Jones v. Minogue

29 Ark. 637
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 637 (Jones v. Minogue) 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. Minogue, 29 Ark. 637 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

Williams, Sp. J.

The appellees filed their bill in the circuit court of Sharp county, chancery side, in which they averred in substance that they are citizens of the county of Tipperary, Ireland. That a number of years ago, William Minogue, a brother of complainants, left Ireland and came to the United States, and was here naturalized, and made a citizen as the law directs. That he settled in Lawrence county, Arkansas, in that part which is now in Sharp county, being naturalized, and having acquired considerable real and personal property. That he made a will about the 9th of April, 1861, and departed this life.

That the will was duly probated before the clerk of Lawrence county, a copy of which is exhibited. , :

That excepting two small bequests named in the will, William Minogne bequeathed and devised all his property, real and personal, to appellees, and appointed Daniel Williams and James Ledford executors, who qualified as such, and took upon themselves the burden of performing the trust. That they paid off all the debts of the estate, and paid off and discharged all the specific bequests of the will, leaving an unadministered balance. That Williams died, leaving Ledford surviving executor. That appellees are the sisters and brother of William Minogue, and are the identical persons mentioned in the last will of William Minogue, and to whom he willed his property.

That the distance between Sharp county, Arkansas, and Tipperary, Ireland, is so great, and the common intercourse by mail and otherwise between the two countries was so cut off and broken up by the late war between the states of the United States, that although William Minogue died in April, A. D., 1861, appellees heard nothing of his death until the spring or summer of 1870.

That Ledford, the surviving executor, was and is a good and trustworthy man, of good property, and responsible individually, for the entire estate of William Minogue, and had given a good bond as executor, and had made no waste or mismanagement, and the estate was safe in his hands.

That while the estate was in this situation, and no one having set up claim thereto as residuary legatee or devisee, appellants James P. Jones, James Manning, Young McCain and William Davidson, united, combined and confederated together to cheat, defraud and swindle the heirs, devisees and legatees of William Minogue out of the estate, and to seize and appropriate it to their own use, or the use of some of them. That these frauds were intended to be carried out in a great measure by a series of orders made in the probate court of Sharp county, where the estate was, so that the perpetration of the contemplated fraud on appellees might seem to have the approval of a court of justice and the sanction of the laws, when in fact the orders themselves were violations of the law, and perversion of justice.

The first of a series of orders that tend to deprive appellees of their right is, that on the 10th day of March, 1870, Young McCain, without ever having been appointed public administrator of Sharp county by the probate court thereof, or by any authority whatever, presented to the probate court of Sharp county his bond, dated January 3, 1870, signed by the securities, and in the usual form. That the said probate court approved the bond, although McCain had never been appointed public administrator; that McCain was irresponsible, had little or no property, and nothing could be made out of him by law; that the securities in the bond were irresponsible; that on the entire bond of ten thousand dollars there could not be recovered the sum of two hundred dollars; and the entire obligors, if even disposed, were not able to pay the amount of the estate of William Minogue, which facts were well known to appellants, the community, and the probate court of Sharp county, which approved the bond. That on the 11th day of March, 1870, when the estate of William Minogue was safe and well secured in the hands of Ledford, appellant Davidson, without giving any notice to Ledford, or alleging any default or mismanagement by him, pretending to act as attorney for Sharp county, but really, as charged, for the sole purpose of placing the estate in irresponsible hands, and swindling and defrauding these complainants, obtained in the probate court of Sharp county, an order on Ledford to turn over the estate to the public administrator, and that he take proper steps to escheat the estate, no heirs having appeared as recited in the order.

The public administrator was ordered to report his proceedings, and make out an inventory of the estate and sell the real estate, and invest the proceeds in United States bonds. That Davidson well knew the effect of this order would be to take the estate from Ledford, a responsible man, and place it in the hands of irresponsible and untrustworthy parties; and it is charged, in effect, that he so intended; that the probate court of Sharp county afterwards made an order directing the public administrator, Young McCain, to turn the estate over to appellant, James P. Jones, as agent of one Manning, who professed to be a representative or assignee of Martin Minogue, one of the devisees of William Minogue (he claiming that the two sisters were dead, and Martin was now the sole devisee) ; that the order was made without any proof of Manning’s rights, or, indeed, that there was such a person in reality; that McCain did not resist this order, and Davidson, instead of doing so as county attorney of Sharp county, connived at it, and stopped his proceedings to escheat the estate to the state, in order that Jones should have no difficulty or obstacle to contend with in getting his claim as agent of Manning before a willing court, and in order that every impediment might be removed, that Davidson withdrew his proceeding to have the estate escheated.

That after the order was made for Young McOain to turn over the estate to Jones, be went forward and collected notes, and that he had reduced some of the notes to cash, and had converted it to his own use, or to that of some of his confederates, and had wasted the same.

That this was the condition of the estate when appellee’s agents were first enabled to look into it, and the estate was being rapidly wasted, and was tending to utter ruin, and was liable to be at any time paid to, or turned over, under, an order of the probate court, to Jones, who is only an agent of James Manning, an entire stranger to all the community, if he be a real person; and such was the imminent danger of the entire estate being lost and destroyed, that complainant had no adequate or full remedy at law or in equity, except by injunction, and a bill was filed in the probate court to restrain McCain from paying over the estate to Jones, which prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the estate. That the probate judge of Sharp county, on presentation of the bill, granted an order of injunction, restraining McCain from paying over the assets of the estate to Jones or Manning, etc., and restraining Davidson from further prosecuting the claim of Manning to the estate in the probate court of Sharp county, until appellees had reasonable time to prove heirship, or right and title to the estate, and Perry West was appointed receiver of all the assets. That afterwards, by consent, this order of the probate judge was so far modified as to allow McCain to collect the assets, and on the promise of appellants that no waste should be committed, at their request the order for a receiver was set aside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ark. 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-minogue-ark-1874.