34 Miss. 101 | Miss. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
The object of this bill is to enjoin further proceedings, under a decree in the Probate Court of Greene county.
The facts are these. One John Fairly, by his will, written in 1837, bequeathed certain slaves to his children. Some years thereafter, he gave the slaves thus bequeathed to his children, and placed them in possession of the slaves. The testator died about the year 1854, and the complainant, being the executor named in the will, inventoried the slaves which had been disposed of by the testator in his lifetime as part of his estate. This inventory is alleged to have been made through mistake.
The appellees, John and Daniel Thompson, filed a petition in the Probate Court of said county for distribution, and united in this petition, without their knowledge or consent, the other children or parties alleged to be co-legatees, or distributees, of said estate. These other parties disclaimed, according to the allegations of the bill, all interest under said decree, or agency in procuring the same.
It is clear, from the allegations of the bill, that the appellees, Thompsons, have not even a shadow of right to the property under the testator’s will, for the reason that the party through whom they claim, received during the lifetime of the testator, such interest as he intended her to have in the same. Under these circumstances* they should be held to the most rigid rule in regard to the enforce-
None of the parties, save those demurring to the bill, desire to bring about this state of things, and hence the impropriety of joining them in the petition without their consent.
The decree, sustaining the demurrer to the bill, must be reversed, the demurrer overruled, and the defendants required to answer in sixty days.