Williams v. . Maitland

36 N.C. 93
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 36 N.C. 93 (Williams v. . Maitland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. . Maitland, 36 N.C. 93 (N.C. 1840).

Opinion

At the September Term, 1833, John Walker put in his answer, wherein he admitted that the plaintiff was the only surviving child and residuary legatee of Samuel L. Wiggins; that the said Samuel did give and bequeath as in the bill charged; that he and Thomas Walker alone qualified as executors to the will of said Samuel; that the widow of his testator (96) intermarried with S. B. Carraway, as stated in the bill, and that subsequently the defendant resigned the appointment of testamentary guardian to the plaintiff, and the said S. B. Carraway was appointed guardian in his stead. The defendant further declared that for some time after his testator's death he had the principal and almost exclusive management of his testator's estate, and to his answer annexed an account of his administration thereof, and averred the said account to be correct with the exception that therein he had taken a credit for a commission on the sum of $2,616.24, a payment made by his co-executor Thomas in discharge of a balance due from the testator Samuel to Lawrence Wiggins, unto the defendant, the guardian of the said Lawrence. The defendant denied the charges of the negligence and mismanagement contained in the bill; admitted that in September, 1821, he executed a deed of trust of his property to secure a debt due personally to Thomas Walker, and also a debt due to the Edenton Bank; but protested that the property fell short of discharging these debts. The account annexed was a copy of an account settled by him as executor of S. L. Wiggins with auditors appointed by the county court on 23 August, 1827, and exhibited a balance due from the defendant personally to the estate of his testator of $148.45.

At the same term the defendants, Mainland and Jordan Walker, filed their separate answer, and therein made the same admissions as were made by John Walker; and further admitted that Thomas Walker had died and they had proved his will as his executors. The defendants stated in their said answer that they personally knew nothing of the administration of Samuel *Page 74 L. Wiggins's estate, but had understood and believed that their testator interfered very little therewith; that nearly all the property was received and the debts paid and the business transacted by John Walker, to whose separate answer they referred; that the only information which they possessed of the particular business of the estate transacted by their testator Thomas was derived from an account which they annexed to their (97) answer, purporting to be an account settled on 10 August, 1827, between the said Thomas and auditors of the county court, and exhibiting a balance then due him from the estate of $2, 041.88; that they had understood and believed that in order to satisfy this balance in part the said Thomas sold certain negroes of the estate on 11 February, 1828, for the sum of $1,768. 25, and that the residue of said balance never had been satisfied. They further answered that on 8 September, 1821, John Walker executed a deed of trust to Mason L. Wiggins to secure a debt due by note to the said Thomas of $2,442.10, and also a debt of $1,849.30 due the bank at Edenton; that sales of the property were made by the trustee; that they fell short of satisfying the trust debts, and that there remained, $1,000 unpaid of the said note of the said John to the said Thomas. To these answers the plaintiff replied generally, and an order was made without prejudice whereby it was referred to the master to take an account of the estate of Samuel L. Wiggins that went jointly into the hands of Thomas Walker and John Walker, and also of what went into the hands of each of them respectively, and also of their joint and respective disbursements, with leave to take testimony and to report what was done by them to the plaintiff. Before the execution of this order was completed it was ordered at the instance of the defendants, Maitland and Jordan Walker, that they have leave to take the deposition of John Walker subject to such exceptions as might be made at the hearing, and the execution of the order of reference was yet unfinished when the said John died; and the plaintiff Sarah intermarried with John G. Williams, who took out letters of administration de bonis non, with the will annexed, on the estate of Samuel L. Wiggins, and at the Fall Term, 1836, became party plaintiff to the proceedings by a bill of revivor, and caused the same to be revived accordingly. At the Spring Term, 1839, the master made his report, which was very full and elaborate, and found in substance that except in a very few instances John Walker and Thomas Walker acted severally in the management of the estate of their testator; it (98) exhibited an account of the said Thomas with the said *Page 75 estate upon which a balance was stated in favor of the said Thomas for the sum of $277.32; and because of the abatement of the suit against John Walker it stated that the master had forborne from proceeding to state his account with the estate. To this report the plaintiff filed a great number of exceptions, and then the cause was, by consent, removed to the Supreme Court for hearing. The exceptions, together with the facts upon which they were founded, will be found stated in the opinion of the Court. Upon the argument it was admitted by the counsel for the defendants that the fourth exception taken by the plaintiff was well founded. That exception is, for that the master has erroneously debited the estate of Samuel L. Wiggins in account with Thomas Walker, as executor, with the sum of $12 and the interest thereon; which sum was paid for a survey of land made after the death of his testator. Without, therefore, inquiring into the matter of the exception, and because of this admission, the Court doth sustain the said exception.

At the same time the counsel for the plaintiff waived the third, twelfth, eighteenth and twentieth exceptions. These, therefore, are regarded as withdrawn, and the Court hath in no way passed upon them.

With respect to the matters embraced within the remaining exceptions, the Court hath minutely inspected the testimony which has been referred to as bearing upon them and deliberately considered it. Upon each of these exceptions it has not been enabled to come to a conclusion with the same confidence, but it has not found any one sustained to its satisfaction. All these exceptions, therefore, are overruled.

Our views upon them will be briefly stated.

The first exception is, for that the master hath erroneously debited the estate of Samuel L. Wiggins with the sum of £ 2 2s. 3d., paid in discharge of an account of Horace Ely. The proof of payment of this account by the executor, Thomas Walker, is full and uncontested, but the objection that (99) the estate ought not to be charged therewith is for that the account itself was not a just one. In support of this objection to the plaintiffs rely on a due bill given by Wiggins to Ely, dated 28 March, 1816, for £ 3 6s. 1d., professing to be for a *Page 76 balance found due upon a settlement of accounts between them up to 1 January, 1816, and upon the fact appearing on the face of this disputed account that all the items therein charged, with the exception of the last item for the laying of three grubbing hoes, £ 1 10s., on 3 January, 1816, are antecedent to the date of the said settlement. The settled account on which the note or due bill was given does not appear, so that we cannot certainly know the items of which it was composed. It does appear, however, that the deceased, Mr. Wiggins, dealt extensively with Mr. Ely as his merchant, and the disputed account is exclusively for blacksmith's work done at the shop of the latter.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.C. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-maitland-nc-1840.