127 Ala. 411 | Ala. | 1900
Luden Nardin by his last will executed February 8, 1888, after making certain specific bequests and devises -to others, devised and bequeathed all the. residue of his estate to his nephews, Tell and John Nardin. Constituting a part of his residuary estate was a claim for bond .199 for $1,000 issued by the county of Mobile for river and harbor improvement, and coupons thereto attached which had been stolen from him a short time before he made his will. He nominated and constituted Henrv C. Lesquereux the executor of his will. Luden having died a few days after the execution of this will, it was duly probated in the probate court of Mobile, the county of testator’s resi-. dence and death, on March 31, 1888, and said Lesquereux was then appointed and qualified as executor. The estate’s claim to said bond was not inventoried nor in anywise taken account of by Lesquereux in his administration, and prior to June 22, 1891, he fully settled his executorship, made final distribution to Tell and John Nardin as residuary legatees, had his accounts audited and passed by the probate court, and a decree therein entered discharging -and acquitting him in all respects as executor. After this, on the date last stated, John Nardin, a resident of New York, departed this life. The defendant, Bromberg, represented the executor throughout the administration of the estate as his attorney, and acting after.the final settlement thereof as attorney for or in behalf of the estate, or Lesquereux as its executor, he collected in-July, 1891, between four and five hundred dollars on said claim in respect of the Mobile county bond No. 199. The estate
This would seem to be a plain and simple enough case for the plaintiff: the trial court so regarded it and gave him the affirmative charge; but defendant insists that the court below erred in that instruction and also in ninety-odd other particulars on the trial. We do not deem it necessary nor do we propose to enter upon any detailed discussion of these very numerous assignments of error. Many of them were reserved to rulings upon the pleadings; and of them it will suffice to say that none of them were prejudicial to the defendant, since on the pleadings as finally made up and settled he had the opportunity to fully develop and present every defense he wished to bring forward. Three lines of defense were attempted by the defendant, and upon each the the pleadings admitted of and the court, allowed him to fully present his case. These lines were: First, that the fund in his hands did not belong to the estate of John Nardin, deceased; second, that plaintiff .was not the administrator of .the estate of John Nardin; and, third, the statute of limitations.
The action is for money had and received to the use of plaintiff. It is an equitable action, and is to be tried upon principles of equity. If defendant has money which in equity and good conscience belongs to the estate of John .Nardin, deceased, the plaintiff, as John Nardin’s personal representative, is entitled to recover
As to the defense that plaintiff is not the administrator of John Nardin’s estate: The petition for letters of administration avers among other thing's that proper tv belonging to said estate came into the hands of an attorney in Mobile after the death of John Nardin. This shows property of the estate in the county in which the letters were issued. The appointment of plaintiff as administrator is, therefore, not void on its face, and it can not be attacked collaterally as was' attempted' in this ca:se. — Winter v. London, 99 Ala. 263.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.