Norman v. Buckner

135 U.S. 500, 10 S. Ct. 835, 34 L. Ed. 252, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2037
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 19, 1890
Docket275
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 U.S. 500 (Norman v. Buckner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman v. Buckner, 135 U.S. 500, 10 S. Ct. 835, 34 L. Ed. 252, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2037 (1890).

Opinion

*501 Me. Justice Beewee

delivered the opinion of the court,

. This- is an appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Louisiana, dismissing the bill filed by appellants, complainants below. The facts are these: ' . .

. Complainants are the heirs at law of W. D. King, who diets intestate in the State of Louisiana, September 5, 1877. Upon his death and on October 6, 1877, Ben. E. Hall was appointed, administrator, and qualified with the defendants and Leonora-. •E. Hall as sureties on his bond.' Leonora E. Hall, the surety,was the wife of Ben. E. Hall, the administrator. At the-time of his death, King owned an undivided one-half '<of the “ Mounds ” plantation, with the personal property attached-thereto, and also several hundred acres of wild and overflow lands. Mrs. Hall ivas the owner of the other undivided half - of the Mounds plantation'; and she and King were partners' in carrying on the plantation, and running a store thereon.. On February 19,. 1878, the complainants, as heirs of King, sold and transferred to Mrs. Hall the decedent’s undivided half of. the Mounds plantation, with all the personal property belong-: ing thereto, for the consideration of five thousand dollars, and the agreement of the purchaser to pay all the debts of the' estate. If Mrs. Hall had carried out her agreement, and paid the debts of the estate, the complainants would have received-the overflow lands free from all incumbrances. For the five thousand dollars Mrs. Hall gave two notes, one of two thou--, sand and the other of three thousand dollars, due respectively January 1, 1880, and January 1, 1881, and secured by mortgage on the Mounds plantation. This mortgage was subordinate to a prior mortgage to Aivey & Co., for $17,504.49.. Complainants subsequently sold these notes to one of the defendants, John A. Buckner. On September 2,1879, Mrs. Hall died, leaving a. will, giving all her property in Louisiana to her husband, and appointing him - her executor. He qualified, as such, and gave bond as required by the order of the court.. On March 30, 1880, Aivey & Co. commenced suit to foreclose their mortgage; and on ..November 20, 1880, Buckner, pur-i *502 chaser from complainants of their notes and mortgage, also commenced suit Nto foreclose. Under the first suit the Mounds plantation was offered for sale on June 19,1880. At that sale, after some competition, a bid from a reliable person, of thirty' thousand dollars, was made. Thereafter, Ben. E. Hall bid thirty-one thousand dollars, and the property was struck off to him. He failed to' make good his bid, and the sale was thereupon adjourned; and, subsequently, stayed by injunction proceedings. After those injunction proceedings had been got out of the way, and on June 21, 1884, the property was .again offered for sale, and sold to Buckner for twenty-two thousand dollars, an amount not sufficient to discharge the mortgage claims. Pending these proceedings, and on December 11, 1880, Hall, the administrator of King, filed a petition for the sale of the overflow lands, in order to pay debts of the estate. An order for sale was made on this petition, and" on February 5, 1881, the property was sold. At the instance of complainants this sale was set aside —• they being compelled to advance $1200 to reimburse the purchasers. Thereafter, and on November 16, 1883, another order for sale, on a similar petition, was made, and the property sold to one Isadore Newman, for the sum of $1677.74. The value of this overflow land is alleged by complainants to have been $10,000; and the prayer of the bill is for a recovery against the defendants, the sureties on the administrator’s bond, of the sum of $11,200 — being $10,000 as the value of the overflpw land and $1200 advanced by complainants .on account of the first sale; and failing that, a decree setting aside the, sale of the undivided one-half of the Mounds plantation made by them to Mrs. Hall, and requiring the purchaser, John A. Buckner, to return said property to them, with the rents, issues and profits during the time of its possession by him.

The bill has thus a double aspect. The alternative reliefs prayed for are essentially different, one being of an equitable ánd the other of a legal nature. We will consider that of an equitable nature first.

The prayer of the complainants is, that the contract of sale between them and Mrs. Hall be set aside; and that John A. *503 Buckner be decreed to return the undivided one-half of the Mounds plantation, which they had sold to Mrs. .Hall, and which he had subsequently purchased at mortgage' sale. But there is nothing in the record which would justify such relief. Under the laws of Louisiana, the heirs of an intestate may take the property and pay the debts. In pursuance of this right, complainants, the heirs of the intestate King, withdrew the Mounds plantation from the possession of the administrator and sold it. By that act the responsibility of the administrator and the sureties on his bond, as to that property, ceased. The heirs cannot take property from the custody of an administrator, and then hold him or his sureties liable for loss in respect to such property resulting subsequently thereto. Dispossessing him, they relieve both him and his sureties from further responsibility; and this release is in no manner abridged by the fact that the administrator'may thereafter, in his individual or in some other representative capacity, obtain the title or possession of the property thus removed from his custody as administrator. The guaranty of an administrator’s bond is not against general wrong-doing on the part of the administrator, but simply against his misconduct while in charge of the property of the estate. "When that property passes out of his custody, his liability and that of his sureties cease. So when these complainants withdrew the .Mounds plantation from the custody of the administrator and sold it on their own account to Mrs. Hall, they released the sureties on his bond from any further liability in respect to it. Neither the administrator nor his sureties owed any duty to the heirs thereafter to look after such property or protect their interests in it. Hebert v. Hebert & Levey, 22 La. Ann. 308.

Again, there is no pretence that in the sale made by complainants to Mrs. Hall there was any fraud, mistake, or deception. It is not even suggested that there was any wrong in respect to it. How then can they ask to have it set aside ? They allege a failure on her part to pay all the consideration. But such failure is no ground for rescission, and they, having parted with the notes received as part payment, cannot return them. Further, while it is alleged that in the fore *504 closure sale there was collusion' between Buckner the surety, and Hall the administrator, yet the testimony wholly fails to substantiate the claim. The specific charge is, that when the property was offered for sale, a bid from a reliable party was made of thirty thousand dollars, a sum which would have paid off the mortgage debts, and left money enough in the estate of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
135 U.S. 500, 10 S. Ct. 835, 34 L. Ed. 252, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-v-buckner-scotus-1890.