39 Ala. 716 | Ala. | 1866
We will first dispose of tbe question involving tbe correctness of tbe several rulings of tbe court below, which resulted in charging tbe executor with interest, notwithstanding be sought to relieve himself therefrom by tbe statutory affidavit; and we will consider this question without reference to tbe sufficiency of tbe affidavit, which was excepted to, on tbe ground that it did not meet tbe requirements of section 1813 of tbe Code.
It appears that tbe testator, by bis will, bequeathed certain specific property to particular persons, and directed that all tbe balance of bis estate should be sold on a credit of nine months, and tbe proceeds divided amongst all bis children. Tbe will was admitted to probate in tbe month of August, 1845. Tbe first partial settlement of which there is any mention, was made in July, 1850, near five years after tbe date of tbe probate of tbe will. On that settlement, there was a balance declared against tbe execu
There does not appear to have been any litigation pending against the estate, rendering it probable that the money would be needed; and we have looked in vain through the record for some good reason for this long retention of it. It is contended by counsel that a contest was pending during the whole period, in the probate court, on a suggestion that the executor had omitted to return in his inventory, as the property of the estate, a slave named John, who was claimed by the executor as his own property; and further, that Wright Mims, one of the legatees named in the will, had died, and that there was doubt as to whether his children would be entitled under the law to the legacy which had been bequeathed to their deceased father, the legatee having died before the testator; and that, for these reasons, the executor had set apart and retained the four thousand dollars. These reasons are wholly insufficient. No matter in whose favor the contest as to John might have terminated, no necessity could have been created by it, for the use of the funds of the estate; and the costs of the proceeding could not have been a proper charge against the estate, as is hereinafter decided. The pendency of this controversy might have been good cause for not making a final settlement of the estate, though a partial settlement and distribution of the fund might have been made; and as to the question whether the legacy to Wright Mims had lapsed or not, it was the duty of the executor to have had this determined within a reasonable time after the probate of the will. But there seems to have been no litigation, if there was any serious doubt upon this question, until the settlement in December, 1861, when it was brought before
The view we have taken above, renders it unnecessary to decide upon the sufficiency of the affidavit in this case, or to pass upon the rulings of the court below on either of the settlements, relating to the item of interest; and it disposes of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments of error.
This court decided, at an early period, that of such a proceeding, on the settlement of an estate, the orphans’ court had ample jurisdiction. — Dobbs v. Cockerham’s Distributees, 2 Porter, 328. And more recently, in a case which was three times before this court, in which was involved the identical question here presented, the action of the court each time upon the case was equivalent to an assertion that the court below had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, although disconnected from a settlement of the estate. — Mims v. Sturdevant, 36 Ala. 636. In the case last cited, the question of jurisdiction was distinctly made, but not decided; the court holding that the previous decisions in the case had virtually asserted the jurisdiction of the court below, and that such being the law of the ease, the court was bound by it.
It would have been more regular, and doubtless the better practice, for the contest as to the truth of the inventory in the particulars specified to have been made and determined at a settlement of the estate, when all the parties in interest would have been represented, and concluded by the proceedings. But the fact that all the proper parties were not before the court, could not affect the jurisdiction as to the subject-matter. And from the ample jurisdiction which the orphans’ court had, in all
It might be held, if the question was properly presented, that when one to whom a life-estate in property is given by will, with remainder over, waives, or from any other cause does not take the life-interest, that the remainder is accelerated, and vests in possession immediately; but we make no decision on this point, it not being properly presented by the record.
Having disposed of all the assignments of error, it results from what we have said that the decree of the probate court must be affirmed.