Montgomery v. Givhan

24 Ala. 568
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 24 Ala. 568 (Montgomery v. Givhan) 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
Montgomery v. Givhan, 24 Ala. 568 (Ala. 1854).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

We have given to the record in this case a laborious examination, and proceed to state, as briefly as we can, the conclusions we have attained.

1. It is very clear, that the voluntary deed executed by the testator, and which, since his death, has been set aside by the Court of Chancery in South Carolina, can have no legitimate influence upon the decision of this cause ; first, for the reason, that both the executor and the legatees undér the will seem uniformly to have regarded it as inoperative; and, secondly, the bill proceeds under the will for distribution, and not under the deed, and the executor admits the receipt of certain property belonging to the estate, and which is embraced in the deed, in his capacity as executor, and his liability to account as such, but insists that the complainant has received her full share. As neither party insists upon the deed, we will lay that out of view, and proceed to ascertain the rights of the parties irrespective of it.

2. It is conceded, that the testator, Job P. Givhan,., made his will, by which, after making certain dispositions of portions of bis property, he directed that the balance of his estate, both real and personal, should be divided, in equal parts, among his eight children.” The complainant is one of his children, and entitled to share an interest of one-eighth in the estate. It appears, that Richard Appleby first qualified as executor of the will, the said George Givhan being then under age ; that several judgments were rendered against him as executor, and that Appleby treated the deed, which disposed of the testator’s slaves, and which was executed prior to the will, as passing the property. One of the creditors thereupon filed a bill in equity, and the deed was declared fraudulent and void as to pre-existing [578]*578debts ; and the commissioner was ordered to take an account of the debts due from the estate, and to seize upon sufficient of the assets embraced in the deed for their satisfaction. The cause having been removed from the Charleston to the Colleton District, the commissioner of the Colleton District proceeded to state the account, ascertaining the sums due to the creditors, and to seize upon and sell divers slaves belonging to said estate.

At said sale, the defendant, Givhan, who was then one of the executor’s, purchased divers of the slaves ; and the first question we propose to notice, is, whether this purchase is to enure to his individual benefit, or is to be considered a purchase for the benefit of the estate. The bill charges him with having procured the sale, and with having purchased with the means, and for the benefit, of the estate. In response to such allega ■ tions, the defendant states, that by the decree of the Chancery Court, setting aside the deed, it was decreed that the assets of the estate should be placed in the hands of the commissioner of said court, and that the commissioner should proceed to sell so much thereof as should be necessary to pay and satisfy the debts of the estate ; that in pursuance of said order, the commissioner proceeded to sell thirty-seven of the slaves ; that he does not recollect the amount of the debts, but avers that no money was left after paying the demands against the estate ; that these thirty-seven slaves were all that belonged to the estate, except nine which the respondent had before that time brought to the State of Alabama. He denies that he received any portion of the proceeds of the sale, and says that he had nothing to do with the sales, or settlements. He admits that he purchased the following slaves, at the sales made by the commissioner, viz., Morris, Venus, Frank, Plenty, Scipio, Ellick, Sarah, and her two children George and Phibby ; also Peggy, Linda, and Sam; that he paid cash for Sam, and may have raised the money which purchased him from a sale of the cotton made in Alabama with the negroes brought to this State; but in making this arrangement, he left debts due from the estate unpaid, which required him to pay out his individual funds in their extinguishment, to an amount greater than that used by him from the proceeds of the crop ; that Sam died in less than a year after his purchase ; that Peggy died in about three years after her pm chase, and Scipio in about four years [579]*579thereafter; that as to the other slaves purchased by him, he paid for them out of the proceeds derived from the sale of town lots in Hayneville, two or three hundred dollars in the sale cf horses and other individual property, besides some means which he borrowed, and the proceeds of cotton crops raised by nine hands, which he and his two brothers had, and of nineteen working hands, which he had in his possession during the years 1836 and 1837, of the estate of one Drury Fort, of which estate he was administrator. He denies that one dollar of money belonging to the estate, or arising from crops made by hands belonging to the estate of J. P. Givhan, was paid ; but on the contrary, insists, that there were but five of said nine slaves capable of working, and that the proceeds of their labor did not support the children of the said Job.

The defendant also avers in his answer, that, upon his purchase at the commissioner’s sale, which was made at.Charleston, the Hamiltons agreed to extend the time of payment, and to give him a receipt for the amount of his bid against so much of their claim. The amount thus receipted was $1500, for which he gave his note to the said Hamiltons. The other portion of the slaves were purchased at Waterborough ; and for the amount bid by him, it was agreed that the Hamiltons should indulge him, upon his executing a mortgage upon the slaves, and giving his bond for the amount, being about §1400; which mortgage and bond, it seems, were afterwards assigned to the Hamiltons, by the commissioner, in payment of their debt against the estate. These papers, together with a transcript of the proceedings in equity in South Carolina, appear in the record before us.

From the report of the master it appears, that the total amount of debts proved before him, embracing the demand due the Hamiltons, was $7565 45. The amount of the proceeds of the sales appears by the record to be §8012 50 ; thus leaving a balance of §447 05 as overplus, after paying the debts. To this sum should be added the price at which the slave Sam was afterwards sold, being $300, which makes the overplus, after paying the amount of the indebtedness of the estate as disclosed by the record, the sum of $747 05. What disposition, if any, was made of this sum, the record does not inform us.

Conceding that an administrator, or an executor, with an [580]*580interest, may purchase at a sale made of the goods of the estate which he represents, if the sale is conducted fairly and openly, as has been several times decided by this court; still, we think, there are circumstances connected with the sale and purchase of these eleven slaves by George Givhan, which show, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he concluded the purchase for the benefit of the estate, and not on his individual account. We do not propose to comment upon tne voluminous testimony of the numerous witnesses who have been examined, and which with much care we have sifted, but merely upon the leading facts in the cause which have led us to this conclusion.

In the first place, the record of the chancery proceedings in the State of South Carolina, presents the claim of the defendant in no very favorable light. It seems, by the proceedings had in that State, that, although the assets of the estate of Job P.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ala. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-givhan-ala-1854.