Lockhart v. Horn

15 F. Cas. 751, 1 Woods 628
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Alabama
DecidedApril 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 751 (Lockhart v. Horn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockhart v. Horn, 15 F. Cas. 751, 1 Woods 628 (circtsdal 1871).

Opinion

BRADLEY, Circuit Justice.

The complainants, Sarah A. and Nareissa Lockhart, are daughters of John Horn, deceased. The defendants are his only son, John A. C. Horn, and his three other daughters, Frances L. Bryan, Eliza P. Nabors and Mary Mc-Phail, and their husbands, and the administrator of Rebecca Horn, widow of the deceased.

The bill is filed for two objects: First. To contest the validity of the will of John Horn, deceased, admitted to probate in Ma-rengo county, the 13th of September, 1858, at the instance of John A. C. Horn, executor and principal devisee. Second. To recover from said John the distributive share of said complainants in the estate of their father; or in ease the will be not broken, to recover from him the balance due them as legatees under the will. The complainants are residents of Texas; the defendants are all residents of Alabama, except Mary Mc-Phail and her husband, Wm; McPhail, who reside in Texas. The relief sought is sought entirely against John A. C. Horn: but the other defendants are made parties, because they have an interest in the estate. Wm. McPhail and wife, though not served with process, have voluntarily appeared and put in an answer admitting the truth of the. statements made by the bill, and praying a decree for Mary McPhail’s share of the estate. The first aspect of the bill is founded on a statute of Alabama, which, after prescribing the mode in which a will may be propounded and contested, enacts that any person interested in a will, who has not contested it as provided by the act, may, at any time within five years after the admission of the will to probate, contest its validity by bill in chancery. The complainants allege that they did not contest the will when it was admitted to probate; and as to the limit of five years for filing the bill, they plead the Civil War, and the laws passed in suspension of the statutes of limitation.

The leading facts, as they appear by the pleadings and evidence, are as follows: John Horn, of Marengo county, Alabama, died March, 1858, leaving a large estate in lands, negroes and personal property; and leaving a widow and six children. Some time about May, 1S57, the deceased, John Horn, 'made a will, which was in existence up to a short time prior to his death. His son, John A. C. Horn, alleges that it was fraudulently purloined and destroyed, either during the decedent's illness or after his death; the daughters allege that their fa-[752]*752tlier voluntarily cancelled and destroyed the will before his death. Soon after the death of John Horn, his son procured himself to be appointed administrator ad colligendum, •and, by petition in the probate court of Ma-rengo county, set up a paper which he alleged to be a true copy of John Horn’s will, with allegations as to its spoliation, etc., and praying that it might be established as his will. The widow and all the children residing in Alabama were duly cited to appear and show cause why the alleged will -should not be admitted to probate. As the -complainants and MePhail and wife resided in Texas, a notice of the time and place set for the hearing was duly published in a newspaper, as authorized and required by 'the laws of Alabama. By these laws, any party in interest who wishes to contest a will offered for probate must file in the court •allegations in writing, stating the grounds of contestation. Rev. Code, § 1953. It appears, from the record of the proceedings, that two of the daughters, Prances R. Bry;an and Elizabeth P. Dumas, afterwards Na-bors, in their proper persons, and Mary Me-Phail with her husband Wm. MePhail, by their attorney, appeared and contested the probate. It does not appear that the others made any legal contestation. The cause was tried by a Jury according to the laws of Alabama, and the will was established by their verdict and the judgment of the court on the 13th of September, 1S5S, and, on the "23d of November following, letters testamentary were issued to John A. C. Horn, as the executor. By the will thus established, the homestead plantation of 720 acres was ■given to John A. C. Horn, after his mother’s decease, and a smaller tract of 208 acres was directed to be sold, and the proceeds diTided equally amongst the daughters. The residue of the estate, after charging the daughters with certain advances made to them by the testator in his lifetime, was to be equally divided between all the children. "The widow repudiated the will and claimed her dower.

On the 20th of December, 185S, by order of the court, a division of the slaves of testator, seventy-eight in number, was made between his widow and children, by commissioners appointed for the purpose, and upon •a valuation then made, the daughters being •charged with the respective advances named in the will as made to them in their father’s lifetime. They severally, with their husbands, receipted for the slaves which were assigned to them in this division. Wm. A. Lockhart gave a receipt for his wife, as follows: “Received of John A. C. Horn, executor of John Horn, deceased, the following slaves, to wit: (giving their names and values), which is in full of my distributive share of the negro property of said John Horn, deceased, in the division of the same, the commissioners having charged me with •$•1,400, the amount of the advance mentioned in the will of the said John Horn, deceased. W. A. Lockhart, Agent for S. A. Lockhart. Attest: E. R. Showalter.” A similar receipt was given by Narcissa Lock-hart and her husbandj who was then living. At the same time the executor made payments of money to the daughters, which were duly receipted for. The receipt given by Wm. Lockhart was as follows: “Received of John A. C. Horn, executor of John Horn, deceased, two thousand and eighty dollars, in part payment of my claim in the estate of John Horn, deceased, this January 10, 3S59. W. A. Lockhart, Trustee of S. A. Lockhart.” A similar receipt of the same date and amount was given by Narcissa Lockhart and her husband. In October term, 1S59. of the same probaté court, Jno. A. C. Horn, the executor, filed .a partial account of his administration, including his sales of property and the said division of slaves. Due notice of exhibiting the account was published as required by the laws of Alabama, and William Lockhart and his wife, Charles J. C. Lockhart and Narcissa, his wife, William MePhail and his wife, and Frances L. Bryan, contested the account as to various items thereof. A decree was finally made on the 21st of May, 1SG0, by which it was declared that the executor had in his hands for distribution $10.7S3.50, proceeds of the land to be sold and divided among the daughters, and $5,159.21, proceeds of personal property, to be divided among the widow and children in accordance with the will, specifying the amount payable to each. By this account it appeared that Charles Lockhart and Nar-cissa, his wife, were indebted to the executor a small sum, he having already made them a payment as before stated, and that there was due from him to Wm. Lockhart and Sarah, his wife. $608.09 over and above the payments made to them. This sum was paid, and Wm. Lockhart gave a receipt for the amount, as follows: “Received of Jno. A. C. Horn, executor of the last will and testament of John Horn, deceased, six hundred and eight dollars and nine cents, in full of the amount decreed by the probate court of Marengo county, in May, 1SC0, in favor of my wife, Sarah A. Lockhart, and myself, in partial settlement made by said John A. C. Horn under said will, May 20. 1800. (Signed) W. A. Lockhart. (Witness) G. W. Col-ton.”

In August, 1S60, and January, 1861, citations were issued at the suit of the daughters, or some of them, to call the executor to a final account. There was still a balance in his bauds due from James B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 751, 1 Woods 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockhart-v-horn-circtsdal-1871.