Weir v. Monahan

67 Miss. 434
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 67 Miss. 434 (Weir v. Monahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weir v. Monahan, 67 Miss. 434 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainants, distributees of the estate of P. L. Monahan, exhibited this bill in the chancery court of Adams county on October 20, 1886, against the representatives of the sureties upon the administration bond of one H. C. Doherty, who was administrator of their deceased father, P. L. Monahan.

The bill avers that all the complainants are infants and sue by their guardian and next friend, except W. J. Monahan, who arrived at majority less than one year before the commencement of this suit; that their father died in October, 1871, in the county of Adams, possessed of a small personal estate, and on December 4, 1871, administration thereof was by the chancery court of Adams county committed to H. C. Doherty, who qualified and entered into bond conditioned according to law, with Levi Fields (the testator of the defendant Weir) and William Zoclc (the intestate of the defendant Doretha Zock) as sureties; that Doherty wasted the estate of his intestate, and without having made any final settlement thereof with said court died in September, A. D. 1874, intestate and insolvent; that on September 30, 1876, Owen Metcalfe, county administrator of Adams county, was by the proper court appointed administrator of the said H. C. Doherty, and adminis[443]*443trator de bonis non of the estate of said P. L. Monahan ; that on March 27, 1877, said Metcalfe filed the final account of H. C. Doherty, deceased, as administrator of the estate of Monahan, “ which said account, though made out as the account of said Metcalfe as administrator de bonis non of the estate of said Monahan, was, as shown by the orders and decrees of the court, to be the final account of said H. C. Doherty with said estate,” and that said account, having been excepted to, was restated by a commissioner of the court, and as restated showed a balance due said estate by said Doherty of $3427.29; that said restated account was by proper decree of date May 10, 1879, allowed, confirmed and ordered to be recorded ; that no part of the sum so found due has ever'been paid by the representatives of said Doherty, and that all debts and demands against the estate of P. L. Monahan have been paid or are barred by the statute of limitations; that Levi Fields, one of the sureties upon the administration bond of said Doherty, died on the 31th of December, A. D. 1884, testate, and his will was duly admitted to probate in the proper court on the 15th day of said month and letters testamentary granted to the defendant Washington Weir, and that administration of said estate is yet pending; that William Zock, the other surety upon said administration bond of said Doherty, died intestate in July, 1876, and administration of his estate was on August 7,1876, committed to the defendant Doretha Zock, and that said administration is still open and pending.

The prayer of the bill is for a personal decree against said Weir, executor, and said Zock, administrator, for the sum found to be due by the deceased administrator Doherty upon his final account.

The defendant’s answer admitted the death of Monahan, the appointment of Doherty as his administrator, the right of the complainants as distributees, the death of Doherty, and that complainants are minors, except W. J. Monahan, whose age is admitted to be less than twenty-two years. They deny that the debts against the estate are all paid or barred by limitations. Touching the debts they say that the following judgments were recovered by. creditors against said Doherty, administrator: One in favor ol Henry Kern, of date January 14, 1874; one in favor of Jane G. [444]*444Kenny, January 15, 1874; and one in favor of Dodge, Cammeyer <fc Co., April 23, 1875, none of which have been paid. They aver that Mrs. Kenny died May 4, 1880, intestate, and that no letters of administration have been granted of her estate. They deny that Metcalfe was ever appointed administrator of the estate of Doherty, the deceased administrator, or that he ever filed the final account of Doherty as administrator of Monahan. If, however, he was ever so appointed and filed said account, and if a decree was rendered thereon, then they aver that said Metcalfe was also at the same time appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of Monahan, and as such administrator de bonis non had and still has the exclusive right to sue upon the administration bond of said Doherty ; but if it shall appear that the right of the administrator de bonis non has become barred by limitation, then they insist that the complainants are also barred. The defendants also contend that Hanlejq the guardian of the complainants other than William J., was also the guardian of all of them until the said William reached majority; that said guardian might have sued upon the administration bond, and that he is barred by limitation, wherefore also the complainants are barred. The foregoing defenses are common to the two defendants. In addition to these, the defendant, Doretha Zock, pleads that administration upon the estate of her intestate was granted on the 7th day of August, 1876, and that suit was not brought against her within four years of the rendition of the final account of Doherty, administrator of Monahan, nor within four years from the adoption of the code of 1880, and she pleads the bar of the four years’ statute of limitations.

An agreed statement of facts appears in the record, from which it is shown :—

1. That all claims against the estate of Monahan were registered according to law.

2. That the judgments described in the answer were rendered, and Mrs. Kenny, one of the judgment creditors, died May 4,1880, and no administration has been granted on her estate, and that none of said judgments have been paid.

3. That Metcalfe never qualified as administrator of Doherty, [445]*445nor were letters of administration issued to him, and that he never performed any acts as such administrator, unless a certain account filed by him of date March 27, 1877 (to be hereinafter more fully described), was the final account of Doherty as administrator of Monahan, filed by said Metcalfe as Doherty’s administrator.

4. That said Metcalfe is yet alive and has never resigned his office of administrator cle bonis non of the estate of P. L. Monahan.

5. That said Metcalfe has never proceeded to final settlement of the estate of Monahan, nor has he ever paid any of the creditors of said estate any part of their claims.

6. That the estate of Monahan was never declared insolvent, but that it was at the time of the administration cle bonis non actually insolvent, and ever since has been, and is now insolvent.

7. That some of the credits asked by Metcalfe in the account filed by him were disallowed on technical grounds, having been originally just and true claims against the estate.

8. That Doherty at his death was insolvent, and had no property liable to execution.

9. That Metcalfe never received any assets of the estate of Monahan or of Doherty.

10. That Doherty, upon his appointment, gave notice to creditors to present their claims.

11. That the distributees have never received' any part of the estate of Monahan.

Complainants offered in evidence, in addition to the agreed state of facts, the following records from the chancery court of Adams county:

1. The petition, bond and qualification of Doherty, administrator of Monahan.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Miss. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weir-v-monahan-miss-1889.