Green v. Byrne

46 Ark. 453
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Ark. 453 (Green v. Byrne) 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
Green v. Byrne, 46 Ark. 453 (Ark. 1885).

Opinion

Hon.-Sam. W. Williams, Sp.. J.

In this case the appellee, filed his complaint against Erancis M. Ivy, as executor of Thomas Ivy, B. W. Green, administrator de bonis non of W. W. Andrews, and others, in the circuit court of Miller county, in chancery, upon which original summonses were issued for the defendants, on the 11th day of November, 1880. In the complaint the appellee describes himself “ as administrator, with the will annexed of estate of Thomas Ivy, deceased, late of' the county of Bowie and state of. Texas, duly appointed and qualified by the honorable the probate court in and for the county of Miller and state of Arkansas.” As no letters are attached, nor date of them given, we are not advised, by the transcript, as to the date, but infer from other matters apparent in the record, that the appointment had been made recently before the bringing of the suit. From the original and amended complaints and exhibits, upon which the case was decided below, on demurrer, it appears that Thomas Ivy, late of the county of Bowie and state of Texas, being seized of a large estate, both real and personal, situated in the states of Arkansas and Texas, on the 9th of December, 1857, made his last will, in which are the following provisions which are pertinent to this case, to-wit:

“Firstly — I desire all my just debts and liabilities to be paid by my executor hereinafter to be named.
“ Secondly — I devise and bequeath unto my brother, Marion Francis Ivy, all the estate, right, title and interest in possession, reversion or remainder, which I, at this time, have, or shall have, of, in and to lands, tenements, hereditaments or annuities, or reuts charged upon, or issuing out of them, whether situated in this the said county and state, Bowie county, Texas, or otherwise. And I further bequeath and devise unto my brother, all the right, title and interest, in possession, reversion or remainder, which I have at this time, or shall have, in or to any slaves or personal property whatever, whether the same is,, or may be in this, the said county and state, or elsewhere; most of said estate consisting of lands and slaves and other personal property, situated and being in said county of Bowie, and in the county of Lafayette, in the state of Arkansas. I do bequeath unto my said brother, Marion Francis Ivy, the proceeds of all my choses in action, and my interest in all claims, of every description, in which I am or may be interested; provided that none of the above legacies and bequests shall interfere with or annul the legacies hereinafter to be mentioned and set forth in this my last will and testament.
“ Thirdly — I bequeath and devise unto my nephew, Thomas II. Wallace, $5000, which I desire to be paid to' him, either in money or property, by my said brother, out of my said estate, when he, the said Thomas H. Wallace, arrives at the age of twenty-one years.
“Fourthly — I hereby nominate and appoint my said brother, Marion Francis Ivy, the executor of this my last will and testament, and desire him to carry out the foregoing provisions, and to attend to all matters of my estate as he may deem best.”

This will is duly attested by two witnesses, so as to make it a good will concerning real estate in Arkansas. Francis M. Ivy, called Marion Francis, in this will, proved this will, it is alleged, before the county court of Bowie county, Texas, a court having jurisdiction, though no record evidence of the probate is exhibited, and took out letters testamentary on the 24th of February, 1862, and fully administered the estate in said county in Texas, the domicile of testator. There is no allegation or evidence that the will and probatehave ever been admitted to record in Arkansas, .as prescribed by the statute regulating wills. Mansfield’s Digest, secs. 6513, 6531, 6582, 653Jp.

The testator departed this life on or about the 15th day ■of January, 1862, shortly before the probate of his will. That the executor has never made his final settlement with the Texas court; that his administration was still open, awaiting the result of an ancillary administration to be had in the state of Arkansas, where the largest and most valuable portion of the estate of testator, realty, was •and is situated, then in Lafayette, now in Miller county, in said state; and remained wholly and entirely unadministered by any court of competent jurisdiction in Arkansas. That testator, and his brother, Francis M., at the time of testator’s death, were partners in the business of •farming in the county of Lafayette, now in Miller. That the slaves were emancipated. That certain lands belonged to the testator in his own right, and he had an undivided half interest in others with Francis M. That William W. Andrews, on the 31st of October, 1865, filed his complaint, and had a writ of attachment issued against Francis M. Ivy, from the circuit court of Lafayette county, which was, on the 4th of November, 1865, levied upon portions of this land. On the 22d of November, 1867, Andrews recovered judgment against Francis 'M. Ivy, and on the 8th of November, 1871, the judgment was revived; and on the 15th day of October, 1875, a ven. ex. was issued on this judgment, directed to the sherifi of Miller county ; and on the 9th day of December the lands were sold in solido, and not in legal subdivisions, and Martha J. Andrews, as the administratrix of W. W. Andrews, became the purchaser. Before this sale, Francis M. Ivy, on the 1st day of May, 1875, mortgaged the lands, which were devised to him by Thomas Ivy, to Wm. B. Crabtree, reserving in the mortgage, the right to 160 acres, as a homestead. • That Crabtree well knew the condition of the lands, and the interest of the estate of Thomas Ivy, at the time the mortgage was executed. That the notes secured by the mortgage were assigned, by Crab-tree, to K. Mandel & Co., of Jefferson, Texas. That suit was brought, in the Miller circuit court, March term, 1879, to foreclose this mortgage, by Mandel & Co., against E. M. Ivy, Henry Moore, as assignee in bankruptcy of Eraucis M. Ivy, Crabtree, James Kelly and Mrs. Andrews, and B. W. Green, administrator, cle bonis non of W. W. Andrews. That a decree was rendered and an order made to sell land to satisfy it. That under this decree the lands which had belonged to Thomas Ivy, as well as those in which he had an undivided interest, were sold on the 7th of June, 1879, and were bought by William R. Kelly, who appears to have bought in trust for Mandel & Co.,, and B. W. Green, as administrator de bonis non, of Andrews’ estate. That on the 1st of December, 1875, Francis M. Ivy, on his own petition, was declared a bankrupt,, by the district court of the United States for the eastern district of Arkansas. That he scheduled these lands of Thomas Ivy as his, as residuary devisee subject to the payment of testator’s debts and the legacy to Wallace., and subject to his own mortgage to Crabtree. That Henry Moore was appointed assignee in bankruptcy of the estate of Francis M. Ivy, the bankrupt, who sold all the interest of the bankrupt in the lands embraced in the schedule, and James Kelly purchased them. That Kelly,, afterwards died, and John A. Roberts was appointed administrator, and as such, it was charged, was setting up-some claim to the land. That Kelly, in his lifetime, did not pay the assignee the purchase money, nor has his administrator, since. Kelly’s heirs are not named or made parties.

That Thomas H.

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Related

Kraft v. Moore
89 S.W. 51 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ark. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-byrne-ark-1885.