Dyer v. Jacoway

50 Ark. 217
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 50 Ark. 217 (Dyer v. Jacoway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Jacoway, 50 Ark. 217 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Battue, J.

Appellees, “ creditors of the estate of Samuel Dickens, deceased, on behalf of themselves, and other creditors of said estate, filed their bill in 1878, against the administrator, Jacoway, his sureties on his bond, and Mrs. Elizabeth D. Jacoway. The object of the bill was to set aside for fraud the settlements made by Jacoway in the probate court, to restate the accounts, to hold the sureties liable, and to subject to any decree to be rendered, certain real estate to which Mrs. Jacoway had legal title. A demurrer to the bill for want of equity was sustained, whereupon complainants rested. The bill was dismissed and they appealed ” to this court. The judgment of the court below was reversed on appeal, and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. It then proceeded to a final hearing and was heard upon its merits. The settlements were held to be fraudulent in many respects and were restated by the court below; and the defendants excepted and appealed to this court. Plaintiffs also excepted to many rulings of the court against them and again appealed. ,

Dickens died intestate, on the second of March, 1867. Jacoway administered on his estate ; filed an inventory, and made settlements, respectively, on the 19th of May, 1868, on the 7th of July, 1869, on the 14th of April, 1870, and the 5th of July, 1871, all of which were approved and confirmed.

“ Subsequently, on the 15th of April, 187'5, he filed a fifth settlement, in lieu of the four former ones, purporting to render an account and statement of all his administration down to that time, from the beginning, which was also duly approved and confirmed.” Plaintiffs allege in their bill that these settlements are fraudulent, and to show this make thirty-one specific charges of facts which they insist indicate fraud.

1. Administration: Settlement of estates: Interference equity. The opinion delivered by this court in this cause when it was here for the first time, which is reported in the 42 -Ark., 186, lays down the rule by which, courts of equity are governed when they interfere in the settlements of administrators to correct fraud or errors, or relieve against accident or mistake. It is unnecessary to add to what has been said upon that, subject in that opinion, except to repeat the rule so often announced by this court: A court of equity will not interfere with the proceedings in the probate courts for the settlement of estates to correct mere errors or irregularities, unless they are sufficiently gross to raise the presumption of fraud. Ringold v. Stone, 20 Ark., 526; Osborne v. Graham, 30 Ark., 66 ; West v. Waddill, 33 Ark., 575; Reinhardt v. Gartrell, Id., 727; Mock v. Pleasants, 34 Ark., 63; Jones v. Graham, 36 Ark., 383; Nathan v. Lehman, Abraham & Co., 39 Ark., 256; Trimble v. Jones, 40 Ark., 393; McLeod v. Griffiths, 45 Ark., 505 ; Hawkins v. Layne, 48 Ark., 544.

Plaintiffs’ first charge of fraud is, the administrator charged himself in his settlements with interest at ten per centum per annum on $3,487 from March 18th, 1868, when he should have charged it from* March 19th, 1867, and thereby defrauded the estate of Dickens out of $348.71.

The thirteenth is, the administrator received $6,957.18, and tailed to charge himself with interest thereon from the time he received it, and thereby defrauded the estate of $1,158.25.

The evidence does not sustain either of these charges. In the first, the $3,487 was the amount of a note which did not bear interest until the 18th of March, 1868, when it was due. In the latter case the administrator charged himself with ten per centum per annum interest on the money from the time he received it to the date of the settlement in which it is charged.

2. same: Administrator's accounts: Liability for interest. But Jaeoway insists that he did not use the $6,957.18,2. and through mistake charged himself with $764.72 thereon, when he was not chargeable with interest, and this error against him should be corrected. The evidence does not show that he charged himself with it through mistake of fact. His settlement shows the dates of the receipt of it, and that he charged himself with interest thereon from the time he received it to the date of his settlement. If there was any mistake in this, it was a mistake of law and not of fact. He received of this money $2,786.25 on the 11th of July, 1873, $1,035 on the first of July, 1873, and $3,135.93, the remainder, on the 20th of December, 1874. He made no report of the collections of it to the. probate court until the 15th of April, 1875, the date of the settlement in which he charges himself with it, but elected to hold the money and pay interest thereon. It was his duty to have reported the collection of it to the piobate court as promptly as he could, so that the court could have directed that it be loaned out or used in the payment of the debts allowed against the estate. Had he done so, the estate would have been benefitted by the interest accrued on the same or by the saving of interest on the claims paid. Having injured the estate by his inaction he did right in charging himself with interest, and the charge should not be changed.

The sixth charge of fraud is, Jacoway charged himself with $4,132.59 as the amount due on the 10 per cent, notes reported worthless, when in fact the amount due on them was $4,556.23, and thereby defrauded the estate of $423.64. The fifteenth charge is Jacoway credited himself with $5,607.31, as the amount of worthless notes when the true amount was $4,470.87, and thereby defrauded the estate of $836.44.

The eighth charge is, Jacoway, on the 1st of January, 1868, sold some notes of the estate for $10.35, and fraudulently failed to charge himself with interest on the amount of the sale, amounting to $7,48.

3. Same: Same. Erroneous calculation accepted by court court. Jacoway admits that he erroneously charged himself with $4,132.59, the amount due on the 10 per cent, notes reported as worthless, when he should have charged himself with $4,556.33, but says it was an unintentional error and would have been cheerfully corrected in the probate court had his attention been called to it. He admits that he took an excessive credit of $589.30 for worthless claims, through mistake; and that through an oversight he failed to charge himself with $7.48 on the $10.85 received on account of sales. He says these errors were mistakes made by him, and that he is willing to correct them, but insists they should be corrected in the probate court.

It appears that he made calculations of the amount due on these claims, and made statements in his settlements and otherwise showing the amount of the principal of each of them, and the interest due thereon and the sum total of the amounts due on all, and that the probate court accepted his ■calculation as correct. This amounted to a misrepresentation to the probate court as to the amount due, and having been acted on and accepted as correct by the probate court, amounted to a fraud on the court, and oú the creditors and others interested in the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ark. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-jacoway-ark-1887.