Dobbs v. Distributees of Cockerham

2 Port. 328
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 Port. 328 (Dobbs v. Distributees of Cockerham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobbs v. Distributees of Cockerham, 2 Port. 328 (Ala. 1835).

Opinion

By Mr. Justice Hitchcock :

The plaintiffs in error, who are administrator and administratrix of William W. Cockerham, deceased, were cited before the Judge of the County Court of Pickens county, to make final settlement of their administration, and to make distribution of the estate among the heirs. At the hearing before the. Judge in October, 1833, the defendants in error, a part of said heirs, filed a statement as follows :

“ The distributees, in the above case, allege and aver, that the said administrators have not made a true and perfect and -complete inventory of the personal estate of their intestate, but that they have neg[334]*334lected and omitted to return in said inventory, the following, negroes, to-wit, Hannah, &c. (some nine or ten in number.) The distributees farther allege, that the aforesaid negroes came to the possession or knowledge of the said administrators, and ought by them to have been embraced in their inventory of the estate of their intestate, and should go in course of distribution among the distributees.”

To this statement the plaintiffs in error demurred; and it appearing that they had not filed any inventory, leave was then given them to file one, which was done, and which was recorded.

On argument, the demurrer was overruled ; and leave was given them to answer or plead to issue; which, at their request, they were to make under oath. Leave was also given the distributees to file an amended statement; and leave being given to .either party to have subpoenses,- and commissions for testimony,, the case was continued to January, 1834, at which time the administrators filed their answer; in which they state,—

“ That the intestate, before his marriage with Nancy Cockerham, (who is one of the respondents) was intermarried with another woman, since deceased, by whom he had children, to wit, the said Wm Cockerham and-Cockerham, who, by her intermarriage with Elsey 'Hunt, became the mother of Wm. and Huron Hunt, who,, in this cause, appear in the character of complainants, under the denomination of dis-tributees -of William. W. Cockerham: that after the decease of his first v/ife, 'William W. Cockerham intermarried with the said Nancy Cockerham, daughter of Elisha Estis, by whom he had children, to-wit, Catharine Cockerham, now Catharine Dobbs, Polly Cockerham, now Polly Dobbs, Patsey Cocker-[335]*335ham, now Patsey Shannon, and Elisha Cockerham: that after his intermarriage .with the said Nancy Cockerham, the said Elisha Estis did, for reasons not certainly known to these respondents, lend or give to the said William W. Cockerham and his wife, the said Nancy, the aforesaid negro woman Hannah, and upon the condition, that the said Hannah and her increase or offspring, should, after the termination of said loan or gift, or after the death of the survivor of the said William W. Cockerham and Nancy his wife, be the property of the children of the said Nancy Cockerham: that the said William W. Cocker-ham, in his life time, on the 15th October, 1806, acknowledged in writing, under his hand and seal, (which writing is ready to be produced) that said negro. Hannah was loaned to him, and that he never had any right, title, claim, or demand to the said Hannah, or to her increase, but that they did, and ■ought of right and justice to belong to the children of his then wife, Nancy Cockerham, which children are the persons above named : that at the time of the death of the said William W. Cockerham, there were in his possession, only Hannah, Martin, Frank, and Lucy, of her increase; the others of her increase, had previously been distributed among the children of the said Nancy, by the authority which they believed they possessed under the'terms of the original gift or loan: that the said negroes, nor any one or more of them, have never been in the possession or knowledge of the respondents, as administrator and administratrix, as part of the estate of the said William W. Cockerham, but that they have ever been in the possession of those to whom they were distributed as aforesaid, in the life-time of the said William W, Cockerham, except the four, which as afore[336]*336said, were in the possession of the decedent at the time of his death, and since then they have remained, and still are, in the possession óf'the said Nancy Cocker-ham, as her rightful property, during her life-time according to the terras of the original gift or loan, and then to become the property of her children.”

To this answer, the distributees fried a demurrer, which upon argument was overruled, and leave given them to reply ; upon which they filed a replication, stating that the said Hannah was not given as a loan, but absolutely, and without condition or limitation : that the negroes were all in the. .possession of the decedent in his life-time, and at the time of his death, and that they are subject to general distribution aniong all the heirs of the said decedent, and not exclusively among the children of the said Nancy ■Cockerham; they deny all the allegations in the answer,‘and put themselves upon the country.

To this replication, there was a demurrer, which was overruled, and the administrator had leave to join issue, which was done, and the sheriff was ordered forthwith to summons and impannel a jury of bystanders, to try the issue, which rvas done, ajrd a verdict, was rendered, finding the four negroes subject1 to general distribution, as a part of the property of the estate of William W. Cockerham; the jury also assessed the value of each negro, and the value of the hire of each, during the time they had been in the possession of the administrator and administratrix. A motion was then made to arrest the judgment of the Court, .which was overruled, and the Court then proceeded, to render judgment, as well upon the verdict as upon .the .evidence adduced, and taking the value of the estate previously inventoried and sold, and the value of the negroes and their hire, as assessed by the jury. [337]*337proceeded to decree distribution in money to the various distributees, fifteen in number, and directed e;o3utioj.s or attachments, as might be required, to' enforce the decree of distribution.

This case has been brought by writ of error into this Court, and several assignments have been made and argued. The first question which will be noticed in the view which the Court has taken of the case, is — Whether the County Court has jurisdiction, in a case where the truth of an inventory is questioned, so far as to try the right of property? This cannot be clone by the eclesiastical courts in England. An inventory is there required for the benefit of creditors, legatees and parties in distribution, and it must, by statute of 21 Henry YIÍÍ, he exhibited on, oath, which the ordinary is bound to receive. The creditor may state objections to the inventorjq which the party is bound to answer upon oath, but no evidence is admissible to contradict the answer. If the creditor be still dissatisfied, he may have recourse to equity for relief;

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Bluebook (online)
2 Port. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbs-v-distributees-of-cockerham-ala-1835.