Shegogg v. Perkins

34 Ark. 117
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 117 (Shegogg v. Perkins) 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
Shegogg v. Perkins, 34 Ark. 117 (Ark. 1879).

Opinions

Turner, Sp. J.

The plaintiffs, who were heirs at law of Constantine Perkins, deceased, state, that on the fourteenth of November, 1864, the said Constantine, who was a resident of Maury county, Tennessee, died at his home, intestate, leaving a widow, Nancy R. Perkins, but no children, lie had a large estate in Tennessee, real and personal, and a valuable plantation in Arkansis, with the usual accompaniments of stock and farming implements.

By the laws of Tennessee the widow was entitled to all his personal property, subject only to the payment of his debts.

By the laws of Arkansas she was entitled to one-half of his personal property, irrespective of the claims of creditors, and to half the rents and pi’ofits of his real estate until her dower was assigned her.

That, on the sixth day of February, 1865, the said Nancy R. was duly appointed administratrix of his estate by the county clerk of Maury county, Tennessee; and that,on the-sixth day of April, 1865, William Q. Pennington, a resident of Pulaski county, Arkansas, was duly appointed administrator of said estate by the probate court of said county. Both administrations progressed,the one in Tennessee, and the other in Arkansas, until the commencement of this suit.

The bill alleged in substance: that said administrator (Pennington) and the widow had confederated together in the matter of the Arkansas administration ; that the said widow had received from the rents and profits of the plantation for 1864, and the succeeding years, as her share, large sums of money, the estimated amount of rents and profits for three years amounting, as they allege, to $27,-000, the plaintiffs having, in the meantime, received nothing; that the administrator (Pennington) had improperly allowed an account, in favor of the widow, which she claimed to have paid in August, 1865, to the firm of Brennan & Co., of Nashville, Tennessee, for $2,000, denying that she paid it all, or, if she had, alleging it had been paid with money of the estate.

That the allowance of claims against the estate, a list of which they set forth, amount to something over $5,000, all of which have been paid ; but as they had no means of proving payment, prayed discovery; conceded dower to the widow; prayed that an account be taken, and for a full and final settlement of the estate, and that after assignment of dower, partition be made of the balance of the lands. The administrator (Pennington) answered: .Denied that the deceased resided in Tennessee; stated that in 1865 the widow cultivated 100 acres of the plantation for her own use, free of rent, in consideration that she would claim none of the rents, and that he received that year from the other lands, $600 ; that for the current year (1867) he had rented the plantation for $4,750, and the whole amount previously received for rents, he stated to be $4,437.05, clear of allowances, one-half of which was paid to the widow. Explainingthe claim of Brennan & Co., he stated that it was due for an engine and fixtures put on the plantation in the lifetime of the intestate; that the widow was sued for it, as administratrix in Tennessee; that she compromised the suit for $2,000, and paid her attorney $100, and sent the claim to him, to be allowed against the estate in Ai’kansas; denied that she got the money from him. He admitted the list of probated claims set forth in the bill, to be correct, with the addition of a claim allowed himself, which was pending when the suit commenced, and showed a balance of money to his debit of $2,028.48. He concluded with a demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court.

Nancy R. Pei’kins (the administratrix) answered and made her answer a cross bill, claiming the whole of the rents and profits of the land until assignment of dower; denied all confederation with Pennington ; admitted that she received her share of the corn and cotton crops for the year 1864, amounting to the sum of $1,421.95.

She admitted the use of 100 acres of land in 1865, which she claims as her right, but denies using any afterwards; also, that she received from Pennington $1,998.80, one-half of the clear rents of 1866, but claimed that she was entitled to the whole. Explaining the claim of Brennan & Co., she stated that her husband had been sued upon it in his lifetime for a larger amount, and that after the grant of administration to her, she was threatened with a revival of the suit, and that, by the advice of William C. Perkins, she had compromised it by paying $2,000 to the claimant, and $100 as fees to her attorneys; that she presented this claim to the Arkansas administrator for reimbursement,because she thought it most proper to have it allowed against the Arkansas property, as it was contracted for that; denied that she had received any of the personal property of the Arkansas place except a mule valued at $25, but that Pennington had bid off'for her at the sale, other personal property of the value of $312, for which he Bad accounted, and paid her, with that, the sum of $455.65 as her half of the sale of the other personal property.

She also set up a parol contract -between her husband and Pennington, for an exchange of eighty acres of land, which she alleged had been carried into effect by her husband’s occupancy and cultivation for a number of years, and now constituting part of the land in which she claims dower, and prays a specific performance against Pennington. She also claimed the whole of the rents and profits until the assignment of dower.

On the twentieth of December, 1867, Pennington filed a supplemental answer, admitting the receipt of the corn and cotton of the crop of 1864, as stated by said administratrix, and corrected his former statement of balance in hand, to show the balance to be $3,626.44.

On the twenty-third of June, 1868, the plaintiffs answered the cross bill of said administratrix, in which they insisted that the domicile of deceased was in Tennessee, and protested against her claim for all the rents and profits.

They still insisted that the allowance of the Brennan claim was wholly wrong, and that it should have been paid out of the estate in Tennessee, and allege that another claim allowed by the administrator here in favor of John Rowland was improperly allowed. That they believed it had been allowed for the benefit of Mrs. Perkins ; that nothing was due him, and that if anything was due Rowland, as claimed, it had been presented hero in Arkansas by her procurement to relieve the personal property in Tennessee.

Issues were made up on the twentieth of July, 1868, by the answer to the cross bill of the guardian, ad litem, of the minor heirs ©f Thomas Perkins, deceased, and by replication of the plaintiffs to the answers of Nancy R. Perkins and Pennington to the original bill.

A number of depositions were taken, filed and published on the eighteenth of February, 1869.

These depositions relate only to the residence of the deceased, and concerned nothing else in issue.

The record shows that upon these pleadings, and the accompanying exhibits, the cause was heard on the fifteenth day of December, 1869. The chancellor found that the said Nancy R.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shegogg-v-perkins-ark-1879.