58 Miss. 286 | Miss. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
Thomas G. Carradine, administrator of his deceased brother, Bird Carradine, omitted in his final settlement to account for $671 of Mexican coinage which he was known to have in his possession, and which the distributees claimed as belonging to the estate of the decedent, but which he asserted was his own property. The chancellor sustained an exception to his account based on such omission, and compelled him to account for the money : and from this, decree he appeals. His title to the money rests upon an alleged gift of it to himself by his deceased brother, and the validity of the gift depends upon the question of whether or not it was perfected by a delivery of the money. , The facts are as follows: The deceased, Bird Carradine, in conjunction with another brother, William G. Carradine, buried in 1863 a sum of Mexican silver dollars, which belonged in equal portions to the two. William died a few years after the close of the war, the money remaining buried. His son, B. C. Carradine, became his executor, but the money was permitted to remain in the earth. In 1876, Bird Carradine, who was very old, and unmarried, and rapidly growing feeble, told B. C. that he wanted his brother Thomas to have his portion of the buried treasure, and that after his death it must be dug up and equally divided between said Thomas and said B. C., as the executor of his father’s estate. He made the same statement and direction to Thomas. A few days before his death, however, he and B. C. changed their minds, and concluded to disinter the money at once. They sent for Thomas, and he and B. C. proceeded to make search for the money, which was in two boxes. One box they found readily, and this box Thomas proposed to appropriate ; but, B. C- objecting, they continued their search for the other. They failed to find it, and, after many hours of vain attempt
There was no error in the refusal of the chancellor to award a trial by jury. There was no question of fact to be determined, there being no conflicting evidence; and even if th.ere had been, the granting of a.jury trial, in the Chancery Court, where no statute prescribes one, is always discretionary with the chancellor, as has several times heretofore been announced by this court.
Decree reversed and cause remanded for a decree in the Chancery Court in accordance with the views announced in this opinion.