Wood's Executors v. Wickliffe

44 Ky. 187, 5 B. Mon. 187, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 Ky. 187 (Wood's Executors v. Wickliffe) 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
Wood's Executors v. Wickliffe, 44 Ky. 187, 5 B. Mon. 187, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 104 (Ky. Ct. App. 1844).

Opinion

Judge Breck

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1824, Nathaniel Wickliffe instituted an action of covenant, in the Nelson Circuit Court, against Nathan B. Wood. Before any trial was had, Wood, having first made his last will and testament, departed this life. His will was proved and admitted to record in 1834, in the Spencer County Court, and James J. Wood and Nathan Deacon were qualified as executors. An order reviv[188]*188ing the suit of Wickliffe was made in 1835, which was served upon Wood in 1837. In 1841 the suit was tried and Wickliffe obtained a judgment for upwards of $3000, which was subsequently reversed in this Court. Upon the return of the cause it was again tried, and a second judgment was obtained by Wickliffe for $3202. The executors again appealed to this Court, and the judgment was affirmed. After obtaining his first judgment, and before its reversal, Wickliffe exhibited his bill in Chancery against the executors, devisees, and trustees of Wood, alledging his inability to make any portion of his judgment upon execution, and calling upon the executors for a discovery of assets; he also piayed for and obtained an attachment against certain slaves, which he charged belonged, to the estate of the deceased, and which were in possession of the defendants, and also against certain other slaves, which had been emancipated by the will, but which were subject to the payment of his judgment. By an amended bill, Wickliffe sets up his last judgment, and also the claim upon which it was founded, against the executors, devisees, and emancipated slaves. The executors having alone answered, the cause was heard and a decree pronounced, from which the executors, who were also devisees, have appealed to this Court.

Decree of the Circuit Court. Errors assigned by appellant.

The decree is against the executors in personam, for $361, which is directed to be credited upon the judgment; the attached slaves alledged to belong to the estate, are there directed to be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the judgment, and if insufficient for the pay-* ment thereof, then the emancipated slaves, or so many of them as may be necessary for that purpose, are decreed to be sold.

The appellants, in the assignment of errors, rely that the decree is erroneous:

1st. In decreeing assets against them beyond the value of the slaves devised.

2ndly. In decreeing the slaves to be sold.

3rdly. In decreeing the slaves emancipated by the will, to be sold withoutdefence made for them, or such of them as were infants, by a guardian ad litem.

Cross errors of appellee. Wood’s will construed. A will provides for the payment Of the just debts of the testator, emancipates a portion of the slaves, and devises the remainder of his slaves to certain resk duary devisees— held that the slaves not emancipated are assets in the hands of the executors foi the payment of debts, and did not pass on the death of the testator to the residuary devisees.

4thly. ín decreeing an absolute‘sale of the emancipated slaves.

The appellee relies by way of cross errors, in the event this Court should be of opinion the decree ought to be reversed, that the Court below erred in not decreeing a greater amount against the executors, and in not charging them with the hire of the slaves which they claim as devisees.

In the examination of the several questions presented, it will be necessary in the first place, to advert to and give construction to the will.

The testator first wills and directs that all his just debts and funeral expenses be paid; he then, after making several small specific legacies, provides for the emancipation of five of his slaves, viz: Ann, Eliza, Elizabeth, Bertrand, and Louisa, and the emancipation is directed to take effect at his death. His executors are also directed to pay over to J. J. Wood and Joseph Funk, five hundred and fifty dollars, whom he appoints trustees for certain specific purposes, in reference to the liberated slaves, and directs the manner in which they are to appropriate the five hundred and fifty dollars for their use and benefit, The will then contains this residuary clause: “I give the residue of my estate, in equal portions, to my brother James and my sister Ellenor Deacon.”

Besides the manumitted slaves, the testator died possessed of five other slaves and some personal estate. Whether the slaves not liberated, passed directly by the will, to the residuary devisees; or were assets in the hands of the executors for the payment of debts and legacies, is the only material question arising in the construction of the will. Looking to the whole will, it is evident that nothing is given or intended to be given to the residuary devisees, except what may remain after the payment of debts and legacies; and we think it equally clear that the slaves did not pass to them, but were assets in the hands of the executors. It is true under our statute, slaves pass by last will and testament, in the same manner and under the same regulations as landed estate; but this statute has been regarded as embracing only specific devises of slaves; McDowell’s administrator, &c. vs Lawless, (6 Monroe, 141.) In this case there is no specific devise, [190]*190and besides, the will subjects the whole estate, including the slaves, first to the payment of debts and then of specific legacies. The slaves w'ere, therefore, assets in the hands of the executors, and they seem, in some respects, to have so treated them. They had them appraised and inventoried^ and in a settlement with the Commissioners of the County Court, they seem to have been treated as constituting a portion of the estate which came to their hands. But the Court below appears to have regarded them as either passing directly by the will, or as having been delivered over by the executors to the residuary devisees. Thus regarding them, the decree is evidently erroneous in decreeing personally against the executors, $361 59. It appears that the whole amount of the personal estate, including a legacy of a gold watch to J. J. Wood, and some other articles bequeathed to Mrs. Deacon, which came into the executors hands, was $1207 39, and according to a County Court settlement, made with them in 1838, they had disbursed, in the payment of debts and expenses of administration, including an allowance for their personal services, very near that amount.

The statute declaring that slaves devised shall pass as lands devised, applies to slaves specifically devised. The pendency of a suit in a different county from thatin which the testator dies and executor qualifies, is not presumptive notice of the claim which will render the executor liable personally-

It is contended that many of the items of disbursement in this settlement, are for claims of inferior dignity to the claim of the appellee; but no effort was made by him in his pleadings, or by proof, to surcharge the settlement. Having been made before he exhibited his bill, and no portion of it having been surcharged, it should prevail against his demand, so far as payments had been made to creditors, including expenses and allowance for services; Burns vs Burton, (1 Marshall, 349;) Wooldridge vs Watkins, (3 Bibb, 352;) and Quinn vs Stockton, (2 Litt. 346.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. Goodin v. McDonough
9 Mo. App. 63 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1880)
Berry v. Hamilton
64 Ky. 361 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1866)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Ky. 187, 5 B. Mon. 187, 1844 Ky. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-executors-v-wickliffe-kyctapp-1844.