Martin v. Blakemore

52 Tenn. 50, 5 Heisk. 50, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 231
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 Tenn. 50 (Martin v. Blakemore) 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
Martin v. Blakemore, 52 Tenn. 50, 5 Heisk. 50, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 231 (Tenn. 1871).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The facts on which the questions for decision in this case are raised are as follows: William Martin and James Adams were administrators of the estate of Thomas Martin, deceased. William Martin and said Jas. Adams both died, and complainant, George W. Martin, was appointed administrator of said William, while the defendant, James B. Blakemore, was appointed the administrator of Adams. George W. Martin, as administrator of his father, the said William Martin, recovered, by decree of the Chancery Court at Dresden, the sum of $1,000 against said Blakemore, as administrator of Adams, at May Term, 1868, and also claims in his bill that, as such administrator, he has an un-liquidated claim against the estate of said Adams for about $10,000. This claim grows out of the following state of facts, as may be gathered from the record before us: The heirs and distributees of Thomas Martin filed a bill in the Chancery Court at Dresden, as we infer, before the year 1859, and certainly before [52]*52the death of William Martin, for an account, and to recover the distributive shares of said heirs. On taking said account, it appears the Chancellor gave a decree in favor of G. W. Martin in said cause for the sum of $1,000 against Blakemore as administrator of Adams; and also gave a joint decree against George W. Martin as administrator of William Martin, and said Blakemore as administrator of Adams, in favor of the other distributees, for a sum of near $10,000, •which last sum is alleged to have been paid by George W. Martin, administrator of William Martin, deceased, after the rendition of said decree in favor of the dis-tributees, to said distributees, at various times, about the first of the year 1870.

It seems that Adams had received the larger portion of the assets of the estate of Thomas Martin, and, as between himself and his co-administrator, ought to have paid the amount recovered by the distributees of Thomas Martin.

Thomas Martin now files his bill in the Chancery Court at Dresden, in September, 1869, asking that the administration of the estate of Adams, which had been suggested as insolvent by the administrator at November Term, 1860, of County Court, be transferred from the County Court, and that his decree of $1,000 and his unliquidated claim of about $10,000 be allowed against the estate of the said • Adams.

The administrator of Adams resists these claims, which were reported on favorably by the Master, on the ground that they were not filed within the time allowed by law in the County Court..

[53]*53The facts show that Blakemore was appointed administrator of Adams on first Monday in July, 1859, and suggested the insolvency of said estate, as stated at November Term of County Court, 1860.

The clerk allowed the $1,000 in his report to the Court, because, he says, the said claim was filed in County Court, March 1, 1869, less than two years after the decree for it was rendered.

The Clerk and Master also allowed the items that make up the sum of $10,000, or thereabouts, on the grounds that the claims were filed in two years after the rendition of the decrees in the Chancery Court, or after payment of them by Martin; and he further relied on the fact that the fund belonging to Adams’s estate was not distributed before the claims were filed.

The administrator of Adams filed exceptions to the report of the Clerk and Master. First, as to the allowance of the $1,000 decree, because not filed within the time required by law in County Court of Weakley County; and second, to the claims numbered 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, for the same reason, and, also, because as to Nos. 9, 10, 11, 12, only half of said claims should have been allowed, if any.

The Chancellor sustained the exception as to the $1,000 claim based on the decree, and disallowed said claim — but disallowed the exceptions filed as to the allowance of items making up the large sum of about $10;000.

From this decree both parties appealed.

The question is, whether these claims were barred by statute of limitations?

[54]*54The administration was granted July, 1859 — the suggestion of insolvency made, as we have stated, November, 1860. The claim or debt of the parties certainly existed at the time of the death of Adams, and although it was only finally adjudicated in the Chancery Court at May Term, 1868, still it was the same debt, its form being changed by the decree from a simple contract debt or legal liability, to one by .a judgment or decree.

On the suggestion of insolvency of the estate, it was the duty of the party to file his claim within the period fixed by law — that is, within two years and six months if a party resident in the State, and three years if out of the State.

We have held at this term, that those statutes are alike applicable to estates of insolvent as well as solvent deceased debtors: See P. M. Rogers, adm’r, v. E. Rogers and others. Manuscript.

As more than the period required by law had expired before the claim of one thousand dollars was filed, the Chancellor properly allowed the exception to this claim.

As to the items making up the larger sum, we hold they were equally barred. The decree had been rendered against Adams’ administrator, jointly with the administrator of Thomas Martin, that is, William Martin, and he and Adams were jointly liable to its discharge, as to the distributees of Thomas Martin.

That liability was as much a liability before the decree as afterwards, and before its payment by complainant as administrator of William Martin, and if he [55]*55neglected to file such claim till after the two years-expired, or waited the result of a long and tedious litigation before it should be filed, it was his own laches.

The administration of the insolvent estate can not be stayed to await the result of other litigations in order to ascertain by judgment or decree the precise amount of a liability (before the claim is filed) in another tribunal. The law makes ample provision for its ascertainment and adjudication in the insolvent proceedings, to which all the creditors are so far parties as that they are bound by the results of said proceedings. It is true that, by sec. 2333 of the Code, suits instituted before the suggestion of the insolvency of the estate may proceed to judgment or decree, which judgments or decrees are, on the evidence of such suggestion being presented to the Court, to be certified to the County Court before which the suggestion is made; but this in nowise militates against the other provisions of the law, which require all claims to be filed within two years in case of resident debtors.

This must be held to be the rule in all such cases, or else the pendency of a litigation in another court must, in many cases, indefinitely delay the settlement of insolvent estates.

If the estate exceeds one thousand dollars, a creditor can always have it administered in a Court of Chancery, and there, by sec. 2383 of Code, the Chancellor may enjoin the commencing or prosecuting all suits at law against the estate, at his discretion, and all suits in equity, except such as he shall direct to be tried separately.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Tenn. 50, 5 Heisk. 50, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-blakemore-tenn-1871.