18 Ala. 9 | Ala. | 1850
The complainant, who is the plaintiff in error, filed his bill in the Chancery Court for Barbour county, on the 22d day of August 1845; and it appears that after he filed his bill, he was removed from his office of administrator of.
The complainant, at the November term 1847, of the Chancery Court, which was prior to the term at which the cause was heard, moved to suppress the depositions which had then been taken bjy the defendants, on the ground that there was no party complainant in the cause, at the times when those depositions were taken. The chancellor overruled the motion, and that is now assigned as one of the errors. Among the depositions to which the motion applied was that of Hines Holt, and we may confine our decision upon this question to his deposition alone; because the others are not indispensable, according to our view of the case. This deposition was taken on the 24th day of October 1846, and the question for us to decide is whether or not the chancellor erred in refusing to suppress it, according to the motion which was made for that purpose at the November term 1847. The motion was made upon the supposition, that the complainant had been removed from the administration before the deposition was taken, and that he was not re-appointed, or at any rate, that he was not made a party again to this suit, until afterwards. If that fact had been made to appear to the chancellor in support of the motion to suppress, the question of error would have been fairly before us. But it was not made to appear to the chancellor at the time when the motion to suppress was made, nor at any time before, that the complainant had been removed from his administration at or before the time when Mr. Holt’s deposition was taken. If this fact was shown to the chancellor by any record, or other evidence, when the motion to suppress was made, or at any time before, the transcript of this cause does not show it, and therefore we can see no error in the decision- of the chancellor upon what was then before him.
The complainant’s counsel, at the hearing of the cause, again moved to suppress the same deposition, on two grounds; 1st, that it was taken after the return day of the commission, and 2d, that the commission issued after the complainant was removed from his administration and while it was abated. This motion.
Mr. Holt testifies in his deposition that he was appointed administrator of William J. Beattie, deceased, by the Inferior Court of the county of Muscogee, Georgia, sitting as a Court of Ordinary, about the 10th of December 1838, and it appears by his deposition that he acted as such in that State. It is proved, too, by the deposition of James Beattie, sen’r, which was taken and used in this cause by the complainant, that Mr. Holt was such administrator; and this proof was brought out by one of the complainant’s interrogatories, which was evidently intended for that purpose. In this place it is proper to mention, also, that Mr. Holt, in his deposition, proves a copy (accompanying his deposition) of the deed of the 25th day of December 1838, executed by himself and others, and he proved the execution of the original. In another part of this opinion we will advert again to Mr. Holt’s appointment as administrator, and to the deed of the 25lh day of December 1S3S. We allude to them now for the purpose of deciding in this connection, whether the administration of Mr. Holt and the deed are sufficiently proved by the evidence which has just been stated. It is true an authenticated copy of the record of Mr. Holt’s appointment, and the production and proof of the original deed by the subscribing witness, would have been the best evidence, and parol evidence- in such cases is not in general admissible. But this evidence was all read at the hearing of the cause, without objection made in the Chancery Court, at that or any other time, so far as appears by the record. It is objected to in this court for the first time. The objections that were made, and
We come now to the main question in the cause, but in order to make our views intelligible, we will state the case as briefly as possible. In consequence of the treaty of March 1S32, between the general government and the Creek Indians, it became the duty of the government to remove those Indians to their new home in the west. To this end, a contract, bearing date the 13th day of August 1S3G, was entered into between Capt. John Page, of the United States army and superintendant of the removal of the Creek Indians, under authority of the United States, of the first-part, and certain persons styled “The Alabama Emigrating Company,” of the second part. The said William J. Beattie was one of the persons of the secoud part — most of the defendants were also parties with Mr. Beattie, of the second part. The other defendants are the personal representatives of persons, now deceased, who were parties of the second part. The parties of the second part stipulated to remove the Creek Indians who were within Alabama to their new home in the west. There were other stipulations, also, which were necessary under the principal undertaking, but which it is not necessary to state. On the other hand, it was stipulated that the government should compénsate the Emigrating Company by the payment of money for the performance of the contract on the part of the company, and the payment was .to be according to certain rates staled in the contract. It is the object of the complainant’s bill to have an account and payment of his intestate’s portion of the money, which was paid by the government to the company, in consideration of the performance of the contract. It is a further object of the complainant, by his bill, to have an account and payment of several other demands against the company, for moneys of his had and received by the company, for his services in the business, &c., all relating more or less to the transactions already stated. It appears that William J, Beattie died in the fall of 1837, before the business of the company uuder its contract was completed. The complainant was appointed administrator of the said William J. Beattie, deceased, on the-day of January 1840, by the Orphans’ Court of
The complainant having by his bill stated his demands, as the administrator of his intestate, against the company, of which, as has been said, the intestate was a member, proceeds to state that the company, some time in December 1S38, offered to the complainant and his father (who is the complainant’s witness, James Beattie, sen’r,) twenty-five’ thousand dollars, if the complainant and his father would give to the company a full receipt for all demands which the representatives of William J. Beattie, deceased, had against the company, and release to the company all demands of the representatives of the said WTilliara J. against William A. Campbell, agent of the company— and all demands of the representatives of said William J. against the government of the United States; and the complainant states in his bill that he and his father accepted this offer and gave the required receipt and release. It appears by the bill that the sum offered by the company was actually paid. But the complainant states that he and his father were very much deceived and defrauded in this settlement by the company and its agents, and he charges such mistakes and such acts of fraud, as are entirely sufficient, if established, to induce a court of chancery to set aside such settlement, receipt, and release, as those stated in the bill, in any proper proceeding for the purpose. But the settlement, receipt, and release, relied on by the defendants as a bar to the relief prayed by the bill, are very different from those stated in the bill. The deed of the 25th day of December 1838, a copy of which, as well as the execution of the original, was proved by the deposition of Hines Holt, as mentioned in a previous part of this opinion, is the matter relied on as a bar by the defendants. It was executed by Mr. Holt as the administrator of William J. Beattie, and by the complainant and his father, and the other distributees of the intestate or their guardian, by their attorney in fact. They thereby acknowledged the receipt from the defendants, Watson & Iverson, who were members of the company, of the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, in full consideration for the claims, demands and dues of William J. Beattie, deceased, against the Emigrating Company, and each and every member thereof, arising under the various contracts, made by the company or
The counsel of the defendants contend that the bill is insufficient to impeach the release of the intestate’s distributees; that it is not competent for an administrator, as such, to impeach the transactions settled by the distributees, more especially by a suit to which they are no parties, (and -most of them are not parties to this suit — none as distributees.) But that question need not be touched in this case; because Holt’s release, which is not impeached by the bill, is a sufficient bar. The counsel for the defendants also contend that the complainant, as the intestate’s administrator in Alabama, cannot impeach the acts of Mr. Holt as the intestate’s administrator in Georgia — that this can be done only by the distributees; that between such administrators there is no privity, their relation not being changed by our statutes, or the decisions thereon relative to administrators and administrators de bonis non appointed here. But even if we could decide that the whole of this argument is wrong, the complainant would not be aided ; because if he can, as the administrator in Alabama, impeach the acts of the administrator in Georgia, the answer is that he has not done so.
We have only to notice one other question — the question whether Mr. Holt, on the 25th Dec. 1838, had authority to make settlement of the claims in favor of his intestate against the surviving members of the company, and to assign and release (hem, as he did by his deed of that date. If he had such authority liis deed is a good bar, it not being properly impeached in this suit. Mr. Holt was the only administrator of the intestate at that time. The complainant was not appointed In Alabama until some time afterwards. Before he was appointed the claims upon which his suit is founded were fairly settled and released by his intestate’s administrator in Georgia, for the settlement and release not being effectually impeached in this suit, we must regard them as having been made in good faith. Docs the complainant suppose that he alone, as the administrator in Alabama, had authority to'release these demands? Or does he suppose that he has the exclusive right to release some of the defendants, conceding to the administrator in Georgia the right to release others? It appears by the case that some mem