Perkins v. . Berry

9 S.E. 621, 103 N.C. 131
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 621 (Perkins v. . Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. . Berry, 9 S.E. 621, 103 N.C. 131 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

This action is prosecuted by the plaintiffs in behalf of themselves and all other creditors of John Sud-derth, deceased, against the defendant, his administrator de ■bonis non, with the will annexed, for an account and settlement of the testator’s estate, and the payment of their several debts. The deceased died in February, 1865, leaving a will, which has been admitted to probate, appointing three executors, to-wit, W. S. Sudderth, John R. Súdderth and Joseph Corpening, all of whom qualified as such, and entered upon and proceeded to discharge the duties and trusts imposed. In March, 1874, the executor John R. Sud-derth died intestate, and without committing any waste, having properly applied the assets that came into his hands. In like manner the executor Joseph Corpening died intestate, in the year 1883, without having completed his administration, as did the sole surviving executor two years thereafter, also intestate, leaving the administration incomplete.

On the 25th day of May, 1^85, after a controversy and final adjudication thereof in regard to the party entitled, letters of administration de bonis non issued to the defendant. At Fall Term, 1888, was entered the following order of reference:

“This cause coming on for hearing, a jury trial being waived, it is, by consent of counsel for plaintiffs and defendant, referred to T. G. Anderson, Esq., with leave to plaintiffs *133 to amend their complaint within twenty days, and leave to defendant to amend answer in ten days after filing of amended complaint. The said referee to find and pass upon all matters of fact or law, without prejudice, however, to the defendant’s plea of the statute of limitations, all rights- of defendant under said plea being reserved, and all other matters by consent referred. Said referee to report his findings of fact and conclusions of law to the Judge presiding of this Court at Chambers, in Marion, McDowell County, on Tuesday of the first week of the Superior Court of McDowell County, where the same is, by consent, to be heard before Hon. Walter Clark, Judge presiding Tenth District.”

The complaint and answer were amended accordingly, and several new parties having been admitted into the action, on their application to the referee, he proceeded with the execution of the order, and made his report, so much of which as is necessary to the proper understanding of the rulings of the Court and the exceptions thereto, brought up for review, is- produced.

In the progress of the cause various other creditors were admitted as plaintiffs, all of whom filed evidence of their debts. An object of the suit is also to have the lands left by the intestate, and which are of great value, sold to supply any deficiency in the personal estate to meet the outstanding liabilities of the testator, and to compel the defendant, who has no assets himself, when the indebtedness is ascertained and the value of the personal estate available for the payment, to institute proper proceedings for the sale of the devised lands, or so much as may be required, for conversion into assets, to be applied to the deficiency.

The referee reported the following facts as admitted by the parties:

“ I find from admissions in evidence and from pleadings—
“1. That John Sudderth died in Burke County, State of North Carolina, in the month of February, 1865, leaving a *134 last will and testament in which John R. Sudderth, W. S. Sudderth and Jos. Corpening were appointed executors, and soon thereafter, in the year 1865, they qualified as executors.
“ 2. That John R. Sudderth died on the first day of March, 1874; Jos. Corpening, on the — day of-, 1883, and W. S. Sudderth, on the 18th day of March,1885, withouthaving fully administered said estate, and B. A. Berry was appointed administrator d. b. n. of said John Sudderth on the 25th day ■of May, 1885, and no final account has ever been filed or final settlement made of said estate.
3. That there is not and ought not to be any personal property whatever in the hands of 13. A. Berry, administrator d. b. n., with which to pay debts of said estate, and that John Sudderth died seized of, and there is now in the hands of his devisees, real estate and outlying lands sufficient to pay off all indebtedness of said estate.”

Then, after enumerating a number of the claimants whose debts are not disputed by the defendant, and whose amounts are specified, the referee proceeds to find the facts and the law arising on each, except the operation of the statute of limitations and the effect of the lapse of time, which we give in the words of his report:

“ As to the claims of C A. Little, administrator of Joseph Corpening, and R. J. Hallyburton, administrator of W. S. Sudderth, which claims are embodied in one and founded upon the same facts, I find from the evidence, and from the records introduced in cases of John Iíaigler et al. v. Executors of John Sudderth, and T. G. Walton, administrator of Robert Slough, v. Sudderth Executors, the following facts: That in 1882, T. G. Walton, administrator of Slough, brought suit against Jos. Corpening and W. S. Sudderth, surviving executors of John Sudderth, for legacy of $1,000 bequeathed to said Slough by said John Sudderth, and recovered judgment against said W. S. Sudderth and Jos. Corpening, surviving executors as aforesaid, fixing them with the sum of *135 $1,941.38 as assets in their hands as executors of said estate, and that plaintiff do recover of defendant executors the sum of $1,000, to be paid out of the assets belonging to the estate of John Sudderth found to be in the hands of defendant executurs, and that he do recover of defendants individually the sum of $1,000, and that upon failure of defendants to pay said sum and interest out of the assets in their hands belonging to the estate of John Sudderth in ninety days, that plaintiff have execution against the lands and tenements, goods and chattels, of defendants individually, for said amount and for cost.
“And that thereafter, on the 14th September, 1882, defendant executors borrowed from one Joshua Kidd the sum of $2,000, giving him their note as executors and authorizing an assignment to him, as collateral security, of the Slough judgment, which was assigned, said loan being to pay said judgment; and thereafter, on the 12th of June, 1883 (Jos. Cor-pening having died and C. A. Little having been appointed his administrator), Joshua Kidd was repaid said sum and interest by W. S. Sudderth, executor, and C. A. Little, administrator of Joseph Corpening, and the judgment held by Kidd as collateral security was receipted, satisfied and discharged by him ; and the claim of C. A. Little is for $1,714 of said amount paid by him as administrator, and the claim of R. J. Hallyburton (who has since been appointed administrator of W. S. Sudderth) is for $326 of said amount paid by W. S. Sudderth on said note; which claims I find, as matters of law, to be not valid nor subsisting claims, but no claims whatever, the said judgment being absolute, and an individual judgment fixing the executors with assets being

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Balfour Quarry Co. v. West Construction Co.
66 S.E. 217 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1909)
Koonce v. . Pelletier
20 S.E. 391 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 621, 103 N.C. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-berry-nc-1889.