William C. S. Ventress, Executors of Lovic Ventress, Deceased, in Error v. Neal Smith, Administrator of John Clark, Deceased

35 U.S. 161, 9 L. Ed. 382, 10 Pet. 161, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 35 U.S. 161 (William C. S. Ventress, Executors of Lovic Ventress, Deceased, in Error v. Neal Smith, Administrator of John Clark, Deceased) 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
William C. S. Ventress, Executors of Lovic Ventress, Deceased, in Error v. Neal Smith, Administrator of John Clark, Deceased, 35 U.S. 161, 9 L. Ed. 382, 10 Pet. 161, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 428 (1836).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case comes up from the district,court of the district of Mississippi, upon a writ of error. It is an action of detinue, to recover five negro slaves, of which John Clark, deceased, was the- owner. The plaintiff, in the court below, prosecuted, as administrator ad colligendum, under letters of administration granted by the judge of probate of Wilkinson county, in the state of Mississippi. The action appears, by the record, to have been, commenced in the year 1822 against Lovic Ventress.; and after the cause was at issue, and before trial, Lovic Ventress died, and a scire facias, tested the first Monday in April 1823, was issued against Elizabeth Ventress, administratrix, &c., who after-wards appeared in court, and the cause, as is stated upon-'the record, was legally continued". At a subsequent term of the court, the cause being-legally continued, as is alleged, the death of the defendant, Elizabeth Ventress, the administratrix, was suggested and admitted to be true ; and thereupon a scire facias was issued to the present defendants in the court below, as executors of Lovic Ventress^tested the first- Monday in October 4826, and due service thereof upon the. defendants Vías returned The , record then states that afterwards; in January term 1834, to which term the cause was regularly continued by consent, the parties *168 appeared by their attorneys, and the cause was tried, and a verdict found for the plaintiff. Upon the trial •two bills of exceptions were taken. One in relation to the admissibility of evidence, and the other upon instructions given .by the court to the jury upon the merits of the case ; which will be noticed hereafter.

It will be necessary, in the first place, to dispose of two objec-' tions, arising upon the record, which have been raised against the plaintiff’s right to maintain the present action :

1. That the letters of administration ad collegendum, granted by the court of probates in Mississippi, did not vest in the plaintiff any right or title to the possession of the property in question, or authorize him to maintain an action to recover it, even if a good title was shown .in the legal representatives of John Ciarle in Alabama.

2. That the record shows a discontinuance of the cause, and a mis-trial.

It may be proper to observe, with respect to the first of these exceptions, that as it rests upon the disability of the plaintiff to sue, it ought to have been pleaded in abatement] but as we think the objection untenable, in whatever form it is raised, we shall proceed to notice it in the manner in which it is now presented.

These letters of administration recite, that John Clark, of Clark county, in the state of Alabama, as it is said, had, at his decease, personal property within this state, the administration whereof cannot be immediately granted, but which, if speedy care be not taken, may be lost, destroyed, or diminished ; to the end, therefore, that the same may be preserved for 'those who shall appear to have a legal right or interest therein, we do hereby request and authorize Neal Smith to secure and collect the said property, wheresoever the same may be in this state, or in Wilkinson county, whether it be goods, chattels, debts, or credits, and to make a true and perfect inventory thereof, &c.

These letters of administration were granted under the aiithority of an act of the legislature of Mississippi,- (Laws of Mississippi, 281,) which empowers the chief justice of the orphans’ court, in the county in which such justice resides, whenever he may deem it necessary, to appoint an administrator to.collect togethei the goods of the deceased, for the purpose of depositing *169 them in the hands of the chief j ustice 5 out of which he shall pay the debts of the deceased, and be liable, in law, as other administrators. The argument at the bar is, that the power given to the administrator, does not authorize him to bring a suit. That no such power is expressly given, nor is it implied in the power to collect. The words of the statute are, general, to. collect together the goods of the deceased, The power vested in the magistrate to appoint such administrator, is discretionary whenever he may deem it necessary. And if the words of the act, upon any reasonable interpretation, .will admit of a construction which will uphold the authority given by the letters of administration, they' ought not to be so construed as to impute to the magistrate an unauthorized exercise of power. And if we look to the letters of administration, the power to sue is necessarily implied in the language there used: “ We do hereby authorizé the said Neal Smith to secure and collect the said property, whether it be goods, chattels, debts, or credits,” &c. These words are amply sufficient to authorize the bringing of suits, if necessary for the purpose of executing the power, and is certainly no forced interpretation of the word collect, as used in the statute, to consider it as implying the authority to bring suits. In the case of Irwin and Wright v. Peak, Walker Rep. 386, decided in the supreme court of Mississippi, in the year 1831, it was held that an administrator ad colligendum, may bring suits. This power, however, in the view of the court, rested upon a statute referred to in the opinion, but which has not been produced on the argument of this case. But the decision is so recent, and referring expressly to the statute, we think we may safely rely upon it as an authority to sustain the right to sue, under the power given by the letters of administration in this case. And we the more readily adopt this conclusion, because we think the right to sue is necessarily implied in the authority collect the goods, chattels, rights, and credits. ' The grant of the power carries with it all the usual, ordinary, and necessary means to effectuate the beneficial exercise of the power.

2. The proceedings, as stated upon the record to continue the cause, appear to have been in conformity to “a statute of that state, (Mississippi Statutes 238,) which provides that, when any *170 suit shall be depéntling in any court, and either of .the parties shall die before judgment, the executors or administrators of the deceased, in case the cause of action by law survives, shall have full power to prosecute or defend such action; and the court is authorized and required to render judgment for or against the executor or administrator, as the case may require ; and a scire facias is authorized tq be issued to call in the executor or administrator to make himself a party; and such was the course adopted in- the present ease, as appears from the record. Upon •the death of Lovic Ventress, a scire facias issued to Elizabeth Ventress, the administratrix, who appeared and became a party to the' suit, and the cause was continued ; and upon, the death of the-administratrix ant)ther scire facias issued, to call in the defendants, the executors of Lovic Ventress, who appeared and became parties to the suit, which, according to the record, was .regularly .continued, by consent, to the term of the court when tlie Cause was tried. For what reason or under, what circumstances • Elizabeth Ventress was appointed administratrix of Lovic Ventress, when the defendants were his executors, does not appear. But the court will not intend that it was without authority.

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Bluebook (online)
35 U.S. 161, 9 L. Ed. 382, 10 Pet. 161, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-c-s-ventress-executors-of-lovic-ventress-deceased-in-error-v-scotus-1836.