McEldery v. McKenzie

2 Port. 33
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Port. 33 (McEldery v. McKenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEldery v. McKenzie, 2 Port. 33 (Ala. 1835).

Opinion

By Mr. Justice Hitchcock.

Murdoch M. • McKenzie brought an action of as-sumpsit, in the Circuit Court of Morgan county, against Thomas McEldery and Reuben Chapman, executors of William S. Goodhue, and declared against them for work and labor done by him for them as executors of said estate, at their instance and request, in and about the settlement of the estate of the said Goodhue. The declaration avers a liability, and super se assump-sit, in the common form. McEldery pleaded in short, “ non-assumpsit, and set-off,” to which there was a replication and issue, in short. The cause was tried at March term, 1833, and a verdict was had in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants, for the sum of eighty-eight dollars and fifty-five cents, and a judgment de bonis testatoris was rendered thereon. No notice appears to have been taken of the failure of Chapman to plead.

At the trial, two bills of exceptions were taken to the opinion of the Court. In the first, and only one which it will be necessary for the Court to notice, it is stated, that “itwas proved that the work and labor done, and which is sued for, was done at the request of the executors, as set forth in an account which is made part of the bill of exceptions, and which appears to be principally for posting up the books of the testator : upon which evidence the Court charged the jury, that if they believed that the work done was such as was beneficial to the estate, that, in that case, it was char[36]*36geable to them in their representative capacity of ex©' eutois, and not to them as individuals; and that such ■ evidence did sustain the action against them in their representative capacity.”

The case appears to have been treated by the plaintiffs, and the Court below, as a suit against them as-executors, and the charge of the Court directly involves the question, whether an executor or administrator, by virtue of their general powers as such, can make any contract in their representative' character, which at law, will bind the estate, and authorise a judgment de bonis iesiatoris.

This Court, in the case of Greening vs. Sheffield,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Port. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mceldery-v-mckenzie-ala-1835.