Lemon's Heirs v. Rector

15 Ark. 436
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 15 Ark. 436 (Lemon's Heirs v. Rector) 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
Lemon's Heirs v. Rector, 15 Ark. 436 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Soott

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants allege, in their bill, that they are the heirs at law of James Lemon, who died may years ago. That, on the 28th of April, A. D. 1832, their ancestor filed his bill in chancery, against the appellees, (on whom process was served,) but died intestate before final decree. That, after his death, the cause was revived by Thomas Mathers, as administrator, and a final decree obtained for the sum of $250 principal, $127 interest then accrued, together with 6 per cent, interest from that date upon the principal sum, besides costs. That, soon afterwards, Mathers died, and J ames DeBaun succeeded him as administrator de horns non, an d the decree was revived, in his name, on the 25th of November, 1841. That a partof the money decreed was made under execution, and the balance remained unpaid at the time of the death of DeBaun, who has also departed this life. ' That, since the death of DeBaun, no person whomsoever lias administered on their ancestor’s estate, which, with the exception of the balance due upon the decree, was fully administered before DeBaun’s death, or was wasted by gross negligence of his several and successive administrators. That his debts and liabilities, however, were all fully paid and satisfied, so that the complainants, as his heirs and distributees, are, exclusively, entitled to the balance of the proceeds of this decree, and that the adult heirs at law are all non-residents of this State, and unable to give the security prerequisite for obtaining letters of administration. The prayer of the bill is for a decree enforcing the original decree in their own names, and for their own benefit. Noland demurred to the bill, and it was taken as confessed against the other two defendants. The demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed, and an appeal taken to this court.

It is a general rule of well settled law, that there can be, regularly, no suit for the recovery of the personal assets of an estate, but by the executor or administrator, who has the right to sue both at law and in equity.

This is in harmony with the doctrine, that the personalty does not, technically, descend like the fealty, but vests in the executor or administrator, for the payment of debts, and for distribution, under the provisions of the statute. Thus, the executor or administrator becomes a trustee for creditors and distributees, and this general rule makes him the only regular organ through whom their rights can be ascertained, when asserted by a suit, and the law requires the formality of an administration, as necessary for the security of these rights.

Special cases, however, have been allowed, both in England and in this country, which form exceptions to this rule. The most common of these, in England, were cases of bankruptcy, or insolvency of the executor, or of collusion by him with the debtor of the estate, or with any one who improperly withheld any of the personal assets. In this country, where bond and security are, in general, required, as a prerequisite for administration, it may be doubted -whether mere insolvency-or bankruptcy, where the executor or administrator lias complied with these terms, would now constitute such a case, unless coupled with some abuse of his trust, and even, in that case, the Probate Court, in this State, has ample power to afford the most prompt ánd complete remedy. Special cases, however, predicated upon collusion, are referable to the chancellor’s jurisdiction, in cases of fraud and trust; and, like fraud in general, collusion is not to be precisely defined, since it necessarily varies, in its aspect, with the circumstances of the almost infinite variety of cases, that might occur, in which it might be perceived. If to this general head of collusion, all abuses of the representative trust, whether active or passive, could be referred, it would embrace a very large proportion of thé special-eases that have been allowed, whether-at the suit of a creditor of the estate, or of a distributee, or whether to recover a chose in action or a personal chattel. But it would not embrace them all; because, in some few cases, where there is no pretence of abuse, personal property has been allowed to be recovered at the suit of the distributee, when the executor or administrator has, in express terms, given his assent, upon the idea that the property descended to the heir, sub modo, through the statute of distributions, and that the express assent of the executor or administrator, to the prosecution of-the suit, was analogous, and equivalent to the executor’s assent to a special legacy.

If these special cases are much indulged in this State, it is manifest that our administration system cannot fail to be seriously disturbed by them. And although presenting themselves in the specious-garb of simplicity and directness, their tendency will far more likely be to complicate and entangle both the rights of creditors and distributees, as well as the accounts of executors and administrators.

Policy will, perhaps, tolerate- a wider departure from the rule in cases of personal property, than of choses in action, for the double reason that the latter is more directly and emphatically a fund for tbe payment of debts than tbe former, and tbe rights, both of creditors and distributees, would be less jeopardised, because property could be more readily identified and reclaimed, when it might pass into improper bands, than money. But, in. ■either class of cases, tbe considerations we have urged strongly urge that tbe rule should be seldom relaxed.

“Whether, according to the weight of authority, the rule would be more readily relaxed in cases of personal property, than of choses in action, it is not necessary now to determine. It is sufficient to ascertain, whether it can be relaxed so much as to authorize us to sustain this bill. Its only material feature, to distinguish it from bills that might be filed by distributees in good faith, in a very great number of cases, soon after the death of the intestaté, is, that, from the lapse of time, which apjaears upon its face, the period fixed by our statute for the presentation of claims .■against the estate, has long since expired; and, hence, there is no ■probability that any claim now unknown, recoverable against the representative of an estate, can ever be, hereafter, brought to light. If this feature could be regarded as equivalent to the answer of an executor or administrator, admitting the truth of the allegations of a like bill filed against him, as a joint defendant with the ■debtor proceeded against, there might be found, in some of the special cases, that have been allowed, some precedents going to ■favor the idea that it might be retained as one of these; but it is impossible that'it can be so regarded, because, although no valid ■claim against the estate, recoverable against its representative, can in future be brought to light, that does not, in the least, sustain the allegation that the debts and liabilities, heretofore known, have all been paid and satisfied.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ark. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemons-heirs-v-rector-ark-1855.