Thorington v. Thorington

111 Ala. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 111 Ala. 237 (Thorington v. Thorington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorington v. Thorington, 111 Ala. 237 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

Jack Thorington died, in 1871, leaving his last will, as follows :

Item First. “I desire all my debts to be paid as soon as may be reasonably done.”

Item Second. “I own” a policy in the iEtn a Insurance Oo. of Hartford for $10,000, also in the Equitable for same amount, both of which I intend to keep alive,“and both of which are for the benefit of my wife, Mary L., and are payable to her at my decease.”

Item Third. “I give and bequeath unto my dearly beloved tvife, Mary L., during her widowhood, all of my entire estate, real and personal, which I now have or may have, or be entitled to at the time of my decease.”

Item Fourth. “It is my will and desire that at the time of my decease if I should not have sufficient means [242]*242to pay within a reasonable time all my present indebtedness now secured by a mortgage on real estate, that my wife should pay the same out of any funds received from the policies of life insurance described in item second, upon the party holding or owning said indebtedness and mortgage transferring and assigning the same to her as her individual property and as for her sole and separate use and benefit, clear of all other hlaims and demands whatsoever.”

Item Fifth. “If the issues, increase, rents and profits of my estate shall exceed the expenditures of my wife, it is my desire,the surplus shall become and form apart of the principal of my estate.”

Item Sixth. “If my wife shall not marry again, it'is my will and desire, she shall have the power and authority, and she is hereby invested therewith, to dispose of all the estate and property she may have or die possessed of, or,be entitled to, by her will to our beloved children, RobertD., Jack and William S.,and in such shares and jxroportions to them, or the survivors, and under such safeguards in trust, or otherwise as under the circumstances then existing she may deem best and wise and just for them, and in the event of her dying intestate, the said estate and property to be distributed to our said three children equitably and share alike, or to the survivors or survivor of them.”

Item Seventh. ‘ ‘It is my w 11 and desire that should my wife marry again, that in that event there shall be an immediate division of all my estate into four equitable parts or shares, that my wife shall receive one of said parts or shares and that the three other, parts or shares shall immediately be paid over to my said three children, Robert D., Jack and William S., or the survivors or survivor of said children.

Item Eighth. “I hereby ordain my beloved wife, Mary L. Thorington, and my son, William S. Thorington,.my executrix and executor of this my last will and testament, and hereby, by express provision to that effect, exempt them from giving security on their bond.”

The widow, Mary L., and the son, William S., qualified as executrix and executor, but as shown by the foreclosure bill, hereinafter referred to, the widow never acted as such, but she devolved all executorial duties on her co-executor. She died in 1890. The son of the tes[243]*243tator, Robert L., mentioned in the will, died, intestate, in May, 1882, leaving a widow, SallieG., and three children.

On November 6, 1871, the said widow, Mary L., as requested by the testator in the fourth item of his will, purchased, with her insurance money, the mortgage therein referred to, paying therefor $5,123.70, being the amount due thereon, and had the same assigned to her by the mortgagee ; and in December, 1885, she filed a bill in equity to foreclose the same., making the said William S., Jack, and the three infant children of Robert D., partios defendant. Tliat bill, averring the necessary introductory facts, further averred that oratrix had been in possession of the property described in the mortgage as life tenant, under said will, and that the accruing rents were secured to her by the will, and enjoyed by he*r as such life tenant, and nod as mortgagee ; that nothing had been paid on the mortgage, but that the full sum so paid by her therefor, with interest thereon, was still due and unpaid. The defendants answered the bill — the infants answering.,by their guardians adlitem; but none of the answers appear in the abstract of the present record. The cause went regularly to submission for final decree on the pleadings and evidence, as noted by the register, and on December 11, 1885, a final decree was enrolled, granting complainant the relief prayed. The court, deeming a reference unnecessary to ascertain it, itself ascertained, from the evidence, and so decreed, that the amount due complainant on the mortgage debt, was the sum of $10,896.40. A decree of sale, in foreclosure of the mortgage, was regularly rendered, at which complainant was authorized -to bid and purchase ; and the register was required, upon compliance with the terms of the sale, by the purchaser, to execute to him a deed of conveyance vesting in him all the right, title, claim and interest, both at law and in equity, in possession, remainder or reversion, which each and all of the parties to the suit had in and to the property, or any part thereof. It was further ordered, that from the proceeds of the sale, the register pay the expenses thereof, and the costs of the suit, and pay to the complainant the sum ascertained to be due her, On January 11, 1886, the decree was regularly executed by the register, and the complainant became the pur[244]*244chaser, at the price of $11,122.81; and having entered on the margin of the minute entry of the decree, a credit, in the sum of $10,969.04, andpaidto the register $153.77, covering the expenses and costs, she received the deed of conveyance, in conformity to the decree. These facts were all duly reported by the register, and on January 12, 1886, his report was confirmed, without exception. Subsequently, and prior to the filing of the present bill, the said Mary L. Thorington disposed of all the lands, so purchased, selling parts of it absolutely, to certain persons, conveying to them, in fee, and receiving the purchase money, and executing sundry mortgages to certain parties, for borrowed money, upon the residue; and some of the mortgagees were proceeding to foreclose.

The said Mary L. Thorington died without marrying again. She left a will, but so far as appears, made no disposition therein, of any property acquired from the estate of her deceased husband.

On December 24, 1894, the said three children of Robert D. Thorington, the eldest having attained majority on February 17, 1892, and the-youngest being still an infant, filed the present bill, in equity, against said Jack and William S. Thorington, the latter individually, and as executor of the elder Jack Thorington, and of Marry L. Thorington, and the said grantees and mortagees of said Mary L., to review and reverse the said foreclosure decree, for alleged error apparent upon the record; assigning, as errors therein, that said Mary L., while executrix and life tenant of the mortgaged property, bought the mortgage for $5,123.70, and heid it for more than ten years, and was not charged, as mortgagee in possession, nor as executrix, with the rents and use of said real estate,, which the assignment of error states, though not shown by the record sought to be reviewed, were worth $2,000 per annum ; that she was not required to pay any portion of the mortgage debt; that she was not required to account for the assets of said estate, and that the decree was made in her favor for the sale of the mortgaged property, for more than the principal of the debt, at the time of her purchase.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

King v. William M. King Family Enterprises, Inc.
515 So. 2d 1241 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1987)
Alabama National Bank v. Beach (In re Beach)
13 B.R. 759 (M.D. Alabama, 1981)
Brugh v. White
103 So. 2d 800 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1957)
Mettee v. Bolling
94 So. 2d 191 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1957)
Quintana v. Vigil
147 P.2d 356 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1944)
Williams v. Spears
180 So. 266 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
Reid v. Armistead
151 So. 874 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Cunningham v. Wood
140 So. 351 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Braley v. Spragins
128 So. 149 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Powell v. Pearson
125 So. 39 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)
First Nat. Bank v. Cash
125 So. 28 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)
Miller v. Wall
113 So. 501 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 Ala. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorington-v-thorington-ala-1895.