Jones v. Graham

36 Ark. 383
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 36 Ark. 383 (Jones v. Graham) 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
Jones v. Graham, 36 Ark. 383 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

Eakin, J.

William A. Jones, a citizen of St. Francis county, died intestate on the seventh day of December, 1860, leaving a very valuable estate, consisting of lands, slaves, personal property, and choses in action. Ilis widow and five children survived him. Two of the latter have since died childless and intestate, and one, a daughter, leaving an only child. He, with the two surviving children of William A., are complainants in this suit.

Shortly after the death of Jones, letters of administration were granted defendant C. 0. Graham, who gave bond, with defendant Eldridge and the two Mebanes as sureties. In January, 1861, he filed an inventory and appraisement of all the real and personal property. About the same time, on application of the widow and children, and upon showing that the lands and slaves would not be required for debts, tbe widow’sdower was set apart in all the lands and personalty; some of the slaves were ordered to be delivered to certain of the children as their own property; and the remaining lands and slaves were duly partitioned; The administrator was ordered to deliver all these over, out of the property inventoried and appraised; to ship tbe cotton on hand to Memphis; and to sell the same for the benefit of the estate. IJpon this cotton, and the sale of some railroad stock, he received $13,067.06, early in 1861.

Graham -was himself a creditor of the estate, holding a joint note executed by his intestate and one Dodson, for the sum of $2,443.92, bearing interest at the rate of 10 per cent. He presented this claim to the probate court, and it was allowed, amongst other claims of pther parties, for"its face and $325.84 interest, on the thirtieth of April, 1862.

During this year, he also filed his first settlement, which, in due time, was approved by the court. Very little or nothing more seems to have been done until after the war. Meanwhile, a great many of the records of St. Francis county were destroyed by fire. In October, 1865, he filed another settlement in lieu of the first, which was thought to be lost, and continued to file settlements in succession, down to about the year 1869, when he seems to have made a final settlement, and was discharged. Believing that his first allowance had been also destroyed by fire, he had his claim against the estate and Dodson again allowed as a demand, on the tenth of May, 1868 ; and on the thirtieth of July, 1867, upon suggestion of a mistake in the calculation'of interest in the former allowance, he had the amount raised and reallowed fof the gross sum of $4,289.75.

In 1870, the present complainants, being then all minors, sued defendant in chancery, seeking to surcharge and falsify his accounts. He answered the complaint fully. Both bill and answers are exhibited, but the record of the judgment, or decree, was burnt, and no copy produced. The present complaint alleges that’the former suit was brought by guardians; and, by them, dismissed, without hearing or decree upon the merits. The present defendants, in their answer, contend that the former suit was concerning and involved the same subject-matter; that upon the coming in of the answer, it was dismissed by plaintiffs; that defendant, Graham, upon said dismissal, agreed, on account of some admitted errors in his accounts, to pay the costs; and that he did so, and the judgment of dismissal was duly entered on the records of the court. Beyond these charges and admissions, the transcript affords no light as to the terms o’f the decree.

The present suit is a renewal of the same litigation. The complainants are the surviving heirs, and the defendants the administrator and his sureties. The bill charges various instances of conduct on the part of the administrator detrimental to the estate, which are. alleged to have been fraudulent, as well as illegal. It is alleged generally, upon these facts, that his settlements were wholly fraudulent, and that their confirmation was procured by fraud; and they seek to open and restate, the accounts all through, and • hold the administrator and his sureties liable for the true amounts. The charges are specific enough, and are directly answered. The more important of them will be Baken up in detail in the opinion, including only such as may be thought sufficient to decide the case, without meaning to be exhaustive, and without notice of many which seem to have been abandoned by counsel.

Upon hearing, the Chancellor dismissed the bill, at complainants’ costs, for want of equity; and they appealed.

dÍcata-Jtr" o®t™i33ai ^merits! tobTwithdice.pr<yu" 2^ 003¶: subject, tó of court-

OPINION.

The first question presented, regards the former suit, pleaded as a bar. Under our statute, a plaintiff may, at any time, dismiss his suit without prejudice, before the final submission of it to the court, or a jury. (Gantt’s JDigest, see. 4-638). There is nothing to show that this eontroversy was ever submitted, in any way, to the court, in the former suit. It can not be inferred from the judgment against defendants, then, for costs. There is no proof of any valid agreement to dismiss the suit for a consideration.

The question has been much ai’gued by counsel, on both sides, in'their briefs, with a considerable array of authorities on the part of defendants, but the whole matter seems settled by statute. The dismissal before submission upon the merits* must be presumed to have been intended without prejudice. We are cited to the case of Merritt v. Campbell, 47 California, 543, as in point to sustain the defense. It suffices to answer that there was a submission for trial in that case, and findings upon an agreement. The circuit judge was not precluded from hearing this case upon its merits. There may have been some special ease or advantage to the defendants in having that case to cease; and even if the guardians prosecuting it, had been authorized to compromise it upon the merits, and bind their wards by á contract not to renew the suit, no such contract is shown.

In equity the burden of costs is always at the discretion of the Chancellor, and does not necessarily attach to the party failing. There is no reason why he may not, by consent, impose them on defendants, even when a suit is dismissed under such circumstances as not to prejudice the right to renew it.

In the case of Reinhardt v. Gartsell, 33 Ark., this court upon-mature deliberation, and a review of previous cases in connection with the constitution of 1874, endeavored to lay down clearly the principles upon which courts of chancery may interfere with settlements duly approved by the probate court, from which no appeals have been taken. Subsequent thought has strengthened the court as to the soundness of its views therein expressed. Any general extension of chancery powers to correct errors of the probate courts would not only be out of harmony with-our judicial system, but would be the prolific source of wrong and injustice to many honest representatives who may have rested for years upon their settlements, as approved by the courts; and lost the memory, or means of proof, of various complicated transactions essential to their proper credits. Courts of chancery are not courts of probate, nor courts for the correction of errors.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ark. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-graham-ark-1880.