45 Miss. 78 | Miss. | 1871
The second plea alleges that the bill single was transferred by the payees who were executors, in payment of their private debt to the plaintiff, he knowing that it belonged to them as executors and was assets in their hands.
The third plea avers a sale of the bill single to the plaintiff, that the proceeds had never been accounted for, but the sale was for private benefit. These pleas were demurred to.
1st. The first proposition is, whether a negotiation of the bill single by the executors under the circumstances and upon the considerations stated, passed a valid title to the plaintiff. As regards the personal estate, the executors generally take the place of the testator; where he was creditor they become such, where he was debtor, so are they by representation. As legal owners of the credits and choses in action, they may transfer negotiable paper in the usual modes. Such was recognized to be their general right in Andrews v. Carr, 26 Miss. 578; Owen v. Moody, 27 ib. 83.
If the paper on its face is payable to the executors as such, it is notice to those who take it that it is assets of the estate, and not the individual property of the executor. Such was the character of the paper sued on in this action. The matters set up in the pleas disclose a palpable breach of trust, in which the plaintiff participates. The assignment therefore in these circumstances would be void. The demurrer to the pleas was properly overruled.
2d. We cannot notice the errors predicated in the granting or refusing instructions, as they are not in the record.
3d. The last cause assigned in the motion for a new trial is, that the verdict is contrary to the law and evidence. The bill of exceptions undertakes and professes to set out all the testimony adduced on the trial. The bill single is certified to be the only evidence before the jury. It is difficult to conceive why they found a verdict for the defendants. As we have seen, the general rule is, that an executor may transfer and negotiate paper, payable to the testator, or to himself in his representative capacity. But the general right is qualified by the important modification, viz.: If made in a transaction in no wise connected with the estate, but for the personal gain and advantage of the executor, the chose in action does not lose its character as assets
The verdict is set aside, judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a venire facias.