Fonte v. Horton

36 Miss. 350
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 Miss. 350 (Fonte v. Horton) 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
Fonte v. Horton, 36 Miss. 350 (Mich. 1858).

Opinion

HaNDY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee filed his petition in' the Probate Court of Lawrence county, to recover of the appellant, executor of Thomas Y. Grin-stead, deceased, hires for certain slaves, specifically bequeathed by the appellant’s testator to Wiley Y. Grinstead, the appellee’s intestate.

The petition states in substance the death of the testator, in July, 1847; the specific bequest of the slaves; the sufficiency of assets to pay the debts, apart from this legacy; the appointment and qualification of the appellant and one Hilliard as executors, in July, 1847, and that the slaves were not delivered to the legatee until February, 1854; that from the time of their appointment, the executors, or one of them, hired out the slaves so bequeathed, till their delivery, and that the hires amounted to about $2874 50; that Hilliard settled his account and surrendered his letters at January term, 1853, and gave up into the charge and keeping of the Prb-bate Court, all the assets remaining in his hands, leaving the appellant sole executor, who became entitled to take charge of the asset? so surrendered ; and prays a decree for the amount of the hires an<^ interest.

[353]*353The appellant demurred to the petition; and that presents the first question for consideration. It is insisted that, as the legatee bad received from the executor, the slaves bequeathed to him, the court had not jurisdiction to decree the payment of the hires.

The legacy being specific, the title of the legatee vested at the time of the testator’s death, and the produce of the slaves, from that time, became the property of the legatee, in like manner as the slaves themselves. 2 Lomax Executors, 152. He would have been entitled to the aid of the Probate Court in obtaining payment of the hires, as an incident to the legacy, upon the same principle by which he might have asked its aid in compelling the delivery of the slaves. If he only obtained a part of his right when the slaves were delivered, that does not destroy the jurisdiction of the court as to the residue; and this objection to the petition is untenable.

The answer of the appellant sets up several grounds of defence, which we will proceed to consider.

First. It is denied that the appellant ever received any of the notes or money for the hire of the slaves; but .that they were hired out by Hilliard, the coexecutor, who took the notes for the hires, and afterwards settled his account with the Probate Court, and returned to the court the notes; and hence it is insisted that the hiring was a matter of individual responsibility on the part of Hil-liard, for which the appellant is not bound, and that Hilliard was discharged by the account and settlement which he rendered, and to which the legatee did not object.

The answer shows, that the hiring of the slaves, by agreement between the two executors, was to be attended to by Hilliard, in the joint names of both executors, and that all notes taken therefor should be made payable to them jointly, as executors; and that Hilliard took the notes for hire accordingly, and reported the same to the appellant and to the Probate Court. It shows, that the hiring was in virtue of an order of the Probate Court, and admits that the slaves were only hired by the executors, respondent, and Hilliard, during a period of nine months.

It is plain, from these statements, that, although the matter of hiring out the slaves was committed to Hilliard, yet that it was in behalf of both executors, and in their joint names; and of course, that the appellant is responsible on account of the hiring, as fully [354]*354as if be had participated in the act. This is clear, from the general tenor of the answer, and especially from the fact stated, that, after the notes given for the hire were returned into the Probate Court, and went into the hands of the administrator of Wiley Y. Grin-stead, the appellant claimed title to them, and sued, and recovered judgment against, Hemingway and Bowen for the money due upon them. The hiring is, therefore, a matter for which the executors were jointly responsible.

Hence, it was not incumbent on W. Y. Grinstead, or his administrators, to object to the account returned by Hilliard, nor was the accountability of the executors for the hires discharged by that account. It was not an account of final settlement of the estate, but was only an accounting of Hilliard’s actings in the' estate, leaving the settlement of the estate for the continuing executor, returning the notes for hire of the slaves to the court for subsequent administration, and which thereby became subject to the right of the appellant, the remaining executor. It is manifest that the rights of W. Y. Grinstead, on account of the hiring, were not affected by that settlement.

Again, it is said, that the claim of the appellee for hires is merely that of a creditor against the estate of Thomas Y. Grinstead, which could not be enforced in the Probate Court. But this view cannot be maintained upon the facts stated in the petition and answer.

The slaves were the property of the legatee under the will; and, according to the answer, -were hired out by the executors, by order of the Probate Court, pending the litigation in relation to the validity of .the will. It was, then, the duty of the executors to keep the proceeds of the hire subject to the claim of the legatee. They had no right to apply it to the benefit of the general estate; and, if they did so, they are liable to the legatee for applying his fund to the general estate; and he would be entitled to recover it from them. The application of the fund to the benefit of the general estate would not necessarily give the legatee claim against the estate, but it would render the executor liable individually to the legatee. If the money belonging to the legatee was applied by the executor to the benefit of the general estate, that might justify the court, upon full proof of the justice of such course, and as between the executor and the estate, to allow the executor credit for [355]*355the amount so applied by him to the use of the estate. But the claim of the legatee is against the executor, and not against the estate.

Hence, if the view of the facts taken in behalf óf the appellant— that Hilliard mingled the proceeds of the heirs with the general assets of the estate, and applied them to its use — be true, the legatee is entitled to recover his money from the executors who have misapplied it; and that the appellant, being responsible for the acts of his coexecutor in the matter, is liable to the appellee for the misapplication of the fund. If the funds were so applied, and it was shown by the final account of Hilliard, the appellant was bound to have known it; and, his failure to prevent it, must be taken as such an act of negligence on his part, as will charge him with the act. 2 Story’s Eq. § 1283. He had the means of preventing it, by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence; and it cannot be supposed that he was ignorant of the fact that his coexe-cutor was rendering his final account. It was, then, his duty to the estate and to himself, unless he approved of it, to prevent the application of the legatee’s fund, to the use of the general estate; and, having failed to do so, he became responsible personally for the act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Miss. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fonte-v-horton-miss-1858.