Phillips v. Thompson

3 Stew. & P. 369
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Stew. & P. 369 (Phillips v. Thompson) 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
Phillips v. Thompson, 3 Stew. & P. 369 (Ala. 1833).

Opinion

Saffold, J.

This was an aetion of debt, brought by Phillips, administrator of Ann Hancock, against William Thompson, executor, in right of his wife, and his wife, Eliza A. Thompson, executrix of Mills Ely, deceased. The foundation of the suit, was a penal bond, executed by Mills Ely, in his lifetime, on the 7th of July, 1817, for the payment, to George Wilson, of seven hundred and fifty dollars, on a day therein mentioned; for which payment, well and truly to be made, Ely bound" himself, his heirs, &c. in the penal sum of fifteen hundred dollars. The bond was assigned, by Wilson, to Benjamin Drew, and by him, to Ann Hancock, the plaintiff’s'intestate.— The suit was instituted in March, 1820, in the Circuit court of Madison comity.

Issue was joined on the plea of payment; and an agreement was entered of record, that the parties re-[372]*372spectiyely, should be at liberty to give in evidence any special matter constituting a good defence, or replication thereto; also, that the same issue and verdict to be rendered thereon, should equally apply to three other cases, then on the docket between the same parties, It has been subsequently agreed that this decision shall also govern all four of the cases. A trial was had in the Circuit court, when a verdict was rendered for the defendants. From this decision the plaintiff below prosecutes error, the grounds of which appear, from a bill of exceptions taken on the trial. From this it is shown that the defence consisted of a voluminous record of a chancery proceeding, had in the Williamsburg district, Virginia; which it is necessary to notice so far only as to shew the principles of this decision in relation to it.

It appears, that all the matters in controversy, originated in the State of Virginia, and that they arose out of the administration'and settlement of the estate of Thomas Hancock, deceased, who died, there, .in the year 1816. Ann Hancock, the widow of the deceased, and Mills Ely, the husband of Elizabeth, one of the .several daughters of the deceased,- administered on the estate. Drew, being indebted to the estate, to the amount of about three thousand dollars, Ely purchased of one Wilson and Whitfield, (the sons-in-law of Drew,) a tract of land, and executed to them, bonds for the consideration, to about the same'amount, which bonds they transferred to Ann Hancock, the administratrix, (by an assignment, in her individual name,) in discharge of the debt due from Drew to the estate; whereby Ely became debtor to the estate, to the amount of said bonds, or, to Ann Hancock, according to the legal effect, of the [373]*373'transaction; and which bonds are the subject of this suit, and the others depending on it.

After this, without waking payment, or in anyway settling the estate, Ely absconded, from Virginia, a portion of the estate remaining unadminister-ed, and carried with him, all his moveable property; but left his portion, in right of his wife, of thei slaves, constituting the widow’s dower, which, in her, was only a life-estate, and the tract of land, thus purchased by him.

After this, a suit in chancery was prosecuted, in the names of all of the children of Thomas Hancock, and the husbands of the married daughters, (E. E. Phillips, being the husband of one,) against Mills, Ely and his wife, Elizabeth, and Ann Hancock, and Samuel Thomas and Exum Ely, securities of the administrator and administratrix, in their administration bond; also, against the said Benjamin Drew, George Wils'on and Samuel Whitfield, who had been parties in the transfer and exchange of the notes and bonds, as aforesaid. The object of the bill was to secure the complainants, as heirs of the deceased, in their distributive shares of the estate, by all the means within the reach of the chancery: among other things, to subject the tract of land purchased by Ely, as aforesaid, and his interest in the said dower estate — to test the responsibility of the three persons named, as having participated in the settlement of the debt due the estate from one of them,by assigning the administrators’ individual! bonds to the administratrix, in discharge of the former; and to fix the liability of the securities to the administration bond. Ely and wife, having left the State, service of process was perfected on them, only by [374]*374publication; and, failing to appear and. answer, the bill was ordered to be taken for confessed, against them. Other defendants answered; and a variety of interlocutory orders were granted. Before the suit had been matured, for final hearing, the death of Ann Hancock, administratrix, one of the defendants, was suggested. , Then, Phillips, one of the heirs, in right of his wife, and one of the complainants, as aforesaid, was made also, a defendant, as'her administrator.

In the multiplicity of other decretal orders, and proceedings had, pursuant thereto, reports were made, by a commissioner, appointed for the purpose; identifying Ely’s tract of land, and estimating its value at two thousand dollars — making division of the slaves, and placing the portion thereof allotted to Mills Ely and his wife, (in their absence,)'in the possession of said Phillips; and concerning which lot, 'nothing farther is shewn, except an order for the sale of it towards payment to the heirs. . A decre-tal order, however, had passed, in -the lifetime of Ann Hancock, requiring of the administrator and administratrix of Thomas Hancock, an account of their administration: and a report by the commissioner, showing the amount in which each was indebted to the estate; also, what personal estate, and its value, had been left by the absconding Ely. — ■ Pursuant thereto, an account wras reported, by the commissioner, of which notice was personally given, to Ann Hancock, and by publication to Ely. It was decreed,' that the tract of land purchased by Ely, as aforesaid, should be sold by the marshal, and the proceeds thereof be paid to the complainants, in equal shares among them; and the same was accordingly sold, at only about eight hundred dollars, and distri[375]*375buted as directed. , Further, it- was decreed that Drew, Wilson and Whitfield, for their participation in the exchange of the bonds for the notes, as aforesaid, be held liable for the amount of the former (they being the same now sought to be recovered,) in the event of the failure of the administrator or adminis-tratrix and their securities, to pay the same; and that Phillips, administrator of Ann Hancock, should pay to bimself and the other complainants, out of the estate of Ann Hancock, the amount of her deficit as ad-ministratrix.

It also appears, that according to the different reports and orders of settlement, embracing the proceeds of Ely’s said tract of land, as sold by the Marshall, that he. then stood indebted to the estate in the sum of ■ 3,267 75; and that the estate of Ann Hancock was in like manner indebted in the sum of $1,008 52.

This sketch of the'proceedings in chancery, sufficiently discloses the nature of the defence, made to this action, in the Circuit court, and the questions presented for revision here.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Stew. & P. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-thompson-ala-1833.