Ikelheimer v. Chapman's Adm'rs

32 Ala. 676
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 32 Ala. 676 (Ikelheimer v. Chapman's Adm'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ikelheimer v. Chapman's Adm'rs, 32 Ala. 676 (Ala. 1858).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The judgment in this case must be reversed, because the words “ administrator,” in the marginal description of the case accompanying the complaint, and the words “as the administrators de bonis non” in the complaint, are unmeaning and useless, without a statement showing of what estate the plaintiffs are administrators. The complaint can not be aided by reference to the summons, especially as there is no word of reference in the complaint to the summons. The court should have regarded the complaint as by the plaintiffs in their individual capacity, and charged the jury, if they believed the evidence, to find for the defendant. — Crimm v. Crawford, 29 Ala. 623; Agee v. Williams, 27 Ala. 644; Gibson v. Land, 27 Ala. 117. The defect in the complaint can be amended in the court below, as it in all probability would have been on the trial, if the attention of the court had been called to the point.

Anticipating an amendment of the complaint, and passing upon the merits of the case made by the evidence, as did the court below, we decide, that the plaintiffs’ letters of administration were valid; that the sale under which the defendant claims was'void, and that the plaintiffs have a right, in their representative capacity, to recover the property.

The order of the probate court of Dallas county, ap- . pointing the plaintiffs administrators de bonis non, does not recite any jurisdictional fact. That omission does not [681]*681authorize the court to treat the order as void, on a collat-teral impeachment. By the constitution of the State of Alabama, (Art. Y, § 9,) the general assembly is invested with power to establish iu each county within this State a court of probate, for the granting of letters testamentary and of administration, and for orphans’ business. The probate court has, by virtue of this provision of the constitution, a specific grant of unrestricted jurisdiction over the granting of letters testamentary and of administration. It is, therefore, as to those subjects, a court of general jurisdiction. Its jurisdictioir is, thus far, of constitutional, not statutory origin. As soon as the court was created, that jurisdiction attached, without the aid of a statute. The constitution, as to those subjects, bestows a jurisdiction which is original, unlimited and general.

The grant of jurisdiction over orphans’ business does not invest the court with authority to order the sale by the administrator of personal property. It required a statute to bring the subject of the sale of personal property within the jurisdiction of the court. No power appertained to any court to make such an order, until it was bestowed by the statute. It is said in the case of Wyman v. Campbell, 6 Port. 232, that legislation is the only source, whence the orphans’ court derived its jurisdiction to order the sale of lands; and, as to that eubject, it has been invariably held a court of limited jurisdiction. The power to order a sale of personal property is equally the creature of the statute, and a distinction between the two is without reason. The court of law has, by virtue of a statute, jurisdiction over garnishment, to be exercised in a mode prescribed; and it is deemed, as to that matter, a court of special jurisdiction. — Gunn v. Howell, 27 Ala. 663. It is clear to our minds, that the probate court, in ordering a sale of personal property, exercises a special power conferred by a statute, which prescribes the circumstances under which it is to be exercised; and we are bound either to decide that it is, quoad hoc, a court of special jurisdiction, or to abrogate a principle which runs through all of our cases, with, perhaps, a single exception, [682]*682from Minor’s Reports to 29 Alabama, and which, has a •universal sanction in the English common law. We refer to our decision in Wyatt’s Adm’r v. Rambo, 29 Ala. 517, for a collection of the cases, and a fuller discussion of the subject.

Under section 1748 of the Code, the jurisdiction of the court is dependent upon the fact, that the administrator makes application to sell for the payment of debts. It is certainly not enough to authorize the court to sell, that the administrator makes an application. The application to sell must be for the purpose authorized by law. Such is the necessary result of the decisions of this court on kindred questions. — See the cases collected in Shepherd’s Digest, 136 and 137.

There is no distinction between the character of the jurisdiction which the probate court exercises over the appointment of administrators and of administrators de bonis non. The duties of an administrator were first created by the statute 13th Edward I, ch. 19. Until the enactment of the statute 31st Edward III, ch. 11, the ordinary was the administrator. That act directed the appointment of the friends of the deceased. By the statute 21st Henry VIH, ch. 5, the appointment was directed to be made from the next of kin. Under it, the ecclesiastical courts appointed administrators de bonis non, as we'll as administrators in chief. There never was a time when, upon, the death of an administrator, the trust passed to his representative. The executor of an executor was the executor of the first testator; but the case was different as to administrators. The reason for this difference was, that upon the payment of debts and legacies, the surplus of the goods belonged to the executor proprio jure, and the authority of the executor was founded on the special confidence of the testator. On the other hand, the administrator was but an officer, on whom the deceased had imposed no trust or confidence. — Vaughan, 182; 2 Bla. Com. 506; 1 Petersdorf’s Abr. 247; 4 Bac. Abr. 23, Ex’rs and Adm’rs, B. 2; Went, on Ex’rs, 215. Under the English law, the authority to appoint administrators embraced administrators de [683]*683bonis non. So tbe provision of the constitution, which gives jurisdiction over the grant of administrations, includes administrations de bonis non.

We do not assent to the position taken for appellant, that the administrator still has his common-law power to sell the personalty of his intestate, without an order of court. That power is taken away by necessary implication. If sections 1748 and 1796, which authorize orders to sell for the payment of debts and for distribution, do not, of themselves, take away the power of voluntary sale, which appertained to the administrator at common law, there is no room for doubt that it is taken away by other provisions of the Code. Section 670 of the Code' gives the probate court jurisdiction over the sale of personal property, in the cases defined by law. Other sections define the cases in which the jurisdiction is to be exercised, and those cases are the only ones in which an administrator could sell, without the commission of a devas-tavit at common law. It is thus shown, that the jurisdiction to order sales, -in all the contingencies required in the progress of the administration, is given to the probate court, which must have the effect of denying the power to the administrator.

There is another argument by which the conclusion must be attained, that the power- of sale without an order is denied to the administrator. It is a correct principle, that the common law relative to any subject is superseded by a revision of the whole of that subject by the legisla-tui’e. — Commonwealth v. Cooley, 10 Pick. 37; Sedgwick on Statutory and Constitutional Law, 126.

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32 Ala. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ikelheimer-v-chapmans-admrs-ala-1858.