Oglesby v. Gilmore

5 Ga. 56
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
DocketNo. 8
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 Ga. 56 (Oglesby v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oglesby v. Gilmore, 5 Ga. 56 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By ike Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

The facts of the case are as follows : Oglesby, the defendant, was administrator upon the estate of a man by the. name of Johnson. Under an order of the Court of Ordinary, he sold certain negroes, and the complainant, Mrs. Johnson, who was the wife of the intestate, and one of his distributees, became the purchaser, giving her note, payable to Oglesby as administrator, for the purchase money, with the other two complainants, John S. Johnson, and William W. Gilmore, her sureties. When the note fell due, suit was brought upon it in the name of the defendant, as administrator, and carried to a judgment; execution issued on the judgment, and the negroes of the complainant, Mrs. Johnson, were levied upon and advertised tobe sold. Whereupon these complainants, to-wit, Mrs. Johnson, John S. Johnson, andWm. W. Gilmore, the defendants to the judgment, and who are all also distributees ■of the estate of Oglesby, intestate, bring this bill, and pray an injunction against the farther progress of the judgment and ji. fa. charging that effects, over and above said judgment, have come to the hands of the administrator, sufficient to pay all the debts, and with that, to leave a balance for distribution large enough to make the shares of the complainants therein equal to the amount of the judgment, which shares they offer in payment of it, and ask to be so allowed by a decree. They also charge Oglesby with a dev/stavit, and pray that he may account. Oglesby answered the Mil, and denying fully the charges therein, sets up a demand in his own right, for advances made for the benefit of the estate, and claiming that the whole assets are not more than sufficient to pay the debts, his own includod. Whereupon the injunction was dissolved. Pending the bill, and before a hearing, Oglesby was dismissed from the administration, by judgment of the Superior Court, upon appeal from the Court of Ordinary, and William W. Gilmore appoined administrator de bonis non. The bill being [58]*58amended to this effect, the Chancellor appointed a receiver to take charge of said judgment, and proceed with its collection. He collecte-d the money, and it being in his hands, Oglesby moved the Court that it be paid, to him, which motion was resisted by the administrator de bonis non, who, by counsel, appeared in Court, and claimed that the money raised upon the judgment, was effects unadministered by his predecessor Oglesby, and of right passed to him. as the now sole and legal representative of the estate. The Court ordered the money to be paid to the administrator de bonis non, and upon that order Oglesby predicates error.

The Circuit Judge held, that inasmuch as the original note, out of which this fund grew, was made payable to Oglesby as administrator, and suit was brought upon it in his name as administrator, it was identified as the property of the estate, and being administered, passed to the administrator de bonis non. Against this view, it is contended by the plaintiff in error, that the sale of the negroes, by order of the Court, for which the note was given, was an administration of those negroes, and that Oglesby and his security became liable for the amount of the sale, and the note and the money collected thereon was individual property. The plaintiff in error contends, farther, that if by law the admininistrator de bonis non is entitled to this money, yet he, as such, was no party to the cause pending, and that it was not competent for the Court, upon motion, merely to direct it to be paid to him.

[1.] At Common Law, we think the Court was in error. The property, (the negroes) was fully administered by a legal sale; the administrator and his sureties became liable for the amount of that sale, and the note thereby became his, in his own right. Nothing at Common Law passes to the administrator de bonis non, but the goods and personal estate remaining unadministered imspecie, and susceptible of identification, and all the debts due and owing to the testator or intestate. So far as the estate has been administered, by the first administrator, the second is concluded. 1 Kelly, 80. 1 Williams’ Ex. 656, 7. 1 Salk. 306. Bac. Ab. title Exr’s, B. 2. 1 Gill & Johns. 270. 5 Randolph, 51. Freem. 462. 2 Lev. 10. 1 Ventr. 275. 2 Leigh, 512, 525. 9 Leigh, 580. 3 Kelly, 261.

[2.] In Thomas vs. Hendrick, this Court has determined, that “ when lands or negroes are sold by an order of the Court of Or [59]*59dinary, or perishable property by the act of the party himself, they are administered, so far as the successor is concerned.” So, upon the authority of this Court, it is settled that the sale of the negroes, in this case, by Oglesby, the first administrator, was an administration as to them — it was a change or alteration of the property, and therefore, the administrator de bonis non, can neither recover that property in specie, from the purchaser, nor can he go upon the previous administrator for its proceeds. If the sale of the negroes was an administration as to them, the administrator and his securities became bound for the amount of the sale, to the creditors and distributees, and what he got for them in money and notes, belongs to him individually.

If, indeed, there is fraudulent collusion between the administrator and the purchaser in the sale, the administrator do bonis non, might then pursue the property. Even legal acts, done in course of administration by an executor de son tort, binds the rightful executor and alters the property. Parker vs. Kett, 1 Ld. Raymond, 661. S. C. 12 Mod. 471. Coulter’s case, 5 Co. 306. Plowd. 282. 1 Williams, Exr’s, 158, 9. The same is said to be true of an administrator’s acts, under a grant of administration void, by reason of there being a will and rightful executor. In Boyd vs. Sloan, through Ch. Harper, the Court of Appeals of South Carolina, say, The executor or the administrator is the legal owner of the goods of his testator or intestate, and if he sell them on a credit, it is his personal demand, and he is liable to creditors or distributees.” 2 Bailey’s R. 311. In all such cases there is no contract with the intestate, he being dead; the promise is to the executor or administrator. In Beassington vs. Ault, three executors out of four, named in a will, ordered the sale of goods belonging to their testator, and afterwards sued for the amount, without styling themselves executors, and without joining the fourth executor, and it was held that they might recover. The Court saying, “ The case referred to is distinguishable from the present. In that case the plaintiffs declared as executors, and when they do that, all must join. But that expression was referable to the form of the action, which was an action expressly by executors. In such a case, it is clear that all must join, because they derive their interest under the mil, and not under the probate, and the right to sue is equal in all. But when the management is left to three, and those three enter into a con[60]*60tract, they may sue alone, without styling themselves executors. It is not material how they came by the property, but how they have disposed of it.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ga. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oglesby-v-gilmore-ga-1848.