Sayre v. Flournoy

3 Ga. 541
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1847
DocketNo. 71
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Ga. 541 (Sayre v. Flournoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayre v. Flournoy, 3 Ga. 541 (Ga. 1847).

Opinion

By the Court.

Warner, J.,

delivering the opinion.

The object of the complainants’ bill as disclosed by the record before us is, to have their debt satisfied out of the fund now in the hands of the administrator of Robert Willis Flournoy, deceased. The complainants are judgment creditors of Nathaniel A. Adams, who intermarried with Mary M. Flournoy, the sister of Robert Willis Flournoy. It appears from the record that Adams is insolvent, and that the complainants have exhausted their legal remedies against him without having been able to collect their demand. It also appears, that Mary M. Adams, the wife of their judgment debtor, is entitled to the one-sixth part of the estate of her deceased brother, Robert Willis Flournoy, of the value of eighty thousand dollars, which is in the hands of Robert Watkins Flournoy, his administrator.

To the complainants’ bill the defendants demurred;

First. Because there was no equity in their bill;

Second. Because there was no privity between the claim of the complainants and the defendants ;

Third. Because the distributive share which Mary M. Adams was entitled to have out of Said estate, was in no wise liable or subject to the claim of the complainants, as the same remained in the hands of the administrator and was therefore not vested in said Adams ; nor could it vest until the same was recovered and reduced into possession during the life time of his wife, Mary M.

The Court below sustained the demurrer and dismissed the [546]*546complainants’ bill, to which the complainants excepted, and now assign the same for error in this Court.

[1.] That a court of equity will assist a judgment creditor who has pursued his legal remedies to every available extent to enable him to reach trust funds belonging to the debtor, in the hands of a trustee, is, in our judgment, an undeniable proposition.

Had Adams, the debtor of the complainants, been the distributee of Robert Willis Flournoy, and entitled to the distributive share now in the hands of the administrator, in his own right, they would have been entitled to the aid which they now seek by their bill.

The complainants are not simple contract creditors, seeking to collect their demand out of a debtor to the estate of Robert Willis Flournoy, but they are judgment creditors, who, in equity, would be entitled to have their judgment paid out of any funds in the hands of the administrator — who is a trustee — to which their judgment debtor is entitled, in his own right, and which cannot be reached by their execution at law. The fact that the judgment creditor has exhausted all bis legal remedies without obtaining satisfaction of his judgment, gives him a right to come into a court of equity and ask its assistance to reach the fund in the hands of the administrator, held in trust for the judgment debtor; and the insolvency of the judgment debtor, in our judgment, greatly strengthens the complainants’ equity; for if the administrator should pay over to the debtor the fund held in trust for him, it might be squandered, misapplied, and placed entirely beyond the reach of the creditor.

We are of the opinion, that where a creditor has obtained judgment, and pursued his legal remedies to every available extent, without obtaining satisfaction of his demand, and his debtor is entirely insolvent, a court of equity will lend its aid to assist him to reach a distributive share to which he may be entitled in his own right, in the hands of an administrator, who holds the same in trust for such judgment debtor.

[2.] The complainants in this case do not seek to reach funds in the hands of the administrator to which their judgment debtor is entitled in his own right. They seek to have the distributive share of their judgment debtor’s wife, now in the hands of her deceased brother’s adminstrator, applied to the payment of her husband’s debt, before he has reduced the same to possession.

To enable the complainant in a bill to maintain his suit in a court [547]*547of equity, it is essentially necessary that he should show a proper right or title to the thing or interest demanded. Story Eq. Pl. 564. The complainants in this case, as judgment creditors, ask to be subrogated to the rights of their debtor, Nathaniel A. Adams. What right or title has Nathaniel A. Adams to the distributive share of his wife in her deceased brother’s estate, now in the hands of the administrator 1 The mere naked, right to sue for and reduce the same to possession. And this mere naked right is made subservient to his wife’s equity, for when he sues for the distributive share of his wife, it is competent for the court to decree the whole fund, for the benefit of his wife and children. 2 Kent Com. 146; Like vs. Beresford, 3 Vesey Jr. R. 512.

The complainants allege in their bill, that a settlement has been made on Mrs. Adams out of her father’s estate ; but this does not affect her right of survivorship to her share of her brother’s estate, nor clothe her husband or his creditors with any additional rights j for it is well settled that the wife is entitled to her equity upon a new accession of fortune. Ex parte Beresford, 1 Desaus. Eq. R. 263; Lady Elibank vs. Montolieu, 5 Vesey R. 737.

The husband has the mere naked right to reduce his wife’s choses in action to possession ; and if he fails or neglects to do so during the coverture, and his wife survives him, she is entitled to them and not his representative. 2 Bl. Com. 351. This is the rule at law, and equity follows the law in this respect. Clancy Hus. & Wife 109.

The creditor can only reach the property of his debtor; can the wife’s choses in action be considered as the property of the husband until he has reduced, them to'possession?- If they are his property, on what principle"is it that courts of equity decree provision to the wife, when he seeks to reduce them to possession 1 If the wife’s choses in action are theproperty of the husband, on what principle is it they survive to the wife on the death of the husband, before he has reduced them to possession % The idea that the husband has any absolute right or title to his wife’s choses in action, vested, in him, before he has reduced them to possession, is entirely inconsistent with her legal right of survivorship, as well as her equitable right to have the whole appropriated for the separate use of herself and children. In Gallego vs. Gallego’s ex’rs., 2 Brock. R. 287, Chief Justice Marshall remarked : “ The property does not become the husband’s, nor is it subject to the liabilities which attach to that [548]*548which is his, until it shall be reduced to possession. Till then, his creditors have no claim to it.”

In Gayner vs. Wilkinson, 2 Dickens R. 491, Lord Bathuz’st said, “ that the interest of the wfe was not such a legal interest as the husband could assign.”

In Elibank vs. Montolieu, 6 Vesey R.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ga. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayre-v-flournoy-ga-1847.