63 Ind. 120 | Ind. | 1878
In this action the appellant, as plaintiff,
In his complaint the appellant alleged, in substance, that, on the-day of-, 1866, the said William A. Jenkins, then in full life, executed to the appellant a mortgage on the property therein described, to secure the payment of the moneys therein described, amounting to the sum of five thousand five hundred and seventy-six dollars and twenty-four cents, which said mortgage was filed with and made part of said complaint; that said mortgage, and the moneys therein secured, remained due and wholly unpaid, with the interest thereon, except the sum of eighty dollars, mentioned in said mortgage, and the further sum of two hundred and seventy-four dollars and thii-ty-two cents, paid by the decedent in his lifetime, and except -dollars, which had been allowed as a dividend on the appellant’s said mortgage, by order of the court, leaving then due and unpaid the sum of four thousand dollars; and that the whole of said mortgaged personal property had been sold, as the assets of said decedent’s estate. Wherefore the appellant demanded that his said claim should he allowed as a preferred claim against said estate; and he asked that the court would appoint a suitable person, as defendant to his said claim, to protect the interests of said estate, etc.
This complaint was filed by the appellant at the October term, 1871, of the Crawford Common Pleas Court, and William II. Peekinpaugh, Esq., was appointed by the court to defend the action for the interests of said estate. Afterward, at the January term, 1872, of said court, the appellant amended his complaint, so as to make it more certain and specific, to which amended complaint the said Peekinpaugh answered by a general denial.
At the May term, 1872, of said court, the cause was tried
Thereupon the said Peckinpaugh moved the court for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and to this ruling he excepted ; and the court rendered judgment upon, and in accordance with, its said finding.
More than two years afterward, to wit, at the'September term, 1874, of the Crawford Circuit Court, the final report of the administrator of the estate of said William A. Jenkins, deceased, and the objections of the creditors of said estate to the approval of said final report, having been under advisement since the last preceding term of said court, the court, being sufficiently advised, ordered that said report be not received and approved as a final report, and that the complaint of the appellant, praying that his said claim should be allowed and paid to him as a preferred claim, be placed upon the issue docket for trial, and that said W. IT. Peckinpaugh, one of the attorneys of said court, be appointed as an adversary party to resist the allowance of said claim as a preferred claim; to which orders of the court the appellant at the time excepted, for the alleged reason that his said complaint was adjudicated at the May term, 1872, of said court, and filed his exceptions and protest, in writing, against the action and orders of the court.
Afterward, at a special term of said court, held on the 3d day of September, 1875, before a special judge, the parties appeared, and the appellant moved the court, in writing, to strike the cause from the docket, which motion was overruled, and to this decision he excepted.
The appellant then filed an amended complaint in two paragraphs, to each of which the appellee demurred for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a cause of action, which demurrers were severally sustained by the court, and to each of- these decisions the appellant excepted.
The appellant, failing to amend his said complaint or either paragraph thereof, judgment was rendered on the demurrers, that he take nothing by his said suit, and that the appellee recover his costs in this action expended.
The appellant has assigned, as errors, the following decisions of the circuit court:
1. In overruling his written motion to strike this cause from the docket;
2. In sustaining the appellee’s demurrer to the first paragraph of the appellant’s amended complaint; and,
3. In sustaining the appellee’s demurrer to the second paragraph of said complaint.
We will consider these errors in the order of their assignment:
1. In his written motion to strike this cause from the docket, the appellant showed the court that the said cause was then erroneously and improperly on the issue docket of said court, in this, that heretofore, on the-day of
It appears to us that this written motion shows entirely too much of the proceedings of the court, in connection with the appellant’s claim, to justify the court in sustaining said motion. From the motion itself, hut more fully and clearly from the return of the clerk of said court to a writ of certiorari, awarded in this cause, it appears that the appellant’s claim or cause of action, against his decedent’s estate, as stated and set forth in his verified complaint, filed at the October term, 1871, had been duly filed by said appellant, on the 29th day of May, 1867, in the court of
In his written motion to strike this cause from the docket, the appellant showed the court, that the complaint filed by him in said court of common pleas, in October, 1871, stated the same claim or cause of action for which he had obtained a judgment of said court against said estate, in October, 1867; and that the object of his later suit or proceeding was to have said court to determine, declare and decree, that his said claim, by virtue of the facts stated in his verified complaint, was a preferred claim against said estate; that the court had appointed an adversary party to represent and defend said estate, in the suit instituted by him in October, 1871; that issues of law and fact were then joined upon his said complaint, and the issues of fact were tried by the court, and a final finding,
It seexxxs to us, that the second suit or proceeding, instituted by tlxe appellant, in October, 1871, was wholly unauthoxúzed by law. His claim had passed iixto a judgment agaixxst said estate ixeaxiy four yeax’S before that time, as a general debt of the decedexxt. The statute provides, in section 109 of the decedeixt-s’ estates’ act, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 534, the order ixx which all claims agaixxst the estate of a decedexxt shall be paid; but we know of no statutory px’ovisioix, which would authorize a trial by the coxxx’t of the question of priority, as between the creditor's, in their absence, axxd ixx such a maxxner as to bind or conclude thexn. The law prescribes, ixx plaixx terms, what claims shall have priority of payment over the general debts of the decedent; and the judgment of the court, that a particular claim shall have preferexxce over the gexxeral debts of the decedent, will not give the claim such preference, eoxxtrax’y to the provisions of the statute. Ixx other words; we thixxk that the lights of priority, and the order of paymexxt, of the claims against a decedent’s estate, are fixed and determined by the letter of the statute, and not by the judgment of the court. In our opixxion, therefore, the judgment of tlxe court, in the suit instituted by tlxe appellant ixx October, 1871. was xxot fixxal axxd coxxclxxsive as to the priority of his claim over the general debts of his decedexxt, in such manner as to preclude the general creditors from impeaching axxd contesting his right to a preference. The action of tlxe court, in ordering the appellant’s second suit to bo placed upon its issue docket for txial, may have been,
The other errors complained of by the appellant, in this court, are the decisions of the circuit court in sustaining demurrers to the first and second paragraphs of his amended complaint. In each of these paragraphs, the appellant sets up and relies upon the judgment of the court of common pleas upon his verified complaint, filed in October, 1871, as a complete and final determination of the priority of his claim against his decedent’s estate, over the general debts of the decedent. Prom what we have already said, it will appear, that, in our opinion, the said suit or proceeding of the appellant, and the judgment of said court therein, were wholly unauthorized by law, and that the judgment in question, obtained as it was in the absence of, and without any notice to, the general creditors of the decedent, could not be regarded as final and conclusive as to the rights of such creditors. "We need not set out, in this opinion, even the substance of the appellant’s amended complaint, as we are well satisfied, that neither paragraph thereof has stated facts sufficient to entitle him to the relief prayed for therein. ITis claim to the priority of his debt over the general debts of the decedent was a matter to be settled between him and the general creditors, but not in this form of proceeding. Prom the amended transcript, returned into this court on certiorari, it appeal’s that the general creditors of the decedent have, by written ex
We find no error in the record of this cause, for which, in our opinion, the judgment of the circuit court ought to be reversed.
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.