Taylor v. Benham

46 U.S. 233, 12 L. Ed. 130, 5 How. 233, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 46 U.S. 233 (Taylor v. Benham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Benham, 46 U.S. 233, 12 L. Ed. 130, 5 How. 233, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 314 (1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The original proceeding in this case was a bill in equity. The complainants are heirs and devisees of William F. Taylor, being aliens and resident in Scotland. He was a naturalized citizen of South Carolina. The respondent was George M. Savage of Alabama,.prosecuted there as executor of Samuel Savage.of that State. The claim set up in the bill was, that William F. Taylor, before his death in A. D. 1811, made a will, devising the residue of his estate, after the payment of a few legacies, to the complainants, directing all his property to be first sold and converted into money, and malting the said Samuel Savage one of his executors, associated with three others. • It was further alleged, that the business was divided between them, and each had settled for what he took in charge, except Savage, who had not accounted fully for the property received by him in South Carolina, or the proceeds of certain lands of William F. Taylor in Kentucky sold by Savage, and that by his negligence large quantities of other lands situated there had been lost.

The original answer denied that the executors took out letters testamentary, except in South Carolina, dr assumed any trusts as to *261 the property of the testator beyond the limits of that State, or ever provhd the will in Kentucky. It also denied that any part of William F. Taylor’s property in South Carolina had not been duly accounted for. As to lands in Kentucky, it averred that the testator owned none, and, though he set up some title to about 4,X00 acres, that it was invalid, and was compromised and released by an agent of the complainants in A. D. 1836. That, as the latter were aliens, the title in the mean time had escheated to the State ; the executors having, as alleged, only a bare power to sell, and some of them dying before Á. D. 1818^ this power could not be exercised by the others. And though it admitted, that Samuel Savage in that year executed deeds of about one fourth of the land claiméd by the testator, receiving a small consideration therefor, yet it contended that no title passed thereby, and.that no court out of the State of South Carolina had any jurisdiction over the matter. The statute of limitations was also pleaded to all the claims.

. Some other particulars,'and some amendments of the answer, which may be found material in the progress of the inquiry, will be noticed as occasion shall require.

A preliminary question has been raised in this court, in' consequence of whát had taken place in the progress of the cause, which it may be proper to dispose of first. , After judgment had been rendered in the Circuit Court in favor of the complainants for a portion of their claims, and before an appeal was taken, George M. Savage, the executor of Samuel, was removed, and Vincent M. Ben-ham appointed administrator de .bonis non of Samuel Savage, with the will annexed. The cause was then entered in this court, and attempted to be proceeded in, but was directed, to be remitted to the Circuit Court in order first to make Benham a party (1 Howard, 282, and 2 Howard, 395). This having been done, the case came here again, and now it is objected, at the threshold, to any examination of the original questions in the case, that an administrator de bonis non is not liable for assets in the hands of the deceased executor. See Grant v. Chambers, 4 Mass. R. 611; Alsop v. Marrow, 8 Conn. R. 584 ; 1 Serg. & R. 549 ; 1 Gill & Johns. 207; and other cases cited.

But if the correctness of these decisions be not doubtful at law, they may require several exceptions and limitations in equity. See Blower v. Massetts, 3 Atkins, 773; 2 Ves. sen. 465; Mitford’s Pleadings, 64, 78; 2 Vern. 237; Fletcher’s Administrator v. Wise, 7 Dana, 347; 1 Howard, S. C. 284, in this case. And it is clear, that under a statute of Alabama, which must, by the thirty-fourth section of the Judiciary Act, govern this case, the objection cannot be sustained. This statute provides, that “ where any suit may have been commenced, on behalf of or against the personal representative or representatives of any testator or intestate, the same may be prosecuted by or against' any person or persons who *262 may afterward succeed to the administration or executorship ; such person or persons may, at any time, be made parties, on motion, and the cause shall proceed in the same manner, and judgment .therein be in all respects as. effectual, as if the same were prosecuted by or .against the parties originally named.” Passed September 4th, 1821. See Clay’s Digest, 227.

The grounds or causes for relief presented in the bill are next to be examined, and are two. One is the claim on account of an alleged failure by Samuel Savage to settle, as executor in South Carolina, for a debt due from himself to, William F. Taylor, and some other debts collected there, with proper -interest thereon. This is the first ground on the merits ; and it may be better considered separate from the second one,, which is the ¿mount demanded for alleged neglects and receipts of money by Savage in. relation to the lands situated in Kentucky. The property left by the testator in South Carolina was held in his own. right, and the proceeds of it were collected by the executor by virtue of his letters testamentary. The first objection interposed to the claim respecting thát is,, that in point of fact nothing is shown to have been due or collected there which the executor did not account for, ánd finally settle, and pay over the balance, April 22d, 1818. . Another is, that if any thing collected diere and. then omitted,, or not since paid over, should now be accounted for, it ought to be in the State of South Carolina, where the letters issued, and not in Alabama. Or, at all events, that some action must first be had in South Carolina, and the account reopened, and the new matters examined and charged ■there upon Samuel Savage, one of the original executors, before he. or George M. Savage, his executor, can be prosecuted elsewhere for the amount. The following cases may be referred to in support of such a position. Vaughan et al. v. Northup et al., 15 Peters, 1; 1 Peters, 33; Story’s Confl. of Laws, 513; Aspden et al. v. Nixon, 4 Howard, 467; Carmichael v. Ray, 1 Richardson, 116. While others may be seen against it in 14 Peters, 116; 15 Peters, 119; 2 Wash. C. C. 338.

But it is to be recollected, that the statute of limitations is pleáded against this no less than the other claim ; and hence, if, on examination, that statute, or the great length of time which has elapsed since 1818, should be found, under all the circumstances of the case; to render -a recovery of any part of this claim illegal or inequitable, a decisive opinion on the other points just mentionéd will become unnecessary.

We therefore proceed-to inquiry into this first.

The settlement in IS 18 seems to have been a final one ; the balance was paid over to an agent of the plaintiff then present; and the executor, Samuel Savage, soon after left the State, and, for aught which appears, never returned again. ■ The statute, if running at all as to the matters in South Carolina, should, therefore, as a *263

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Bluebook (online)
46 U.S. 233, 12 L. Ed. 130, 5 How. 233, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-benham-scotus-1847.