Pinchback v. Graves

42 Ark. 222
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 42 Ark. 222 (Pinchback v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinchback v. Graves, 42 Ark. 222 (Ark. 1883).

Opinion

EakiN, J.

This is a bill by the children of Peyton R.. Graves, deceased, as heirs and distributees, seeking to follow assets of his estate into lands which have been purchased by their mother’s second husband, and to subject the lauds to their payment.

It is alleged and shown by the pleadings and proof' that Peyton R. Graves, about the beginning of the civil war, died seized of some personalty, including two slave men, a wagon and some oxen. He had no land, but was cultivating land of his wife, with negroes, some of which were her own; and upon which land he left a growing crop. Ilis widow became his administratrix; and it is. sufficiently clear that some debts were pirobated against the estate, which have never been paid. In a short time she married Edward C. Hydriek, who took possession of all effects in her hands, and assumed the care and protection of her children. Of this second marriage a son was born also, E. C. Hydriek, junior; who, after the death of his father, was made a party to this suit, together with tlm administrator of his father’s estate. The administration on the estate of Graves was never revived nor settled. It is plain that none is necessary now. The creditors have rested nearly twenty years upon their probated claims and would not new be heard if they were claiming, which they-are not. No effects remain which if collected could be otherwise disposed of than by distribution amongst the complainants. The rights of all parties may be finally settled in chancery.

It is not a case of distributees endeavoring to represent the estate, to get in or get possession of outstanding effects or property adversely held. It is more in the nature of a claim for waste and conversion against the administrator himself, in which the aid of chancery is necessary to reach a fund to which the distributees are entitled.

All the active parties in the transaction are dead, and the widow also. The contest is between the complainants and those claiming the land through Ilydrick. The principal and the determining questions are: First. Did Ilydrick lay out any money or expend effects of Graves’ estate in such manner as to make him a trustee for Graves’ children; and, if so, are a portion of the defendants, the Pindalls, who hold the greater part of the land under a purchaser at execution sale against Ilydrick, bound by, the trust? With regard to Ilydrick’s heir, the second question can not arise, but as against the Pindalls he had a right to contest the validity of the execution sale.

The Chancellor upon hearing, i n a very clearly expressed written opinion, setting forth its grounds, held both points in the affirmative, and decreed in favor of complainants for the original value of the property of Graves’ estate, which he found had been used by Ilydrick in the purchase of the lands, but, under the peculiar circumstances, allowed nothing for interest. It was further held that the lien of complainants Avas superior to the claim of the Pindalls. In the decree, hoAvever, it was ordered that certain portions of the laud which Ilydrick had conveyed to his wife, and of wbicb complainants had possession, should be first subjected to the lien.

1. Practice Defense infant, how made.

Erom this decree both parties appealed.

The interests of the defendants are not identical. The Pindalls, the administrator of Hydrick, and his heir, E. C. Hydrick, have a common interest in denying the trust, but the community goes no further. The heir has an interest antagonistic to the Pindalls, inasmuch as their purchase of the judgment against his father, and the sale under it, diminishes his inheritance, and he has a right to contest it. The administrator of Hydrick, senior, is only concerned to prevent a personal judgment or decree against the estate for the value of the properly, for which he will not be personally liable. It can not concern him very materially whether a trust be declared against the land or not, although it does concern the heir vei’y seriously.

It is evident from the decree that whilst the Pindalls may by its operation still be protected from loss, and have their claim to hold the lands against the heir made res judicata ; and whilst the administrator or his sureties can not be injured, the heir loses all.

He was but seventeen when he defended, and it is very important to consider whether he has had proper protection in the court, in the determination of the rights of the respective parties upon the merits. I am deeply impressed with the conviction that there has been, in the past, not only in this, but in other States, too great laxity in dealing with the interests of minors. This is common in the probate courts, and not sufficiently rare in courts of more extensive jurisdiction.

No guardian ad litem was appointed for this youth. He came in and simply adopted an answer which had been filed by an administrator de bonis non, denying nothing of his own motion, evidently knowing nothing about the whole matter. He adds this:

Disabilities removed by probate court.
“ The defendant further states that at the-term of the probate court of Lincoln County he had his disabilities of non-age removed, and was then and there declared to-be competent to transact his own business, as will more fully appear by a copy of the record of said court in that behalf made, and herewith filed.”

This answer is signed only by the attorney, and verified by no one. It is put in upon the ordinary leave granted in all cases to new parties, adults or others. No copy of any such record appears in the transcript. None was ever filed below. No entry shows that the court was satisfied that the infant was competent to act sui juris, or that the court ever looked into the matter at all. The cause proceeded as against an adult, with the result above announced.

If there had not been that clause in the answer, no one would question the fact that a gross error had been committed in allowing the rights of a boy of seventeen years to be settled upon his own submission to a vicarious defense, made by one having no connection with him by blood, nor personal interest in the subject matter. Of what effect, in law, can be the admission or statement of one not competent to make it ? It made no issue. And may, from all that appears, have been prompted by those who had an interest in dispensing with a proper guardian ad litem. I do not mean to say there is any special reason to suspect this. I take it that in fact there has been some proceeding in some other court, by which the court and attorneys were all satisfied that the boy had been rendered competent to act sui juris. But we can not make bad precedents from confidence in the court and attorneys. No such proceedings appear, whilst it does appear that he was a mere boy, had no guardian, and lost his inheritance in the contest. Eor between the Graves’ and the Pindalls he will have nothing left.

2 Appointment of guardian ad litem, and his duty.

When the probate court of Lincoln County did the thing, whether or not it had jurisdiction, by residence of the boy, at the time, and what specially it did, are not shown. No inquiry upon these points appears to have been made.

The business and juridical history of America is strewn with the wrecks of infants’ fortunes.

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

Related

Harjo v. Johnston
1940 OK 152 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
Ark. Tr. Co., Curator v. Sims
133 S.W.2d 854 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1939)
Baker v. Boyd
119 S.W.2d 524 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1938)
Tucker v. Leonard
1930 OK 209 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Moore v. Wilson
20 S.W.2d 310 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1929)
Wade v. Saffell
9 S.W.2d 803 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1928)
Ross v. Stroud
291 S.W. 996 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)
Lowery v. Richards
1926 OK 148 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Gannon v. Moore
104 S.W. 139 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)
Sexton v. Crebbins
98 S.W. 116 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1906)
Rankin v. Schofield
66 S.W. 197 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ark. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinchback-v-graves-ark-1883.