Rainwater v. Harris

51 Ark. 401
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 Ark. 401 (Rainwater v. Harris) 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
Rainwater v. Harris, 51 Ark. 401 (Ark. 1888).

Opinion

Hughes, J.

The complaint in this action alleged that the defendant, Rainwater, was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of three hundred dollars for money had and received of her. The answer contains three counts; first a general and second a special denial. The third count is as follows: “That prior to the death of the said J. A. Harris, to-wit, in the year 188— this defendant loaned to him the sum of three hundred dollars in cash, and took no note or evidence of indebtedness therefor, but that the same was entered by the said Harris in his own private memorandum book; that the said J. A. Harris was thereafter taken sick and died intestate before securing or paying the same; that he died indebted to this defendant in the sum of three hundred dollars and the interest thereon; that at the time of his death he left the said M. J. Harris, his widow and Wm. Harris, his son, his sole heirs him surviving and left property not exceeding seven hundred ■and fifty dollars in value; that he was not indebted at said time except to this defendant, as he believes and alleges, and had no outstanding claims for collection, as defendant believes and alleges; that sometime after the death of the said Harris, this defendant called the attention of the said M. J. Harris to the indebtedness of her said husband, deceased, to-this defendant, and of his entry in his memorandum book of the same; that by agreement of the said M. J, Harris and this defendant she paid this defendant the sum of - three hundred dollars in full satisfaction of the said claim, which was-the only sum of money ever paid to defendant by the said plaintiff.”

The defendant then sets out in the same plea that said M. J. Harris had sued him in her own right for said sum, as-money loaned him, and that upon a verdict of a jury, judgment was rendered for him, and concludes his plea by saying, ‘‘this defendant says that the sole and only object had in administering upon the estate of her said husband was to-try and compel him to pay the sum of money based on the transaction aforesaid with herself after the death of her said husband.”

A demurrer was filed to the answer ‘‘because it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defence to the action.”

The court overruled the demurrer to the first paragraph of the defendant’s answer, to which the plaintiff excepted, and sustained the demurrer to the third paragraph of same, to which defendant excepted. After hearing the evidence the court sitting as a jury found the facts, declared the law, and gave judgment for the plaintiff for three hundred and forty-six dollars and sixty-five cents. The defendant moved for a new trial, his motion was overruled and he excepted and appealed. The motion for new trial assigns four causes:

1st. The finding of the court is contrary to law.

2nd. The finding of the court is contrary to and not supported by the evidence.

3rd. The court erred in excluding evidence offered by the defendant.

4th. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the 3rd paragraph of defendant’s answer,

The appellant’s counsel abandons in his brief, all. the causes or grounds alleged, save the 4th.

Did the third paragraph of defendant’s answer contain a good defence to the action?

The demurrer admits the facts alleged in the plea, from which it appears that the said J. A. Harris, at the time of his death owed no debts save the one to defendant, which was paid by the widow before grant of administration to her; and that she had administered for the sole purpose of recovering in her capacity as administratrix, the three hundred dollars she had paid to the defendant. The trial court found that Mrs. Harris, believing her husband indebted to the defendant, had voluntarily paid him the three hundred dollars, but held that the same was unauthorized by law. But the payment having been made, ought the plaintiff now to be allowed to recover the sum paid to defendant? There are no creditors who can object to the settlement. It was not to the detriment of the estate, but in its interest, as no interest was paid upon the sum loaned by appellant to appellee’s intestate. The widow was entitled to administration and to the care and custody of the property before administration. .She was entitled by law to an interest of one-third in the estate, an amount that would have exceeded the sum she paid appellant — the estate consisting of about $900, personal property, as the evidence shows. There was but one heir, a son of the intestate, who may or may not have been of lawful age, as far as appears from the transcript in the case.

1. Administration: Authorities are not wanting, which hold that, when an estate has been settled and the debts paid by those interested in it, without administration, the settlement will not be disturbed, and that an administrator qualifying afterwards cannot recover the assets, where there is no necessity that he should be allowed to do so. In Harris, admr., v. Seals and wife, 29 Ga., 585, the court said: “In the case in which there are no debts, the regular administrator, if there is one, is bound to divide out the estate among the heirs or next of kin according to the statute of distributions. Therefore, if in that case, an executor de son tort, divide out the estate,, in that way, the act will be good — the division will stand.” “In a word, the act will amount to a valid administration of the estate in full.” In Taylor v. Phillips, 30 Vt., 238, it is held that, “it is competent for all the heirs of a deceased person, if they are of age, to settle and pay the debts of the estate, and divide the property among themselve.s, without the intervention of an administrator, and neither the creditors, or debtors of an estate have a right to complain.”

Irregular settlemant ofestates. In Richardson v. The Estate of Merril et al., 32 Vt., 28, it is held that, “in settlement of an administrator’s account he is entitled to be allowed for money paid by him, in liquidation of a claim, which could have been enforced against him either at law or in equity. ” Notes for one thousand dollars were returned by the administrator on his inventory of the intestate’s estate, payable to the intestate. The widow claimed they were her property, and the administrator paid her $1000 and kept the notes. The notes were afterwards held to be the widow’s. The probate court refused to allow the administrator credit for the thousand dollars and the judgment was- and the credit allowed. These cases serve to show that while it is irregular and unauthorized to settle estates, outside of a regular administration, yet that it is not every settlement, thus made, that will be interfered 'with, and that where a settlement is fair, without fraud, and in furtherance of the purposes of a regular administration, and made by competent parties, it will not be repudiated merely on account of the irregularity. It is true, Judge Cooley, in Gilkey v. Hamilton, 22 Mich., 283, says that, “under our probate system, an administrator is a mere officer of the law, and though his title to the assets of the estate relates back to the death of the intestate, yet it is an official title which cannot be affected to the prejudice of the estate, by any acts of his prior to his appointment; nor will his title be affected by any estoppel that does not rest on equities against the estate.”

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ark. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainwater-v-harris-ark-1888.