Fretwell v. McLemore

52 Ala. 124
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by114 cases

This text of 52 Ala. 124 (Fretwell v. McLemore) 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
Fretwell v. McLemore, 52 Ala. 124 (Ala. 1875).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

(after stating facts as above). — We propose to consider the causes of demurrer in the order in which we have stated them.

In Gardner v. Gantt (19 Ala. 668), Dargan, C. J., said: “ The distributees or next of kin can maintain no suit, either at law or in equity, for the mere purpose of distribution, until letters of administration have been duly granted upon the estate of the deceased. This principle is well settled by authority, but even without decided cases no other rule could obtain, for the reason that the law casts the title to all the personal estate of the decedent upon his personal representative. It is true that he holds the title as trustee, to pay the debts in the first instance, and then to make distribution, according to the statute, amongst those entitled. But until letters of administration have been granted, the legal title cannot be brought before the court, and therefore it cannot be bound by the decree; nor can the court see that the trusts have been executed.” The case before the court was a bill in equity by the remainder-men of personal property, bequeathed by will, after the death of the tenant for life, for the recovery and distribution of the property bequeathed, which was in the possession of vendees of the life tenant, and averred payment of all the debts of the testator, but failed to show that there had ever been any administration of his estate. The bill was dismissed. .There is a series of decisions in this court, asserting that when an estate is left entirely free from debt, the distributees may in equity obtain distribution without the delay and expense of administration. The first of these is Bethea v. McCall (5 Ala. 308), which was a bill for an account and settlement of a trust estate. Two of the donees died in infancy, and the survivors, who were the complainants in the bill, were their next of kin. It was objected that the personal representatives of the deceased donees were necessary parties. The court said, in answer to the objection, “ There was no necessity to take letters of administration upon the estates of the two brothers who died during infancy. The survivors were the heirs 'at law, and as they had no capacity to contract debts, cannot be presumed to have any creditors.” In Miller v. Eatman (11 Ala. 614), which was an action at law, and was held not maintainable, because the personal representative of a deceased infant was not joined as [132]*132a plaintiff, it is said: “ In courts of equity, where it is not necessary that the legal title should be vested in the plaintiff, an administration may be dispensed with, when the right is asserted by those who would be entitled to distribution, and when it is clear there are no creditors to be prejudiced. Such was the case of Bethea v. McCall, 5 Ala. 315. But even'these are exceptions to the general rule, which is the same in equity as at law.” In Vandeveer v. Alston (16 Ala. 494), the husband of a sole distributee, without administration, took possession of the personal property of an intestate, paid the debts, and remained in possession, until the death of the wife, when her next of kin had administration granted of the estate of the intestate, and sought to recover of him the property of the intestate. A court of equity intervened for his protection, and in pronouncing the opinion of the court, Chilton, J., said: “In case of a sole distributee, the claims of creditors aside, I see no principle of public policy requiring the party to push the property through the diminishing process of administration.” In Frowner v. Johnson (20 Ala. 482) the subject was again before the court, and Goldthwaite, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, used this language: “We do not say that there may not be cases where it is allowable for the distributee of a deceased distributee to take without the intervention of an administration, but those cases are properly regarded as exceptions to the general rule, and to sustain them it is necessary to show affirmatively that an administration would have been a useless ceremony.” Plunkett v. Kelly (22 Ala. 655) presented, as did Frowner v. Johnson, the question here involved. It was a bill filed for the settlement of an estate by several complainants, claiming to be next of kin of the decedent, one of whom deduced his right through his parent, who died after the decedent. The bill contained no allegation showing that administration of the father’s estate “ would have been a useless ceremony,” and was deemed fatally defective on general demurrer. In Vanzant v. Morris (25 Ala. 285) the surviving brothers and sisters of a deceased infant were permitted in equity to recover a legacy bequeathed to them jointly with him, without administration on his estate, when there were no debts against it. In Marshall v. Crow (29 Ala. 298), which was a bill for partition of personal property between tenants in common, one of whom had died, and of whose estate there had been no administration, the court -said : “ When an estate is left entirely free from debt, and the distributees do not invoke the action of the probate court to separate their several interests, but ask the chancellor to give them their several shares without an administration, the bill will be sustained, and the relief granted.” The surviving tenants were the next of [133]*133kin of the deceased tenant. The rule to be extracted from these decisions is, that a court of equity will dispense with an administration, and decree distribution directly, when it affirmatively appears, that, if there was an administrator,, the only duty devolving on him would be distribution. Then administration is regarded as “ a useless ceremony.” An administrator or an executor is a trustee clothed with the legal title. He holds in trust for creditors and distributees or legatees. The creditors are entitled to charge the assets with the payment of their debts, in priority of the equity of distributees or legatees. When there are no debts, the equity of the distributees or legatees is perfect; the legal title, if there was a personal representative, would be a naked trust, which a court of equity ought not and would not permit to be interposed as a bar to the equitable title of the distributee or legatee. Vandeveer v. Alston, supra; McCaa v. Wolf, 42 Ala. 389. There maybe expressions in Vandeveer v. Alston indicating that air administration will be dispensed with only when there is a sole distributee. We do not suppose the court intended to be so understood. The expressions were used in reference to that particular case, in which there was a sole distributee, whose husband was claiming to have reduced the personal estate to possession during her life, and that thereby his marital rights had attached. Plunkett v. Kelly, supra, certainly announced the true rule, and is not at all inconsistent with our conclusions. It did not affirmatively appear that there were not debts against the deceased distributee. For aught that appeared from the bill, the distributees were seeking, through the instrumentality of a court of equity, to obtain property which ought to have been charged with the debts of the intestate. There was not under the allegations of this bill a misjoinder of complainants.' The children of Esther, and her grandchildren, the children of her son, dying after her death, could join. They had a community of interest, and were entitled to relief of the same character.

As we have stated, the intestate, of whose estate distribution is sought, was at her death a resident citizen of Georgia.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ala. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fretwell-v-mclemore-ala-1875.