French v. Winsor

36 Vt. 412
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Vt. 412 (French v. Winsor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. Winsor, 36 Vt. 412 (Vt. 1863).

Opinion

Poland, Ch. J.

1st. Is the orator entitled to a decree against the defendant Winsor ?,

The original bill, which was against Winsor alone, stated in substance, that in 1828 the orator, Calvin French, was duly appointed administrator of the estate of James Winsor, of which the defendant Winsor, then a minor, was the sole heir. That he proceeded to settle the estate, paid the debts allowed against the estate by commissioners, and some just claims that had not been allowed, and expended' some for the support of the defendant Winsor, the heir to the estate. That in 1839, after the payment of all claims against the estate, he paid the balance in his hands, being about $530., after deducting his own charges as administrator, to the guardian of H. M. Winsor, and that after-wards, in 1842, H. M. Winsor received the same from Ms [414]*414guardian. That as all matters relating to the estate were fully closed and settled, the orator did not suppose it necessary that his account should he settled in the probate court, and therefore had never presented it or made any settlement in that court. That in December, 1845, the defendant Winsor caused the orator to be cited before the probate court to settle his administration account, and subsequently, in fraud of his agreement with the orator, procured an order to be made by the probate court that the orator should present his account for settlement; of which decree the orator was ignorant for more than twenty days, so that he lost his right to appeal. That the orator refused to account in the probate court as ordered, whereupon the defendant Winsor brought a suit upon the administrator’s bond against him and his surety, Josiah French, which suit was entered and pending in Court.

The original bill also alleges that, for several years before the death of James Winsor, the orator Calvin French had the care and management of his affairs and business as his agent and attorney, and performed services .as such, but that he made no deduction from the assets of the estate therefor when he paid over the balance in his hands to the guardian of H. M. Winsor -T and the bill alleges that he was entitled to payment for such services, and that-in making such payment he really paid more than was justly due from him. The bill prayed for an accounting, — for an injunction upon the suit upon the administration bond, and for general relief.

There was no specific prayer for a decree in favor of the orator Calvin French for the payment of any balance due him, if it should be found on taking the account that there was any such balance; and this was unnecessary, if the facts stated in the bill entitled him to such decree, the prayer for general relief would cover it.

The defendant demurred to the original bill, and the case came before this court and the decision is reported in the 24th Vt. Rep.

The court decided that under our system of settling estates and all matters growing out of them in the probate court, the [415]*415accounting which the orator prayed for could only be had in that court, and therefore remanded the case to the court of chancery, with direction to retain it there until the accounting should be had in the probate court, and then to proceed with the cause, if the result shall be such as to entitle the orator to have the aid of the court of chancery for the protection of his rights.

After this determination of the original cause in this court, the orator presented his administration account, and his other claims against the estate of James Winsor, to the probate court for adjustment, and the result was that about the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars was found tó be due the orator from the estate; or in other words, it was found that he had overpaid the defendant Winsor that amount, and a decree was made accordingly, from which decree the defendant Winsor appealed to the county court.

After this adjudication in the probate court and appeal, the orator Calvin French presented his petition to the chancellor, setting forth this allowance in his favor, and prayed for a writ of sequestration in said chancery suit to sequester the property of the defendant Winsor to secure the payment of any decree he might thereafter obtain therein against the defendant. The petition was granted, a writ of sequestration issued by the chancellor, and certain real estate of the defendant was sequestered or attached thereon. No question has been made upon this agreement but that this proceeding was regular, and created a lien upon the sequestered estate. In this condition of the litigation, a settlement was negotiated between Calvin French and Winsor, by which Winsor was to pay French the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, secure the payment of the same by a mortgage on the same real estate sequestered, and all suits between them to be discontinued.

Winsor executed his notes to French, and a mortgage to secure them, on the 8th day of August, 1855, and at the same time gave to him a written agreement that, if such mortgage should prove not to be good security in consequence of any previous encumbrance upon the mortgaged estate, he would “ make confession of judgment in proper form on a writ of sequestration [416]*416in his favor upon the same property to the amount of said mortgage.”

Previous to this settlement, on the 3d day of August, 1855, Isaac Matthewson caused an execution in his favor against Winsor to be levied on the same real estate sequestered and mortgaged, and in December after set off the whole estate upon his execution.

It has not been suggested but that this levy and set off were all in legal form, and valid as againt Winsor the debtor.

Thereupon the orators filed a supplemental bill setting up the said proceedings in the probate court, the writ of sequestration and service, the settlement between Calvin French and Winsor, and the levy and set off upon the execution of Matthewson.

The supplemental bill also alleges that the debt of Matthewson against Winsor was fictitious and fraudulent, or if not-,- that Matthewson held other ample security for its payment.

Matthewson was made a defendant in the supplemental bill, and the bill prayed that Matthewson’s levy and set off might be set aside and vacated, dr postponed to the orator’s lien by his sequestration.

The defendants answered the supplemental bill, the answers were traversed, and testimony taken.

The orator Calvin French claims that he is entitled to a decree against Winsor for the balance found due to him upon the settlement in the probate court, or if not, that he is at least entitled to recover the one hundred and fifty dollars agreed to be paid on the settlement between him and Winsor.

The defendants insist that the orator is not entitled to any decree against Winsor, because they say that his original bill did not really set up or claim any balance as due to himself, or ask any decree for the payment of any sum due to him, and is therefore insufficient to sustain any such decree ; that if this be otherwise, that then, by the settlement ‘ with Winsor, and taking his notes and mortgage, his claim was merged ; and that if Winsor violated his agreement to confess a judgment on the writ of sequestration, the orator is not entitled to have a decree for the amount, but must resort to his action against Winsor for the [417]*417breach of his agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Vt. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-winsor-vt-1863.