16 Ala. 286 | Ala. | 1849
When an executor or administrator shall be displaced, all money due to him in his representative
It may perhaps be proper for an executor or administrator, upon resigning, to protect himself by satisfying judgments or other liabilities against him as such; but if he does not, and afterwards discharges them from his own estate, he will not be compelled to bear the loss. His successor in the administration may reimburse him, and if the assets are ample, may be compelled to do so. If this were a doubtful question at common law, the modified state of the law in this State makes it clear that the administrator may retain for his advances, or if he allows the estate to pass into the hands of an administrator de bonis non, he becomes a creditor, at least. If the personal representative, who contracted or incurred liabilities, relinquishes the trust and turns over the assets to a successor, the latter will be authorised to discharge them, if they were primarily a just charge upon the estate. This is but reasonable, for the estate should bear its own burdens, no matter to whose hands its administration may be entrusted.
In O’Neill v. Donnell, 9 Ala. Rep. 734, it was held that there was no general rule to determine when costs incurred by an administrator in respect to the assets of the estate shall be allowed ; every such case must depend upon its own peculiar circumstances. “It is evident, however, there is one fact which must exist in every case, to warrant the allowance of
After the report that the, estate of a deceased person is insolvent is comfirmed, the executor or administrator shall on a day to be appointed by the Orphans’ Co'urt make a settlement of his accounts, and notice shall be given to the creditors to attend. On the day appointed for the attendance of the creditors, they shall hold a meeting under the direction of the court, and may elect and nominate to the court some suitable person as administrator de bonis non of such estate; and upon such person taking the oath and entering into bond with sufficient surety, letters of administratration shall be granted him accordingly. Clay’s Dig. 192, 193, §§ 2 to 6. Further,“ whenever any administrator de bonis non shall be appointed according to the provisions of this act, any former grant of letters testamentary or of administration of the said estate shall be thereby
There was no pretence for allowing the defendant the two hundred dollars he paid B. Gayle for having assisted in bringing back the slaves to this State, not only for the reason that he did not go in pursuit of them under a previous contract, but for the additional reason that he charged nothing for the services he performed.
This view is decisive of all the questions presented, and may serve as a guide to the ulterior proceedings in the court below. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.