Lindsay v. Platt

9 Fla. 150
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Fla. 150 (Lindsay v. Platt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. Platt, 9 Fla. 150 (Fla. 1860).

Opinion

WALKER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought for an account and distribution of' the real and personal estate of Joshua Platt, deceased, who died in 1854, leaving eight children, of whom tlicomplainant is one.

The only defence set up is that contained in the eighth section of the answer, which reads as follows:

“ And this defendant, further answering, says, the complainant, Nathan Lindsay, on the 8th day of January, 1845, then the husband of the said Amy Lindsay, undertook to collect, and for that purpose received from said Platt, deceased, a jxromissory note in writing, signed by Thomas S.. Parr, for five hundred and forty-eight dollars and eighty-one cents; that he, the said Lindsay, about one year thereafter, as the defendant has been informed and believes, and charges to be a fact, did collect the same, with interest, by suit. The said Nathan and Amy, his wife, were then citizens of the State of Georgia; that at the time he so received said note, the said Nathan gave the said Joshua Platt, in his lifetime, his due bill for fifty-two dollars, and the said' Lindsay, after he had collected said amount of said note and given his due bill as aforesaid, undertook and agreed, and faithfully promised the said Joshua Platt, in his life-time, to-wit, in the year 1846, that if the said Joshua Platt would not sue him and make him pay the said amount of said note so collected as aforesaid and the said due bill, he, the said Nathan Lindsay, would deem the consolidated amounts as-an advancement, to be accounted for upon the death of said! Joshua Platt, out of the share of his estate that in equity and in law would be coming to Amy Lindsay, his wife, and' the legitimate daughter of the said Joshua Platt, deceased;; and the said Amy Lindsay was not present when the said. Nathan Lindsay made said proposals to her father; but' when she did hear of the contract she did not in any man-[152]*152nor or form express lier dissent thereto. Latterly she may have done so, but if so it has not been communicated to this defendant. And the said Joshua Platt agreed to and accepted the proposition of the said Nathan Lindsay, and fulfilled his portion of said contract to the letter; said contract was not reduced to writing; the amount of the note and due bill, when consolidated, with interest thereon, at the date of this agreement, was six hundred and thirty-seven dollars and twenty cents; and this defendant, being administrator on the estate of Joshua Platt, believes and claims and charges it as a fact that said amount ought to be brought into hotchpot for the benefit of the co-heirs of the estate.”

To this answer the complainant excepted.

First, On the ground that neither said amended eighth section nor any other part of defendant’s answer alleges that the said promise or agreement entered into as aforesaid was done and entered into in the presence and hearing of Amy Lindsay, or that she entered with Nathan Lindsay, her husband, into said agreement with the said Joshua, and thereby became one of the contracting parties thereto, or that she at any time after the making of said agreement consented thereto, or that the same was given to her as advancement of her legacy or portion of her father’s estate, nor is it alleged that the said Amy had any knowledge that the said Nathan, her husband, and the said Joshua, her father, had ever entered into an agreement such as that alleged by the defendant in the eighth amended section of his answer.

Second, The statute of limitation.

Tlvi/rd. That said contract not being in writing is void Under the statute of frauds.

The following is also a part of the record, viz:

It is hereby confessed by the counsel for the complainants that if it shall be adjudged by the Court that the amount, six hundred and twenty-seven dollars and twenty cents, set •forth in the eighth section of defendant’s answer, which was [153]*153advanced by Joshua Platt to the said Nathan Lindsay, as in said section alleged, shall be returned in hotch-pot with the estate of the said Joshua Platt, deceased, for distribution, before the complainants can recover on their bill, then and in that case there would be no amount whatever coming to the complainants.

(Signed,) G-ETTES & MITCIIELL,

Attorneys for Complainants.

Hpon this record the parties submitted the cause, after argument, to the Judge of the Southern Judicial Circuit, and the Court being advised of its decree to be rendered therein, “ ordered, adjudged and decreed that said bill be dismissed, and that each party pay his costs of suit.”

Complainants then appealed to this Court.

The only question presented by the record for our consideration is, whether the defence set up in the 8th section of the answer is a good one, or, in other words, whether the facts set up in that section of the answer amount in law to an advancement.

After an examination of the authorities cited by the able counsel on both sides of this case, and such others as we have been able- to find, we have arrived at the conclusion that the question of advancement must depend, generally, if not invariably, on the intention of the intestate. The Supreme Court of Kentucky, in the case of Barbour et al. vs. Taylor’s heirs, reported in 9th Dana, 86, say: “They (the authorities) virtually recognize as a controlling principle the Intestate’s intention, and therefore virtually decide that whatever he intended as an advancement, and would have been so treated at his death, should generally, if not invariably, be so considered, without regard to the mode of making or of securing the actual enjoyment of it, concern-ing all which he should be the sole arbiter; and therefore there could. be no doubt that if a father should vest in a [154]*154st/rcmger the title to property in trust for a (laughter, the estate thus intended for her by such provision should generally be deemed an advancement, even though by the malconduct of the trustee she had lost the whole benefit of the provision.

“ A gift of money or other personal property to the husband of the donor’s daughter would, if not otherwise intended, be an advancement to such daughter, though the husband, by investing or losing it, might prevent his wife from deriving any benefit from it.”

There can be no doubt that the intestate intended this as an advancement. lie made an express contract that it should be so considered. Ilis having made a contract about it seems to have led the learned counsel on both sides into the error of treating the question of advancement as one depending in some degree upon the law of contracts. Such is not the ease, and therefore neither the statute of limitations nor the statute of frauds has anything to do with this' question. Nor is it material that the daughter did not or might not have known of the arrangement between her husband and father, (it does not appear certainly whether she did or did not know it,) since it certainly appears that her father intended it as an advancement to her, and neither her knowledge or consent was necessary to make it a good advancement. The property in the life-time of her father belonged to him, and it was for him to determine whether he would ever give her anything or not, either by advancement or will. Ilis action in the disposition of his property did not depend in any measure upon her knowledge or assent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

West v. Coogler
427 So. 2d 813 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1983)
Corlett v. May
171 So. 517 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)
Dilley v. Love
61 Md. 603 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Fla. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-platt-fla-1860.