Vertner v. McMurran

1 Free. Ch. 136
CourtMississippi Chancery Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Free. Ch. 136 (Vertner v. McMurran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Chancery Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vertner v. McMurran, 1 Free. Ch. 136 (Mich. Super. Ct. 1844).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The bill is brought against the defendant, McMurran, as administrator of W. B. Griffith, deceased, who was administrator of Lyman Harding, deceased. The complainants claim as the distribu-tees of said Harding, and seek to open the accounts rendered and settlement by said Griffith, as administrator of Harding, and to surcharge and falsify such accounts for the errors and mistakes alleged in the bill, and for a decree for such sum as, upon re-examination of said accounts, may be found due them from the estate of said Harding. The form of the pleadings renders it unnecessary to. no tice more in detail the allegations of the bill.

The defendant, McMurran, pleads the final account, marked A in complainants’ bill, rendered and settled in the Orphans’ court of Adams county by his intestate, Griffith, in bar of so much of the bill as seeks to surcharge and falsify such accounts and settlement upon the errors and mistakes specified in the complainants’ bill, and in bar to all relief sought; This plea has been set down for argument by the complainants’ counsel,' and the only question raised is the sufficiency of the plea, which relies upon the order of the Orphans’ court allowing the final account of Griffith as an adjudication of a competent tribunal, fixing and definitely settling his relations with the estate of his intestate, and as conclusive on the rights attempted to be asserted by the complainants.

The conclusiveness of a judicial decision depends upon different reasons, according to the character the proceeding assumes. Where the proceeding is upon matter of private litigation between party and party, and where the sentence directs something to be done, suffered or omitted by one party, its conclusive and binding effect rests upon the supposition that the parties have been fully and fairly heard upon their rights in controversy, and upon the policy of the law in putting an end to multiplied litigation for the same thing. This class of judicial proceedings presupposes parties before- the court, either actually or constructively, presenting issues of law or of fact for decision, and that the court has jurisdiction over both the parties and subject matter.

[140]*140Another class of judgments, rendered upon what is technically called a proceeding in rem, where the court, exercising a peculiar jurisdiction, pronounces upon matter of a public nature and interest, independently of any private party, and where the court condemns the thing to some particular use, and also upon principles of public policy, allowed to be final and conclusive, even against strangers to the original suit.

But, in both classes, the sentence or judgment must appear to be final upon the whole matter in controversy, in order to constitute a bar to further proceedings. The record of the Orphans’ court must be found to partake of the character of the one or the other of these classes of judicial sentences, in order to make it conclusive upon the rights of the parties. Whether the proceeding in that court, in examining and allowing an administrator’s account, is a judicial one, upon matter of private litigation between party and party, or, if not that, whether it be a proceeding in rem, will be best determined by a reference to the proceeding itself.

An administrator, in accounting with the probate court, proceeds upon the principle of stating an account between individuals, upon returning an inventory and appraisement, he stands charged with the amount which those instruments show the estate to be worth, and all acts done afterwards, in rendering accounts, are intended as discharges or credits, pursuing the process of making up a balance sheet until he renders a final account. This course seems to be intended as well for the purpose of insuring fidelity on the part of the administrator as to enable the court to determine when the business of the estate was at a close. These accounts are usually stated, arranged and balanced by the administrator himself, at his own private desk. It is true, that, before presenting his final account, he is required to post up notices of his intention at three public places in the county, or advertise the same in a public newspaper three weeks. Although the statute requires this notice, yet, in practice at least, the making a final settlement with the orphans’ court is usually a proceeding purely ex parte, and has not been generally regarded as assuming the character of a judicial controversy. The plea avers notice, and, although the record does not show it, the plea having been set down for hear[141]*141ing without replication, the notice is admitted. Is this notice intended as a service of a process to bring the parties into court ? And does it give to the order of the orphans’ court, simply allowing the account, the conclusive effect of a judicial sentence, as between the administrator and the distributees of the estate? I think not. If the publication made by the administrator is to be-considered as conveying absolute notice, and as a soft of service of process, it must apply equally to distributees residing in the county where administration was taken, as to those who n»,y reside in Maine or Europe; for there is no reservation in favor non_ residents: and yet it is obvious that the manner and time of iUb-lication could not possibly convey notice to the latter. To hold that an administrator’s account, rendered under such circumstances, should be final and conclusive, would be to subvert the first principles of justice; and to ascribe to the law consequences which the legislature could never have intended. Under such circumstances, to allow an administrator to hold, as his own, assets for which he had failed to account, would be to violate all the principles upon which the conclusiveness of judicial sentences repose. I consider the notice as merely directory to the administrator, and not as having the obligatory effect of the service of process on creditor^ and distributees of the estate, but as intended merely to afford them an opportunity of scrutinizing the account without making them actually or constructively parties to the proceeding, giving them the optional right of appearing and resisting the proposed settlement or not.

The proceeding of the orphans’ court does not state the complainants as parties, nor does it profess to adjudge any thing as between them and the administrator. In matter of private litigation, no one, in general, can be bound by a judgment, unless he be a party to the suit, or in privity with the party. 1 Starkie on Ev. 190.

' A judgment against a defendant, without summons or notice, has been repeatedly held to be absolutely void. 1 Starkie on Ev. 215, note.

And to determine who are parties, reference must be had to the record itself. No one can be considered as a party to a judicial [142]*142proceeding, so as to be bound by the judgment, but those who appear by the record to be such. 1 Marsh. R. 526.

In a case reported in 3 Leigh, 407, where the bill was filed to surcharge and falsify an executor’s accounts, which had been audited before the commissioners of the county court, and where these accounts had been returned to the court, approved and ordered to be recorded, and where it appeared that the complainants were present when the account was stated, and were urged to state anv objections that occurred, the supreme court of Virginia, pi appeal from chancery, held that the presence of legatees at the settlements was no objection to a bill in chancery to surcharge and falsify the accounts so settled.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Free. Ch. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vertner-v-mcmurran-misschanceryct-1844.