8 Ala. 552 | Ala. | 1845
In proceedings at common law, and usually in equity, the plaintiff sets out the nature of his claim upon the record, and that is inquired into at the same time as the other matters in dispute; but the mode of proceeding is different in testamentary causes, before the eclesiastical courts. In these, the administrator, &c. in possession of the fund, is entitled to call upon the party invoking tha aid of the Court, to propound his interest, and if the interest is disputed, to controvert it by an exceptive allegation. [McRae v. Pegues, 4 Ala. Rep. 158.] If the interest is made to appear, the petitioner is admitted as a party, and if, upon exception, it cannot be shown, the petition is dismissed, because it is the interest alone in the subject matter of controversy, which entitles the one party to call upon the other. In its very nature, this investigation is al
The result of this conclusion is, that t'he writ of error must be dismissed, but as the parties would probably proceed in the mode indicated, without a decision upon their claim,-it is proper now to consider whether the plea assuming the fact stated by it as true, is sufficient to bar the plaintiff from proceeding to enforce distribution.
The act which provides, that any person entitled to the distribution of an intestate’s estate, may at any time after eighteen months from the time of granting admininistration, petition the Orphans’ Court for a distribution, [Dig. 198, § 23,] merely regulates the mode in which the Court, shall proceed; but its jurisdiction over the matter of distribution, may be referred to its general testamentary powers, which are given by another act. [Dig. 300, § 21.] Indeed, this act seems to stand in the place of the statute 22 and 23 Chas. 2, c. 10, by which the ordinaries in England were invested with jurisdiction'to ‘compel administrator's to settle the estate, and pay the samé by due-course of eclesiastical law, without the limitation imposed by the subsequent statute of 1 Jas. 2, c. 17, which restricted the compulsory jurisdiction, except at the instance of some person on- behalf of a minor, a creditor, or the next of kin. See these statutes cited 4 Burn. E. L. 369.
It' is evident, in the very nature of things, that there must be some mode, and some Court, by means of which an administrator may be relieved from the responsibility of ascertaining, who
Now the general rule in equity is, that a chose in action is assignable, and vests in the assignee all the interest of the assignor. ¡[Story’s Eq. § 1039 to 1057.] Beyond this it has been repeatedly held, that if the debtor assents to the transfer, when the chose in action isa debt, the right of the assignee is complete at law,
’ Our conclusionis thatifMr. Abercrombie,in his life-time,assigned his interest in this estate to another, his representatives are not entitled to be heard in its settlement, and that all his rights have devolved on, and may be asserted by, his assignee, in his own name. ^
It will be seen, we have omitted to examine the other questions made by the assignments of error; this is not because we consider them unimportant, but because they do not affect the plaintiffs, until they show themselves entitled to raise them, by being parties to the record.
Writ of error dismissed.