Stone v. Stillwell

23 Ark. 444
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ark. 444 (Stone v. Stillwell) 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
Stone v. Stillwell, 23 Ark. 444 (Ark. 1861).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill to impeach the final settlement of Absalom Fowler, as administrator of Rufus Stone, deceased, determined in the Independence Circuit Court.

The complainants were Jefferson Stone, in his own right, and as administrator of his deceased brother Solon, and as guardian of his minor brother Rufus, who were the sons and heirs at law of Rufus Stone, deceased.

The defendants were Fowler and Joseph H. Egner and Morgan Magness, the sureties of Fowler in his administration bond1.

The bill was dismissed for want of equity, the complainants appealed, and after the case was brought here, the death of Fowler was suggested, and Joseph Stillwell, his executor, substituted, etc.

The material allegations of the bill are, that Rufus Stone died intestate, 10th March, 1853. On the 26th of the same month Fowler bécame his administrator; and in April following, filed an inventory, in the Probate Court of Independence county, from which his letters were issued, stating that no assets had come to his hands, and there were none within his certain knowledge, except an old and diseased negro man, npt worth the expense of appraising.

That on the 1st of October, 1856, Fowler filed his account current for final settlement, in which he stated that nothing had come into his possession' as administrator, except the old and valueless negro referred to in the inventory; and that the estate was indebted to him in the sum of $2 ¿0, expended by him for letters, etc. Which account, after publication, was confirmed by the Probate Court, and Fowler discharged.

That but one demand had been allowed and classed against the estate; and that waS in favor of Wm. H. Stone for $200.

That it was not true, as stated in the settlement, that nothing came to the hands of Fowler, as administrator; but, on the contrary, that Rufus Stone, in his life time, commenced a suit against Isaac Folsom, in the Circuit Court of Jackson county} or a negro man named Ben, and for his hire for a number of years, in which suit, Fowier was the attorney of Stone; and after his death, the cause was revived and prosecuted in the name of Fowler, as his administrator. That on the final termination of the suit, Fowler, as such administrator, obtained a decree against Folsom for the negro, and for $1,675 00 hire; and that he afterwards obtained possession of the slave, and collected the hire, etc., but had failed to account therefor in his settlement. And'the bill alleges that in this, the inventory and settlement were false and fraudulent, etc., praying that Fowler and his sureties be compelled to account for and pay over the slave, the money collected on the decree, subsequent hire, etc., after deducting the $2 50, expended by Fowler for letters, etc., and that the same be appropriated first to the payment of the demand allowed in favor of "Win. H. Stone, and the remainder to complainants.

Egner and Magness demurred to the bill, on the grounds that if they were liable at all, the remedy against them was an action at law on the administration bond, and that they could not properly be joined with Fowler in a suit in chancery; but the demurrer was not disposed of until the hearing.

Fowler answered the bill. The answer, in substance, denies, in the most positive and direct terms, that any assets whatever, came to his hands as administrator of Stone, and particularly that the negro Ben, and his hire collected by him under the decree against Folsom, were assets.

On the contrary, he alleges that, at the time Stone employed him to bring suit for Ben (in the year 1848,) he was largely indebted to him for house rent, professional services, small sums of money advanced, balance upon a judgment transferred to him by one Calvert; and that he had control of another judgment against Stone in favor of one Stewart, etc., etc., the particulars of which are stated, and an account thereof exhibited. That Stone employed him upon an express agreement, that he was to have a fee of $500 for prosecuting the suit to its final termination, and was to take and appropriate Ben and his hire, if recovered, first to the payment of the fee, then to the liquidation of his other demands against Stone, and the balance, if any, to apply as a credit upon the Stewart judgment; and that under this agreement, he brought and prosecuted the suit, in the name of Stone, but for his own benefit.

That he obtained a final decree against Folsom, in the Jackson Circuit Court, 21st November, 1851, for Ben and his hire ; after which, and as of that date, he had a settlement with Stone, in which it was agreed that Stone’s entire indebtedness to him, including the fee of $500, was $2,510,.and he'was to credit Stone with $1,100 for Ben, that being the value fixed upon him by the decree, and $1,675, the amount of hire recovered, making an aggregate of $2,775, which extinguished Stone’s indebtedness to him, . and left a balance in Stone’s favor of $265, which was to be applied as a credit, upon the Stewart judgment, as originally agreed upon between them before the suit was commenced. That he was to take the decree and its fruits absolutely, and at his own risk — the risk of getting possession of Ben, and of the solvency of Folsom.

That there was pending between them at the time, however, a negotiation about an exchange of some lands, and it was understood that if it was perfected, the settlement was to be recast, but the exchange was never consummated.

That Stone died in November, 1852, (and not in March, 1853, as alleged in the bill,) and Folsom having appealed from the decree to the Supreme Court, Fowler, for the purpose of availing himself of the fruits of the decree, became his administrator, prosecuted the case in the Supreme Court, the decree was affirmed, and he afterwards obtained possession of the negro, Ben, and collected' the hire decreed, nominally as administrator of Stone, but for his own benefit, and that they were not recovered as assets, etc.

He denies that there was any fraud in his inventory or settlement, and pleads the judgment of the Probate Court in bar, etc.

It is insisted by the executor of Fowler that the allegations of fraud are general, and not specific, and that the bill is, therefore, fatally defective. But tbis is a misapprehension of the character of the allegations. The bill has the merit of being short and pointed, and is therefore creditable to the counsel who drafted it; but the facts upon which the charge of fraud- in the settlement is based, are distinctly and specifically stated. It is alleged that the negro Ben, and his hire, recovered in the suit against Folsom, were the effects of Stone, and came into the hands of Fowler as assets, and that in making his final settlement, he failed to charge himself with either, falsely stating that nothing had come into his possession : and in this, the fraud is alleged to have consisted. If Ben and the decree for his hire belonged to Stone at the time of his death, they constituted, it seems, his entire estate; and if Fowler recovered them as his administrator, and held them as such at the timé he made his final settlement, and yet failed to charge himself with them, or account for them, the settlement was fraudulent, according to the principles settled in Ringgold vs. Stone et al., 20 Ark. 526.

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Related

Ringgold v. Stone
20 Ark. 526 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1859)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ark. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-stillwell-ark-1861.