27 Ga. 330 | Ga. | 1859
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Did Elbert Melton have the right to appeal without giving security ? The Court below held that hepiad.
And, it is clear, he had, if the suit against him, was against him as administrator. The Judiciary Act, of 1799, says so.
The question, then, is, was the suit against him as administrator ?
It may be assumed, that a suit against a person who is an, administrator, is against him as administrator, if the suit is one to which, he may plead as administrator; and the decree in which, may be against him as administrator; one the title set up in which, is good against him only as administrator, and one the prayer in which, is against him as administrator.
The bill states, that, Irving is the guardian of Elizabeth, Sarah, and Qniney Melton, orphans of McKinny Melton, deceased; who died in 1840, leaving an estate of some §10,000, or §15,000, consisting in part of lands and negroes; that Elbert Melton was appointed his administrator; that, McKinney Melton left a widow, and, a number of other children ; that, in 1853 the complainant applied to the Court of Ordinary, for an order requiring the administrator to pay over and deliver to him, complainant, all the property
That, he realized from the sale of the property $14,000 ; that one Jones owed the intestate, at the time of his death, $1500, for certain lands purchased by him, Jotres, of the -intestate, and that, the administrator “ made a rue” with Jones, and in it, gave up to Jones, his notes for the purchase money, and received back the land, and a negro man, named Jesse, to boot; that, the administrator has appropriated these lands, and this negro, to his own use, whereas they are, as the complainant charges, the property of the intestate; that, the lands of which the intestate died seized, except the widow’s dower, had been sold by the administrator, at administrator’s sale, for $3000, to four-ninths of which sum, as also, to four-ninths of all the property of the intestate, the complainant’s wards were entitled; that, the administrator had received $400 in rents, and, $1000 in hire of the negroes; that, from the cash on hand, and the sale of personal property, he had realized $10,000; that the complainant had made repeated applications to him, for the “ distributive share” of the estate, coming to his wards.
The bill prays, that an account may be taken,- and that what shall be found “ due and coming to the wards of” complainant, “from him the said ElbertMelton,as administrator,” he shall be decreed to be paid over to” him, the complainant, “ as guardian as aforesaid.” And there is, the general prayer.
This is the bill. And, certainly, this is a -bill to which^ would lie, a plea or answer made by Elbert Melton as administrator. Á. plea, or answer, that he had paid away all the assets to debts, or, to legatees under a will annexed to his administration, would be a complete bar to the bill, And these are pleas confined to an administrator or an executor in his representative character.
So, this bill is one in which, a decree may bo had against
The title which the complainant sets up in the bill, against Elbert Melton, is a title against him as administrator. That is, that his wards are of the next of kin of McKinny Melton, deceased, and that, as such, they are entitled to have their shares of McKinny Melton’s estate. Such a title as that, is good only as against the administrator of that estate, for if asserted against any other person, on an allegation, say, that this other person has the estate in his possession, this person may plead, that there is an administrator to whom he is bound to account.
Finally, the special prayer to the bill is a prayer agains Elbert Melton “ as administrator.”
We think, then, that the suit is against Elbert Melton as administrator, and therefore, that he had the right to appeal without giving security.
Judgment affirmed.