Gregory v. Harrison

4 Fla. 56
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Fla. 56 (Gregory v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. Harrison, 4 Fla. 56 (Fla. 1851).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is brought up by appeal from Gadsden Circuit Court.

A bill in equity was there filed by A. E. Gregory, as administrator de bonis non administratis of the estate of James M. Nixon, deceased, the purpose of which bill was to call Robert L. Harrison, former executor of Nixon, but who had been removed or dismissed from his executorship by the Probate Court, upon the complaint of some of the parties in interest, as provided for in our statutes. The bill charges a devastavit, and prays “ that an account be taken, &c., and that what may be found to be due by the said defendant, be decreed to be paid by the said defendant to .complainant, as administrator as aforesaid.”

[61]*61It is not necessary to state at large the several allegations of the bill, nor to refer to the exhibits, farther than to say, that they exhibit amongst other matters, a large balance to be due by the removed executor to the estate of his testator, on an order for a final settlement made by the Judge of Probate for Gadsden County, on the 27th of July, 1843.

The defendant, Harrison, demurred to the complainant’s bill, “ denying the right of the said complainant, as such administrator of the estate of the said James M. Nixon left unadministered by this defendant, to call upon and require of this defendant any account of the administration of the said estate by this defendant, in his capacity as executor of the last will and testament of the said James M. Nixon, deceased.” It was the opinion of the Court below, that this demurrer was good, and the bill was thereupon dismissed. It will be perceived by this statement, that a single point is presented to the consideration and decision of this Court, and that is, whether an administrator de bonis non can call to account a removed executor, and charge him with a devastavit, as to the goods and chattels of his testator which have come to his hands.

It is the first time that this question has been before the appellate tribunals of this State, and it cannot be denied that it is one of some difficulty. This difficulty, however, we apprehend, grows rather out of the loose practice which has prevailed in some of the States of this country, and the consequent leaning of the Courts to sustain, for the sake of expediency, a practice regulating, by long acquiescence, the settlement of numerous estates, than out of any inherent obstacle to the ascertainment and adjustment of the respective rights and liabilities of parties standing in the relation to each other occupied by those before the Court.

To arrive at a proper understanding of these rights and liabilities, we propose, in the first place, to inquire whether, in any respect material to this controversy, a removed ex[62]*62ecutor differs from the personal representative of a deceased executor, and then to look briefly into the early law respecting the character, rights and liabilities of administrators de bonis non, and of executors, and their personal representatives after their decease.

An executor derives his interest in the personal effects of his testator from the will itself, and the property in them vests in him, from the moment of the testator’s death.

In England, with certain exceptions peculiar to that country, the Ecclesiastical Courts have exclusive jurisdiction of the probate of wills, and in this country, the Courts of Probate have succeeded to that jurisdiction. It results from the exclusive character of this jurisdiction, that an executor, though deriving his title from the will itself, cannot assert that title in any of the other Courts, until he is prepared to exhibit there a proof of the will from the Spiritual Courts ; in other words, he must have a probate of the will, or letters testamentary, before he can proceed effectively with the duties of his office — nevertheless, these letters testamentary are only attestations of his title, and, as a consequence of being only such, they have, when procured, relation back to the time of the testator’s death. For the same reason, the executor, before probate, may do almost all the acts which are incident to his office, except only some of those which relate to suits. See 1st Williams on Executors, book 4, Chapter 1, Sections 1 and 2, and the authorities there cited. The Courts of our own country, in numerous cases, recognize these positions. Johns v. Johns, 1st McCord, 132. 3d McCord, 371. 3d Massachusetts, 514.

It follows, necessarily, from this view of the origin and source of an executor’s title, that it exists independently of his letters testamentary; and so far as relates to money collected, and goods reduced into possession, it cannot be divested, by the revocation of the letters testamentary. It is true that our statute (Thompson’s Digest, 211,) gives to the [63]*63Judge of Probate authority to revoke letters testamentary, upon grounds not known to the English Courts ; but there is no authority given to divest the executor of the title which he acquired from his testator’s will. The appointment of another administrator can only have relation to the goods not reduced to possession, and to choses in action not recovered.

A removed executor, then, notwithstanding the revocation of his letters testamentary, still holds his interest in the chattels reduced to possession — not as his own absolute property, but as trustee for the creditors, legatees and distributees of his testator, and to them he is accountable.

The administrator of a deceased executor occupies the same position. The death of the executor is a virtual revocation of his letters testamentary from that time, though they may be used in his behalf, as evidence of his authority, for acts done during his life-time — as the removed executor may resort to his cancelled letters, to justify his antecedent acts. The administrator succeeds to the deceased executor’s title in the first testator’s effects, so far as they have been reduced to possession — that is to say, to his tide as trustee for the creditors, legatees and distributees, and is bound to account to them just as the removed executor retains his title and obligation to account. It is not correct to say that the administrator de bonis non is the substitute of a removed executor — this last derived his authority from the testator’s appointment, and the other from the ordinary, in virtue of the ordinary’s right to take charge of the goods of a deceased person, which are not in charge of an executor of his own choice. The exercise of the ordinary’s right begins where the exercise of the better right of the testator stops, or is arrested, by the removal of his appointee. By the common law, the rights of an executor and of an administrator de bonis non to the residuum of the estate were essentially different, and, therefore, the one cannot be cor[64]*64rectly regarded as the substitute of the other — the former being entitled to the residuum in his own right — the latter, as the bailiff of the ordinary, and accountable to him that the assets might be distributed, in pios usus, at the ordinary’s pleasure.

Without tracing this analogy any farther, we think it very evident that, in regard to the accountability of a removed executor to an administrator de bonis non administratis, he stands on the same footing with the representative of a deceased executor, and in the further consideration of this subject, we shall so consider him.

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4 Fla. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-harrison-fla-1851.