Ruddell v. Childress

31 Ark. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Ark. 511 (Ruddell v. Childress) 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
Ruddell v. Childress, 31 Ark. 511 (Ark. 1876).

Opinion

Walker, J.:

This suit was brought by Childress and others, securities upon the executor’s bond of Ruddell, to compel him to indemnify plaintiffs as such securities against loss, and to prevent him from removing his person or property out of the State, without first giving such indemnity.

As the main questions of law presented for our consideration arise upon the demurrer to the complaint, and to the sufficiency of the affidavit, it may be best to state the substance of each.

Plaintiffs, Robert A. Childress, Samuel Blair and Leah L. Mayfield, administratrix of Uriah Mayfield, deceased, state that, on the 29th of April, 1867, the will of John Ruddell was probated in the Independence Probate Court. That defendant John L. Ruddell and Mary Ruddell were named as executors of the will; Mary Ruddell relinquished her executorship, and defendant assumed the sole executorship of the will, and entered into bond in the sum of $30,000, with plaintiffs, and one Willin Iiollen, who does not join in the suit, as his sureties. That on the 29th June, of that year, the defendant filed an inventory of said estate, charging himself with $18,132, after which, in 1871, he filed his account current, by which he stood charged with $17,179.94; on the 28th December, 1871, upon further settlement, he was charged with $6,171.09, as a balance remaining in his hands, and for which sum plaintiffs are responsible, and liable to pay as his securities; that on the 7th of July, 1871, an order was made by the Probate Court of Independence County, requiring defendant to give an additional bond for the faithful performance of said trust within ten days, which he failed to do; that his letters testamentary were revoked, and defendant ordered to settle, aud pay over the estate so remaiuing in his hands. That afterwards, in June, 1872, plaintiff Robert A. Childress was, by said Probate Court, appointed administrator do bonis non, with the will annexed, of said estate; that after such appointment, he demanded of defendant the entire' assets of said estate, and an account of the same, which defendant refused. Aver that they are responsible as such securities for the same; charge and believe that defendaut procured them to go upon his said bond with the fraudulent intent and purpose of cheating, injuring and defrauding them out of a large amount of money, and that the course and conduct of the defendant, in the management and settlement of the estate; has fully confirmed this belief of his fraudulent intent in procuring them to sign the bond as securities; that he made false and fraudulent statements in order to procure their signatures, and has since managed said estate, and allowed claims against the estate which should not have been allowed, to-wit: The claim of William Byers for $5,427.10, which is-near the amount due upon defendant’s pretended settlement, which claim remains unpaid, and which plaintiffs believe it is intended to force them to pay.

That defendant .has sold the lands of the estate, and collected the assets thereof to the amount of about $20,000, which he now has under his control, and refuses to pay the claims of the estate, or to account for the same. That. defendant has fraudulently disposed of all of his property, and claims to be insolvent and irresponsible for any debts he may contract, when, in truth, as plaintiffs charge and believe, defendant has a large amount of money deposited so that he can get it, and leave the State at any time; and has stated that he would make a large amount out of said estate, and manage it so as to compel his securities to pay or lose a large sum; that he would leave with money enough to live on the balance of his days; that defendant is now making arrangements to leave the State of Arkansas, and go to parts unknown to plaintiffs, as they charge, to consummate defendant’s rascality and defraud plaintiffs, as he originally intended to do. Plaintiffs charge that their responsibility has been produced by the fraud of defendant; that defendant has in his possession, or in the possession of others for him, a large amount of money, and securities for money, and is about to depart from this State, and move his property therefrom, with a fraudulent intent, and without leaving property therein sufficient to satisfy any process of the court, after judgment, or any claim of plaintiffs arising out of their liability upon said bond.

In addition to the usual affidavit, verifying the allegations in the bill, it was accompanied with the following affidavit: “ The plaintiff, Robert A. Childress, states that the claim in this action against the defendant, John L. Ruddell, is to obtain indemnity against the debts and liabilities for which plaintiffs are bound, as securities for said Ruddell. That it is a just claim, and that the liability therefor was fraudulently contracted by the defendant, and that he believes they ought to recover thereon indemnity against the said debts or liability in the sum of $30,000, and that the defendant has money, or securities, or evidences of debt in the possession of himself and others for his use, and is about to depart from this State without leaving property therein sufficient to satisfy plaintiffs’ clai.m.”

Upon the. filing of the complaint and affidavit, an order was made by the clerk to arrest the defendant, which was executed.

Several motions and rulings were had; an answer filed and subsequently withdrawn. A demurrer was filed to the bill as amended, which fully presents the question of its legal sufficiency, and a motion to vacate the order of arrest, which presents the question as to the sufficiency of the affidavit.

First — Is the complaint sufficient? Does it present a state of case to bring it within the provisions of the Constitution and of the statute. By sec. 14, Article 1, of the Constitution of 1868, “no person shall be imprisoned for debt in this State; but it shall not prevent the general assembly from providing for imprisonment, or holding to bail, persons charged with fraud in contracting said debt.”

The legislative enactment is, Gantt’s Dig., Ch. 8, sec. 265, “A defendant in a civil action can be arrested and held to bail only upon the condition and in the manner prescribed in this chapter. Sec. 266. An order for the arrest of the defendant shall be made by the clerk of the court in which the action is-brought, at its commencement, or at any time before judgment, when theye is filed in his office an affidavit of the plaintiff showing in all cases of arrest, the nature of the plaintiff’s claim or debt, and charging the defendant with fraud in contracting the same. That it is just, and the amount or value which the affidavit believes the plaintiff ought to recover; and that affiant believes, either that the defendant is about to depart from this State, and, with the intent to defraud his creditors, has concealed or removed from this State his property, or so much thereof that the process of the court after judgment cannot be executed, or that the defendant has money, or securities for money, or evidences of debt, in the possession of himself, or of others for his use, and is about to depart from this State without leaving property therein sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s claim.”

Sec. 5694, Gantt’s Digest: A surety may maintain an action against his principal to obtain indemnity against the debt or liability for which he is bound, before it is due, whenever any of the grounds exist upon which, by the provisions of Chs. 8 and 9, an order may be made for arrest and bail, or for attachment.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ark. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruddell-v-childress-ark-1876.