Heirs of Adams v. Adams

22 Vt. 50
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 22 Vt. 50 (Heirs of Adams v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heirs of Adams v. Adams, 22 Vt. 50 (Vt. 1849).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, J.

This is a bill in chancery, wherein the plaintiffs in substance allege, that they are heirs at law of Friend Adams, late [53]*53of Panton, deceased, intestate, and bring this bill for the benefit of all the heirs, or so many as may choose to eome in under the claims set forth in the bill.

The bill states, — 1. That Friend Adams deceased, intestate, on the nineteenth day of April, 1839, leaving no widow, but leaving the plaintiffs and defendants and some others, his children, and the representatives of such as have deceased; — 2. That he had a large property at the time of his decease; — 3. That on the second day of May, 1839, administration was granted to the defendants; — 4. That they immediately took and have kept possession of all the books and papers of the intestate; — 5. That the defendants inventoried real estate, to the amount of $69,776, and personal estate to the amount of about $20,000; — 6. That the estate was represented insolvent, commissioners were appointed, and debts were allowed against the estate to the amount of $12,213,92; — 7. That from the time of the defendants’ appointment until April, 1844, the defendants, without cause, wholly omitted to make any farther progress in the settlement of the estate; — 8. That on the twenty first of April, 1844, the probate court required the defendants to render their account of administration on the third Monday of May following; that publication was duly made; that this hearing was continued from time to time until the second day of April, 1845, when the defendants made themselves chargeable for $23,389,69, and charged such debts and expenses, as to make the balance only $5,106,04, besides the real estate, to be distributed among the heirs; and that this account was duly passed by the probate court; — 9. That the defendants made application to the probate court for distribution, which proceedings are still pending; — 10. That at the time of the settlement all the children of a daughter of Friend Adams, who had married one Ferris, and had deceased, except two, were minors and had no guardians appointed ; — 11. That in the proceedings before the probate court the defendants would not bring the intestate’s papers and books into court, and were not examined upon oath, and refused to give information of what they had received as advancement, or of how much they were owing the intestate at the time of his decease, or of divers sums of money and property held by the defendants in trust for the decedant at the time of his decease, and refused all access to the books for the purpose of ascertaining these [54]*54facts; — 12. That on the -day of -, A. D. 183,— Friend Adams was the owner of the Gage lot, consisting of two hundred acres in Addison, worth $5000 ; that Gage was tenant to the deceased; that the deceased conveyed this land to the defendants, in trust, as the plaintiffs conjecture and allege, to enable the defendants to bring an action of ejectment to recover of Gage for the benefit of their father, and, after the recovery, to convey to him; and that no consideration was paid; — or else, that the conveyance was in mortgage ; — or else, an advancement; — or else, it was for a consideration to be paid, but which never was paid; — and that Friend Adams had some paper until, or near, the time of his death, which would have showed the true state of facts, and which will show the defendants’ liability to account for the value in someway; —13. That in the year 1834 the intestate conveyed to the defendant Hiram Adams a farm in the south west corner of Panton, of about fifty acres, by a deed in the usual form, but which was never recorded until after the decease of his father, and that the land was never occupied by Hiram, but by his father, from that time ; that the land was conveyed by Friend Adams to Edwin Adams, to make him a freeholder, and was by him occupied from 1835 until the death of Friend Adams, without claim upon the part of Hiram ; that Hiram, finding an old deed to himself among his father’s papers, undestroyed, by means of it, and threatening to turn Edwin out of possession, compelled him to buy this fifty acres; and that this has never been in any way accounted for by Pliram, and should be;— 14. That the intestate, some time before his decease, conveyed to the defendant Harry Adams the house and lot where he lives in Vergennes, of the value of $1500, without any consideration; that the deed was never recorded until the ninth day of May, 1839; and that this should be accounted for, the same as the former land deeded ; — 15. That the defendant Harry Adams, on occasion of his forming a partnership with the Parkers, applied to his father to help him to a capital, and he sold the Hill & Hapgood place, and turned in $500 of the notes, which were the same as cash to Harry, and have never been accounted for; and that this was not known to the plaintiffs, at the time of the settlement before the probate court;— 16. That the intestate held, at the time of his decease, a note for $750 against Harry, of which Harry took possession after the death [55]*55of his father, and for which he refuses to account; — 17. That Friend Adams made advances to Harry, before he went west, and took from him at that time a certain paper writing, without date or signature, showing that Harry had $1100 of his father’s property in his possession ; and that since the decease of the intestate Harry admitted the liability for that sum, and promised one of the plaintiffs to account for it; but that before the probate court he refused to give any account whatever; and that he wholly refused to produce the writing, — as he did also before the probate court; — IS. That about the year 1835 Enoch D. Woodbridge recovered a judgment against the proprietors of Addison, for some $600, and levied his execution upon land of the proprietors, undivided, near Snake Mountain; that Friend Adams, being one of these proprietors, and claiming this land, gave a sum of money, about $700, to satisfy the execution and release the land; and that Harry either paid the judgment, or suffered the land to vest in Woodbridge, and then procured it assigned to himself, but now wholly refuses to give any account, either of the land, or the money; — 19. That the daughter of Friend Adams, Cynthia, married one Ferris, and their farm, in Chazy, became incumbered, and Friend Adams gave to Hiram $1000, with which to redeem it for the daughter, as advancement towards her share, and that Hiram redeemed the land and sold it for $2000, and put the avails into his own pocket; — 20. That about the year 1837 Hiram borrowed $1000 and gave his note to his father, which was among the papers of the intestate, when they came into the administrators’ possession ; and that the intestate also had a credit on the partnership books of H. & H. Adams of $1000 cash, which they subsequently claimed to be for the $1000, for which the note was given, and finally altered to “ sheep,” and before the probate court would only account for $700 for both; — 21. That Hiram and Harry occupied the brick store of the deceased, in Vergennes, worth a yearly rent of $175, and Hiram occupied the house of the deceased, in Vergennes, worth a yearly rent of $175, and that Hiram occupied about four hundred acres of the Barnum farm, worth $300 annually, and that Harry occupied three hundred acres of the same farm, worth $200 annually, and that they have given no account whatever of the same; — 22. That since the appointment of the defendants’ as administrators, they have cut large quantities of [56]*56valuable timber on the Barnum farm, committing waste to the amount of more than $1000,.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Vt. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-adams-v-adams-vt-1849.