Wright v. Campbell & Strong

27 Ark. 637
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 Ark. 637 (Wright v. Campbell & Strong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Campbell & Strong, 27 Ark. 637 (Ark. 1872).

Opinion

Bennett, J.

On the 12th day of October, 1869, Campbell & Strong filed their bill of complaint in the Jefferson County Circuit Court to cancel a deed made by Elizabeth W. Wright to Carland IT. Dorris, in trust for the benefit of her minor child, James W. Wright. The deed conveyed lands, and charged, in the complaint, to have been voluntary, and the consideration was love and affection merely. Campbell & Strong are creditors of Elizabeth W. Wright, who died in the year 1865. Their claim has been duly presented to the defendant, Hartwell T. Wright, as administrator of Elizabeth W. Wright, deceased, and the same allowed and duly classified in the Probate Court of Jefferson county. It is charged, in the complaint, that the estate of Elizabeth* W. Wright deceased, is wholly and • totally insolvent, and it would be unnecessary and useless expense to proceed further against said administrator to make complainants’ debt. It is also charged, in the complaint, that Elizabeth W. Wright was largely indebted at the time she made said deed of trust, and was at that time insolvent.

The insolvency of Elizabeth W. Wright, as charged, is admitted by all the defendants, in their answer, to be true. The making of the trust deed, and the consideration for the same, as alleged, are also admitted to be true. The defendants, however, say in their answer that the lands conveyed by the said trust deed were not the lands of the said Elizabeth W. Wright, but belonged to the estate of Joseph J. Wright, deceased, the husband of the said Elizabeth W. And the defendants say, in their answers, that Elizabeth W. Wright had no authority to make, said deed of trust, and the same was a fraud upon the rights of the defendants, Hartwell T., Mary'S, and Joseph Wright, children and heirs at law of said Joseph J. Wright. The defendants also expressly say and. charge in their answers that the pretended claim • of Elizabeth W. Wright to said lands was bought and procured by her when she was the administratrix of Joseph J. Wright, deceased, and with the money'- and credits of said estate, and with nothing else, and her purchase of said lands, each and all of them, inured to the benefit of the estate of Joseph J. Wright, and that she held them in trust for said estate, and that said lands belong to defendants, the heirs of said estate.

The answer of the defendant, Joseph Wright, in addition to the defendants’ claim, as heirs of Joseph J. Wright, deceased, also sets up and asserts a tax title to said land, by virtue of a purchase made by Thomas,H. James, at a tax sale on the 2d of March, 1868, who afterward assigned and transferred, in due form of law, his certificate of purchase to said Joseph Wright, who afterward obtained a tax deed, as provided by law.

The complainants, replying to this allegation of the answer, state and charge that Thomas S. James was, at the time of said tax sale, the attorney of the estate of Elizabeth W. 'Wright, deceased, and had "been acting as attorney for her estate for some time previous to said tax sale, and that said Thomas S. James did declare, at the time of his said purchase at the tax sale, that he was purchasing the same for the benefit of the estate of Elizabeth W. Wright, deceased, and for the purpose of defeating the mortgage of the Real Estate Bank upon the lands, and requested persons present not to hid against him on that account; all of which was known to Joseph Wright. Eor this reason the complainants, in their reply, say that this purchase by James, at the tax sale, was fraudulent and void.

A demurrer to the bill was filed in all the answers.

The record does not show what disposition was made of the demurrers, hut we shall treat them'as though they were overruled by the court below. The demurrers arc general, but the counsel for defendants insist that the bill is defective :

First. Eor want of proper parties to it.

Second. Because it does not disclose any grounds for equitable relief.

This is a bill brought by Campbell. & Strong to cancel a a deed made by Elizabeth W. Wright to her minor son, and to subject the laud conveyed to the payment of their debt. It alleges that at the time of the conveyance, she was largely indebted, as much as thirty thousand dollars,-and that she was insolvent and wholly unable to [jay her debts. It also, alleges that her estate is insolvent, and that they have no other means by which they can make their debt. These are the only allegations that can, by expression or- implication, raise the presumption that there may be other creditors or parties interested in this suit.

The fact that the estate is insolvent does not show that _ other parties may be interested in the result of the suit, because the insolvency may arise from inability to pay the debt of Campbell & Strong alone. Nor does the fact that Elizabeth W. Wright, herself, was insolvent at the time of the execution of the trust deed, and that her indebtedness was thirty thousand dollars at that time. Because, if she was owing other* parties than Campbell & Strong, at that time, that" indebtedness may have been liquidated since, and they may bo the sole creditors of the estate.

As to the want of equity. The. defendants insist that before a court of equity will interpose to try the validity of a deed, a creditor, seeking to sot it aside, must present to the court'a judgment of a court upon his demand upon which an execution has been issued and it returned nulla bona; or if the creditor would avoid the force of this rule, he must show such equitable circumstances as will relieve him from its application, so as to make his case an exception: Meux vs. Anthony et al., 11 Ark., 411.

Conceding the above to be the correct doctrine, have not the plaintiffs brought themselves within it? The record shows that the claim of Campbell & Strong was allowed by the administrator of .the estate of Elizabeth W. Wright, and that the Probate Court lias allowed and classified it, and ordered and adjudged that the same stand as a claim against the estate. This order of the Probate Court has the same force and effect as a judgment: Chap. 4, Sec. 115, Gould’s Digest; Cositt et al. vs. Biscoe, 12 Ark., 95; McMorrin, adm’r. vs. Overholt, 14 Ark., 244. Should execution have been issued on it ? It has been held in the case of Adamson et al. vs. Cummins, ad., 10 Ark., 541, that “a judgment obtained in the Circuit Court against an administrator, as such, cannot he executed until, the estate is settled in the Probate Court; hut an execution on such judgment, before it is ascertained that there are assets to pay it, is irregular.” The same doctrine has been maintained in the case of Horner, as Trustee, vs. Hanks et al., 22 Ark., 585.

If an execution, upon a judgment obtained in the Circuit Court, cannot ho enforced against an estate, we can see no reason it would lie for a creditor to to obtain an execution in the Probate Court, after lie lias had. •his claim allowed and classified. After this has been done, the administrator is obliged to pay such claims from the assets of the estate; an execution could accomplish no inore. If the allegations of the bill are true, the complainants are entitled to relief. The demurrers were properly overruled.

In determining the rights of the parties in this cause, as presented by the bill, answer, exhibits and proofs, it becomes necessary to prosecute three inquiries: .

Mrst.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ark. 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-campbell-strong-ark-1872.