Wells v. Bowling's Heirs

32 Ky. 41, 2 Dana 41, 1834 Ky. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 9, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 Ky. 41 (Wells v. Bowling's Heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Bowling's Heirs, 32 Ky. 41, 2 Dana 41, 1834 Ky. LEXIS 10 (Ky. Ct. App. 1834).

Opinion

Judge Nicholas

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Upon an issue of no assets, to an action of debt against the heirs of Bowling, an agreed case was framed, shewing, in substance, that there w^s a prior suit against them, by another creditor, for an unliquidated balance [42]*42—the amount claimed being more than the whole a* mount of assets, if any ; and that, by the will of Bowling’s father, there was devised to him and his sister certain slaves, after the death .of their mother, who was devisee for life of the whole estate, with directions to pay debts, maintain and school the children; and that his interest in those slaves, the mother being still alive, is all the assets, if any, that have come to his heirs.— No administration had been granted upon the estate of Bowling ; and more than twelve months after his death had elapsed before the institution of this suit.

Opinion^jntigc'u court?6 CU" The pendency no ba”to Treeovery against tor odieir^But the administrahT títh^suit? confess the acmountoftheassets, and then plead that juagment in bar of •the other action Slaves — though they descend % pass as real estate, (by statute,) do not vestinthe heirs, without the as•sent ofthePe*“ sonal representative, in whose ^dsth^%a“® statute) assets, j^ndsonly.they can be readied by creditors. — • The property of heirs in slaves inherited, does not render them liable to judgment upon the obligation oftheancestor. When there is neither ex’ornor adm. the title to the slaves — like the title to the personal property ■ — rests in aheyance.The act art thovizing suits against heirs alone, after 12 months elapsed without the appointment of ex ecutor or administrator, -does not subject any propertyin their hands which was not so liable before the statute.

[42]*42Upon this agreed case, the court rendered an opinion, that Bowling took a vested remainder in the slaves, which became liable to his creditors, as assets in the hands of the defendants, as his heirs ; but that the institution of the prior suit gave the plaintiff therein, “a right to have his claim first satisfied,” and judgment was thereupon rendered for the debt, “to be levied of the estate of Bowling, which has or shall come to the hands of the defendants, his heirs.”

That part of the judgment which goes for present assets, is so palpable a non sequitur from the decision of the court, that we presume it must have been the result of inadvertence in entering it up.

We do not know the principle, upon which the court determined the defendants were exempt from a judgment for present assets, by reason, of the pendency of the prior suit. It is not even alleged in the pleadings, or the agreed case, that any part of the sum claimed in that suit is actually due ; and if it had been, still, the defendants could obtain such exemption in no other Vay than by confessing the first action, to an amount sufficient to cover the value of the assets. A creditor cannot be postponed in recovering his judgment against heirs, merely because another creditor has a prior suit against them, though the heirs may have the privilege, accorded to the personal representative, of confessing the action of either creditor, and then pleading his recovery in bar of the other.

There is no pretext for our determining, in this case, the questions that have been mooted in argument, and [43]*43wliich it appears to have been the principle design of the agreed case to present for adjudication ; that is, whether the devise to Bowling lapsed by reason of his death in the life time of iiis mother, or whether he took such an interest in the slaves as would descend to his heirs. In neither alternative, would a judgment against the defendants, as his heirs, be authorized on the idea of such interest being assets in their hands. ' For though our statute declares that slaves shall descend to heirs, yet, at the same time, it makes them assets m the hands of the personal representative, and it has uniformly been determined, that the heir acquires an inchoate property only, such as gives him no absolute legal ownership, without the assent of the personal representative. The legal title to slaves must, therefore, rest in abeyance, until the appointment of a personal, representative, in the same way as does the title to theise chattels that are strictly and exclusively personal. The heirs can no more be sued on acco.unt of the one than the other, as assets in their hands. Though there had been no grant of administration on the estate of Bowling, at the institution of this suit, yet that is no reason why there may not be hereafter ; and whenever granted, whatever interest of his in the slaves, that either the heirs or personal representative could take, would immediately become the property of the latter, for the purposes of administration ; and the recovery in this suit could neither divest his right, or bar his recovery. The statute authorizing suit against heirs alone, where no administration has been taken for twelve months, creates no new liability against the heir, and makes no new subject of assets ; but merely enables the creditor, in a particular class of cases, to sue the heir alone, without joining the personal representative.

Former decis_ ions of this ct. (8 Mon. 124— 7 Mon. 421,) that there could be no judgment quando against heirs, questioned and overruled ; and now held, that — Though the right and title of the heir is cast upon him at once by the death of the ancestor, he may not acquire, or be able to obtain, the possession until long afterwards ; and is liable to the creditors of the ancestor so far only as estate has actually come to his possession. In the mean time, the creditor should have the right to establish his debt,by suit against the heir, and to have his judgment satisfied out of'any estate of the ancestor w-liich the heir may thereafter acquire possession oil Judgments against heirs, for assets quando, are therefore legitimate, necessary and proper.

So much of the judgment, therefore, as goes against present assets is erroneous, and so much as goes against 1 [44]*44assets in futuro is equally erroneous, provided it be true, as has been determined in the cases of Monroe vs. Wilson, 6 Mon. 124, and South vs. Snelling, 7 Mon. 421, that no judgment quando can be rendered against heirs. In the first of those cases, it is said, the court “ could not conceive, under what law, or according to what precedent,-any such judgment could “ be rendered — “for there cannot be a supposed case of assets descending to them from time to time. They (heirs) take at once on the death of the ancestor, or not at all.” In the other case, a decree against heirs for assets quando, is treated as something ludicrous, because it was providing “for a future supposed descent, an event which could never happen.” No authority is cited in support of these decisions, nor is any comment made upon the multiplied precedents in the English books, of judgments quando against heirs, or upon the unvarying current of authority in their favor. The only argument used is embraced in the above extracts from the opinions, which is, that there could be no such judgment, because assets do not descend from time to time to the heir, but descend at once on the death of the ancestor. This argument supposes that a judgment quando anticipates a future descent, which it does not.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ky. 41, 2 Dana 41, 1834 Ky. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-bowlings-heirs-kyctapp-1834.