Gibson v. Jones

81 Tenn. 684
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 Tenn. 684 (Gibson v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Jones, 81 Tenn. 684 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Freeman, _ J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This bill is filed, December, 1882, by complainants as creditors of David Hull, to subject a tract of land.' [685]*685devised by him to bis wife for life, remainder to his children therein named, except one, Lucretia.

The facts necessary to be stated are, David Hull .died in 1870, his wife, who had the life estate, in 1879. At March term, 1879, after the death of the wife, defendant, W. E. Jones, was appointed administrator de bonis non with the will annexed, there having been a previous administration, we take it, soon after his death. PIull left the tract of land of 160 acres, subject to the disposition of h.is will.

Adeline Hull, who had been a ward of Hull’s, brought suit in the chancery codrt against the estate of Hull and his sureties, on guardian bond to recover monies in his ' hands as guardian and not accounted for. This case was successfully prosecuted, so that a decree was rendered against complainants in the present case as sureties for $844.36, by this court November, 1882. The estate of Hull, however, was held not liable, the defense of seven years having been interposed as a bar to the recovery sought. The sureties have paid this debt, and now file this bill against the ■devisees of the realty to subject the same to the payment of their debt, by way of reimbursement. It is shown there are no personal assets, and the devisees are made parties, together with the administrator ■Jones. He, in fact, is only made defendant by the terms of the bill in his ‘ character of administrator de bonis non, in order to have judgment ascertaining the amount of the debt against Hull’s estate, and in order to enjoin a proceeding instituted by him, it seems, for the sale of the land, or his doing so [686]*686privately, as it is suggested be will do, in violation or without authority under the will.

Jones, however, answers the bill individually, and claims to have purchased the shares of three of the children of Hull, and that for this, with the reasons-given in addition, the shares thus purchased by him, before suit commenced by complainants, these shares-are not subject to complainants’ claim. The chancellor has so decreed, and complainants have appealed. It is proper to say, that the other devisees, or those representing the other four shares made no defense, and the case is not before us as to them.

The Referees report against this decree, and recommend a reversal, to which respondent; Jones, files exceptions.

Several questions are presented by the exceptions, which are disposed of summarily together, as there is nothing in them to aid respondent. It is assumed in the answer that the claim of complainant rests on the doctrine of subrogation, and these sureties who have paid the debt due Adeline Hull from their guardian, are to be subrogated to the rights of Adeline. This is a mistaken view of the claim. Their claim is simply the ordinary claim of sureties, who have been compelled to pay the debt of their principal, and stands in this record alone on the ground of money paid for another, which he ought to have paid, and therefore a right to be reimbursed the sum paid. This being so, the statute of limitations having run in favor of the estate as against the claim of Adeline Hull, and the former adjudication to that [687]*687effect, as we]l as the other defeases urged, that might or should haye been made to her claim by complainants, have nothing to do with their rights in the present case.

This suit is brought on the new right of action which accrued on payment . of the money decreed against the sureties, and was brought a short time after the right of action arose, and that no statute of limitation runs, until a right of action accrues, is now axiomatic in our law.. It suffices to say, that there is nothing in any of these questions.

The plea of former adjudication of the claim in that case is equally unfounded, as these complainants had no claim, at that time to assert, asserted none, and their claim could not have been adjudicated in any way in that case, because not then accrued.

The only exception that does tend to raise a matter that might be tenable. or present a question to us for decision favorable ■ to respondent is the second one, which is because the Referees report that the three interests purchased by William E. Jones, as set. out in his answer in his own right was liable to complainants’ demands, and reversing the chancellor’s decree holding them not liable. This exception, taken alone, is not a compliance with the statute creating the commission, section 6, requiring specfic exceptions to the report, pointing out definitely the error or errors complained of, and accompanying these must be a brief, citing the testimony,” etc.

This exception is to the conclusion reached. or announced, and puts in issue the entire record, no [688]*688specific reference being given to any part of it. Taken, however, in connection with the first exception, it may by a liberal construction, be held to raise the question, whether a purchaser from an heir or devisee, bona fide before suit brought or process issued, with no notice of any claim which could be a charge on the land, gets a good title as against creditors of the testator or intestate.

The first exception is based in the first part of it, on the effect of the statute of limitations having run against the claim of Adeline Hull, against the estate before purchased by defendant, and then adds, “before any lien or right had obtained against the same in favor of Adeline Hull or the complainants,” he purchased the three interests for valuable considerations.

Giving this exception a liberal construction, it may raise the much mooted question in our State of the right of the heir or devisee to- sell, and makes him liable only for the ancestor’s debts to the value of the lands aliened: Code, sec. 2256 (old Code), new, 3094.

But that this question was not intended to be raised by the exception is shown by the fact, that in brief and argument filed in support of the exception there is no allusion to it, nor any reference to the section of the Code or our decisions upon it. On the contrary, the argument aimed to the point, first, that the statute of limitation of seven years had barred the •claim: against the estate, and had been so adjudged in the former case; and second, that Jones had purchased without notice of the claim of Adeline Hull.

As a matter of fact, the weight of the proof is [689]*689against respondent on this question of notice of some claim on the part of Adeline Hull, whether he had knowledge of its precise character is not so certain except that it grew out of the guardianship; and if so, then the claim now asserted by complainants would have been a necessary result of her assertion of that claim, and so, as she has asserted it, .he is charged with notice of what has followed, and so the Referees report. This being so, the real question on the facts would be, whether a party who purchases from an heir or devisee lands, descended or devised, with notice of the fact that there exists a claim against the estate, which may be made a charge on 'the land,, if personalty is not sufficient to meet it, can hoild said land free from the debt, by reason of the .title conveyed to him by the- heir or devisee, and compel the. creditor to go alone on the heir or devisee for the value of ■ lands descended or devised.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Tenn. 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-jones-tenn-1884.