14 Fla. 21 | Fla. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is here now for two terms without any petition of appeal filed in this Court showing the grounds upon which a reversal of the decree is sought. We shall therefore simply state the question which arises in the case, and dispose of it. The simple question is whether, under the facts, respondent had an equity which entitled him to a decree for one-half of the sums collected under this judgment, and then in the control of the Court. That at law he might possibly have recovered a judgment for one-half of the amounts collected by Smith in his lifetime, or by his
That Bisbee has' a demand payable out of this particular asset cannot be denied. This is the contract set up and established by proof; indeed the administrator does not ■deny it. "Where a legatee has a right to a particular fund, a court of equity will always secure the interest in his favor when the contest is between legatees, and where the superior rights of creditors do not intervene. In this case the demand is by contract. The particular asset is liable for this particular claim; the general assets are not, except conditionally in the event of an improper appropriation by the intestate. That is the case with the amounts collected by •the intestate during his life. Respondent is a general ■creditor as to that, and there is no claim upon the judgment for that. The fund must be identified. These views áre fully sustained by adjudicated cases. 2 Ves. jr., 619; 1 Ves. sr., 282; 1 Mar. Chy. Dec., 64; Story’s Eq., 846, 730, 717.
The decree is affirmed.