Harrison v. Henderson

54 Tenn. 315
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Tenn. 315 (Harrison v. Henderson) 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
Harrison v. Henderson, 54 Tenn. 315 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

EeeemaN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill is filed by complainant as one of the legatees of John Hughes, deceased, against Samuel Henderson, who qualified as the executor of the said John Hughes, after proving the will, on the 24th of January, 1861, and against John W. Miller, who, on the resignation of said Henderson, was appointed administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, of the said John Hughes, and also against the heirs and dis-tributees of said estate.

The bill alleges that at the March term, 1861, said Henderson returned his inventory of said estate to the County Court, a copy of which is made an [319]*319exbibit to the bill; and that at a subsequent term said Henderson resigned his office of executor, and John W. Miller was appointed administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, and at the March term, 1862, he returned his inventory of the estate. That on the 6th of May, 1865, said Henderson being summoned, and the parties in interest notified, appeared before the Clerk of the County Court of Williamson county, and made what purports to be a settlement of his administration of the estate, which the bill alleges “was misnamed a settlement, it being simply a statement of his own account against said estate, amounting to $5,723.21.” This account is also made an exhibit.

The bill then charges, that sometime in the year 1865, said Miller, administrator, sold a tract of land of 640 acres in Gibson county, Tennessee, for $5,000, said Henderson being the purchaser, and that the amount of said purchase money was credited on his account against the estate.

It then charges that Miller, as administrator, had obtained a judgment, principal and interest, amounting to upwards of $8,000, against Herbert S. Ewing, administrator of Brice M. Hughes, in March, 1865, and that a part of this judgment, as complainant believes, had' been collected and paid said Henderson, in full of his claim against the estate.

It farther appears that by the 9th item of the will of John Hughes, complainant was entitled to a legacy of $4,000, to be put out at interest until the death of her husband William Harrison, who had died [320]*320in 1865, and then with interest accumulated, after deducting compensation to the trustee, to be paid over to her. She insists that this legacy ought to have been first paid, because given in lieu of a tract of land which her father had put her in possession of, but had afterwards given to Brice M. Hughes.

She charges then that the account Henderson had rendered to the Clerk of the County Court, in the settlement of May 6,1865, which was presented by the Clerk to the Court for confirmation, is not a settlement of Samuel Henderson’s administration, but simply a one-sided account against the estate, and that said account is unjust; that it would have been settled by the testator if it had been known to exist before his death, as he was prompt in the discharge of his debts, and that a large portion of the account was barred by the statute of limitations before the death of the testator, who died about the last of the year 1860, and that the allowance of said claim, and payment of it by Miller, were illegal and void, and a fraud on legatees of the estate.

On this question the prayer of the bill is, that the said settlement of Henderson be set aside, and he be required to make a full and complete settlement, showing clearly what came to his hands, and what disbursements were made by him as executor, and that the claim of Henderson be disallowed.

The allowance of said account against the estate of John Hughes, and the effect of this settlement with the County Court Clerk, are the first questions presented for our determination.

[321]*321It appears that at the November Term, 1861, Henderson, the executor, filed his petition in the County-Court to be permitted to resign his office, and pass his account as executor, and that he be discharged of all future liability as such executor. At the December Term this petition was heard, no resistance having been made to it, as far as appears, when it was ordered that Henderson be discharged from his office of executor, and from all future liability as such, and that he hold the property of the estate, with all notes and accounts, choses in action, etc., now in his hands as bailee, until the appointment of his successor. It was further ordered that he make final settlement with the Clerk of this Court, and be charged with all proper charges, and credited Avith all proper credits for payments and disbursements, and that the Clerk make to him a proper allowance for his services.”

John W. Miller was appointed his successor, and on the 10th of February, 1862, Henderson handed over to said Miller an inventory of assets of said estate, and took his receipt as follows: “Received of Samuel Henderson, executor of John Hughes, deceased, all the within described notes and papers (referring to the list in the inventory) set forth in this paper.”

It is now claimed that the settlement made in pursuance of this order, whether in 1865, or after-wards, or in 1862, when it is insisted it was commenced to be made, is conclusive as to the correctness of this claim against the estate.

But we need only look to the decree of the Court to see that the settlement was not intended to be, nor [322]*322could it properly have been, for an ascertainment of the amount due from the estate to Henderson individually, but only to ascertain what property or assets of the estate he had received as executor, by virtue of his office, and to charge him with such assets, and credit him with all proper disbursements and payments made by him, and also to give him a proper allowance for his services, which would go as a credit to him in such settlement.

This is the extent of said decree, and is the full extent of the power of a court in such a case, in view of all the facts found in the record. It can not be maintained that the amount of this account was a credit to be given to him as a payment, for it clearly appears that it was not paid until July, 1863, by proceeds of the sale of Gibson county land; that is, $5,000 of it, less the interest, till the payments were to fall due. Henderson is certainly estopped to insist that he had paid, by way of retainer or otherwise, the amount of this debt during his term of office as executor, by his own act in insisting on its payment by the administrator de bonis non in 1865, and the actual receipt of nearly $5,000 of this very claim.

It is not necessary, in this view of the case, to look into the question, as to whether he presented this claim to the County Court in his effort at settlement with the Clerk in 1862. If he had done so, having paid and handed over all the assets of estate to his successor in February, 1862, he could not be said to have proposed a retainer of the amount of his debt; and [323]*323a mere presentation of his individual debt against the estate, after his removal from the office of executor, to the County Court Clerk, could not in any way serve to authenticate it, or vindicate its validity. The Clerk was only authorized to settle his account as executor, by charging him with assets received, and crediting him with disbursements properly made, and with compensation for his services. In fact we are well satisfied that Henderson resigned his office with a view of enforcing this claim against the personal representative of the estate, who might he appointed.

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Related

Page v. Lloyd
30 U.S. 304 (Supreme Court, 1831)
Hanger v. Abbott
73 U.S. 532 (Supreme Court, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Tenn. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-henderson-tenn-1872.