Maloney v. Hawkins

77 Tenn. 663
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 Tenn. 663 (Maloney v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maloney v. Hawkins, 77 Tenn. 663 (Tenn. 1882).

Opinion

McFarland, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court

The complainant by his bill claims to be the creditor of the defendants, D. S. & John K. Hawkins, in the amount of sis promissory notes, executed by them as partners, and all due at one day, all of which are exhibited, with the bill.

[664]*664The specific object of the bill is to subject the undivided interests or shares of the said I). S. & John K. Hawkins in the lands of their deceased father, Lr. Joseph Hawkins, and also their interest in a tract purchased by his executrix after his death, under the power to do so given by the will. The several tracts are specially mentioned and described, and the position is assumed that as to these lands Dr. Hawkins died intestate. It is stated, however, that the executrix bad conveyed two of the tracts to said John K. Hawkins, and he in turn had conveyed one of the tracts to Ezekiel Adams and the other to S. C. Ayres; that the first was really a sale by the executrix to said Adams, but the mode of conveyance referred to was adopted to avoid the terms of the will. It is charged that the executrix had no power under the will to make these conveyances, and that Adams and Ayres had notice of the terms of the will.

The bill further charges, upon information and belief, that said D. S. & John K. Hawkins have receipted the executrix for large sums and thus attempting to show that they received their pro raía of their father’s estate, and he insists that this is a part of the scheme to defraud complainant out of his debt. The executrix, who was the widow, and also the other four children of the testator, and Adams and Ayres, together with D. S. & John K. Hawkins, were made defendants. The specific prayer is, that the undivided shares of said D. S. & John K. Hawkins in the ■ lands be subjected to complainant’s debts, and that the deeds re[665]*665ferred to be removed as clouds upon the title. No attachment was prayed for or issued.

The executrix and the other children answered and made defense, but the other defendants suffered judgments pro oonfcsso.

The decree of the chancellor granted the relief prayed for, except that he held that the deeds of John K. Hawkins to Adams and Ayres vested each of these purchasers with the undivided one-sixth of the said John K. in said tracts respectively, but he held that said John K. still remained the owner of an undivided one-sixth of all the other lands, and the said D. S. is still the owner of one-sixth in all the lands, all of which are ordered to be sold, if necessary, to pay complainant’s debt. The executrix and in behalf of herself and as guardian ad litem for the three infants, have appealed, and I). S. & John K. Hawkins have sued out a writ of error.

If the decree was so far final as to allow a writ of error — as it probably was not — still we • think it clear that the question made in behalf of said D. S. & John K. as to the debts or notes sued upon not being due at the filing of the bill, is not well taken. The notes are all exhibited with the bill, and all upon their faces read “ one day after date we promise to pay,” etc., which from their date would make them all due before the bill was filed, but they all have on the lower left hand corners and opposite the signature words in this form, “due January 1st, 1881,” “clue January l§t, 1882,” etc., and according to these mem-oranda, there was only one of the notes due when the [666]*666bill was filed; but the makers of the notes allowed judgment pro confesso to be taken, and did not make the question by answer or otherwise, as they might have done, whether these memoranda constituted part of the notes, as according to the allegations of the bill they did not: Hatfield v. Griffith, 1 Lea, 300. The other defendants did make the question in their answer, but it is a question in which they have no interest. If the decree below only had the effect to subject the individual interests of the two debtors in the lands mentioned to complainant’s debt, without any adjudication binding upon the heirs or' devisees as to the extent of those 'interests, it might be said that the other heirs and devisees would not be affected by the decree; but the decree adjudges that said debtors each own one-sixth of all the lands, except as to the two tracts as to which John K. has conveyed his interest. The decree does, therefore, affect the rights of the other heirs and devisees, and the correctness of the decree on this point must, therefore, be examined, and the determination of the question depends upon a construction of Dr. Hawkins’ will.'

It is to be inferred that at the date of the will and at the death of the testator, which occurred soon after, his children were all under age. The 1st and 2d items • provide for the payment of the funeral expenses and debts. The 3d item is as follows: “ 3d. That after my debts are paid, my beloved wife Martha; so long as she shall remain my widow, shall control my real and personal property to the best advantage to raise and educate our children, and to use [667]*667wbat may be necessary for that purpose.” The 4th item provides, that the money he may be entitled to, arising out of a partnership with his two brothers, his interest in the lands of his deceased father, and in the lands of a deceased brother, and his interest in another tract specifically mentioned, purchased jointly * by him and his two brothers, “be invested in good lands for my children.” In connection with this, the 10th item provides that if the other parties owning a joint interest in the lands of his deceased father and his deceased brother, that is to say, the other heirs, think it best to make a private sale, and if his two brothers think it best to sell the other tract mentioned in the 4th item, then his executrix is empowered to join in all these sales and convey accordingly. The 5th item is as follows: “ 5th. It is my will that my children should be made equal in the division of my estate, both of the real and personal.”

The 6th directs his lands to be so farmed as to improve them. The 7th is as follows: “7th. It is my will that my children should all receive about the same in the way of education, and that as ■ they arrive at the age of twenty-one years that they may be assisted. out of my estate what she may think necessary, but not go beyond what would be their part.”

The 8th directs that the surplus stock or grain on hand the next fall be sold, and if not necessary for carrying on the farm, the proceeds to assist in making the last payment for a certain farm.

The 9th appoints his widow his executrix “to carry out my will,” but provides in the case of her death [668]*668or marriage, that his two sons, D. S. and John K., if twenty-one years of age, together with his brother-■William, shall be executors. This is, in substance, the whole of the will.

The answer of the executrix, filed in behalf of herself and the other children, sets up that under the powers given her in the will, and especially under the 7th item, she did assist the said John K. and Dudley S., upon their arriving at age, by advancing to them sums which they acknowledge to be their full share of the estate. Dudley S. received his share, $1,700, on or before the 10th of January, 1877, which it is to be inferred was money or personal property; and by the 28th of December, 1876, said John K. had received his share, which included the two pieces of land conveyed to him shortly before.

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77 Tenn. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloney-v-hawkins-tenn-1882.