sold by the administratrix, or advertised or offered by her for sale, or reported by her as having been sold, advertised or offered for sale, notwithstanding the recitals to the contrary int he deed from Sanderson, as administrator de bonis non, and that the Probate Court had no jui'isdiction to order a sale of these lots, as the petition did not allege the exhaustion of personal assets, but on the contrary showed that the personal property had not been exhausted. The claims or demands, for the payment of which the sale was made by the administratrix are also alleged not to have been debts or demands of, nor subsisting debts or demands against Foreman’s estate, nor such debts or demands as upon a petition setting up the jurisdictional facts, would make a lawful predicate for ordering a sale of real estate.

[1019]*1019It is charged also that' Sanderson, upon being appointed administrator de bonis non, possessed himself of funds of the estate in the State of New York, amounting to several thousand dollars, and unadministered property in Florida, ánd that he died without having made any settlement whatever of his administration or any distribution, either partial or final, of Foreman’s estate, to those interested therein; and that at his death he was in possession of said lot No. 7, and, claimed the fee thereto, he having, however, on February 7, 1870, conveyed, in his own right, lot.No. 8 mentioned above, to the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company. His administrators, it is alleged, have made no settlement of his administration of Foreman’s estate.

(b) The grounds of relief against Deans, as administrator de bonis non, aforesaid, and his sureties, and the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, and Knox, the commissioner of such company, are, in brief, that on April 23d, 1881, Deans, as such administrator, petitioned the County Court for a sale of lot 8 to pay Foreman’s debts, and on May 6th obtained an order as prayed, and on June 6, one Driggs, as commissioner, appointed by the County Court, exposed the lot for sale, and one Lockwood, the agent of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, bid it off at the price of $13,-000, and the sale was reported to the court as having been made to “ Augutus E. Bass and the heirs and representatives of Job Bass, deceased.” No further action, it is stated, has been taken by the County Court in the premises.

It is alleged: That at or before the sale just mentioned, the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, or its Commissioner, surrendered the possession of lot 8 to Deans, as such administrator, and that he still retains possession of the same as assets of Foreman’s estate, and is receiving the rents and profits of such possession, and that the Trust Company recognizing the invalidity of its title to lot 8, obtained [1020]*1020through the alleged sale by Mrs. Foreman as administratrix, and the conveyance from Sanderson in completion of such sale, and the reconveyance to Sanderson individually, and his deed to the Trust Company, and desiring to acquire the title residing in the heirs of Foreman, procured from the grantors who had conveyed lot 8 to Sanderson, an assignment of the debt subsequently set up by Deans’ petition, and procured Deans to take out letters of administration and apply for the sale. That no purchase money has been paid on the bid, nor was any intended to be paid by those making or interested in it, other than a credit upon the alleged debt, for the payment of which the sale was prayed and ordered, and which has been assigned as alleged.

It is charged that at the time of Sanderson’s appointment as administrator, there was no valid subsisting debt or claim of any kind against the estate of Foreman; and that the County Court had no jurisdiction in the proceedings instituted by Deans to determine whether or not the alleged debt was established as a predicate for said order, if said debt or claim ever existed, which is denied. The reasons given by the bill for the last allegation are stated in a subsequent subdivision of this opinion.

It is also argued that “if there were valid and subsisting debts at the time of Deans’ application for an order to sell, it could not be determined by said County Court that there was a necessity for the sale of the lands for the payment of the debt, or that the personal estate had been exhausted or was insufficient to pay debts, or that the debt exceeded the value of the personal estate, until there had been a final settlement of said administration of Elizabeth, and that of Sanderson in person or by their representatives. ” When the order was granted (the bill alleges) there was abundant evidence in the files of said court that each of said administrations W£S outstanding and unsettled.

[1021]*1021The bill expressly states, however, that the complainants are willing that the sale made of lot 8 by the commissioner under the order obtained by Deans should stand, provided the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, or the parties in whose names the bid is reported to have been made, pay into the Circuit Court of Duval county, where the bill under consideration is filed, the purchase money so bid, ($13,-000) to be distributed by such Circuit Court to those entitled thereto; and complainants offer to ratify the sale upon the payment of the same to be disposed of by the order of such court.

The prayer as to the administrators of Sanderson especially, is that the sale evidenced by Sanderson’s deed as administrator de bonis non, conveying lots 7 and S, be set aside and held for naught; that they fully settle in this court Sander-son’s administration of Foreman’s estate, and account for all the assets their intestate received, and was or is chargeable with, including lot 7.

The prayer of the bill as to Deans and the Trust Company and Knox specially, is that Deans, as administrator de bonis non, account for all the assets he has received and for which he is chargeable, and that the Trust Company, or Knox, its commissioner, pay into the Circuit Court the sum of $13,000, .bid for lot 8, or failing therein the sale be set aside and dedal ed of no effect.

The bill also prays for a final settlement and distribution of Foreman’s estate, and that the alleged claim of December 20th,1838,setup in each of the petitions as adebt of Foreman, for the payment of which a sale was sought, whether in the hands of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company or of A. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deans-v-wilcoxon-fla-1889.