44 Mich. 251 | Mich. | 1880
The bill in this case is filed by complainants as creditors who have proved a claim against the estate of Lafayette Brown, deceased, which is under settlement in the probate court of Clinton county. The bill, which is
The bill further claimed that Walbridge had suppressed and not filed the report of claims, amounting to over $10,000, of which complainants were allowed $808.12, and had failed to account though cited. The bill claims that the mortgage was fraudulent, and that Walbridge had been offered an indemnity to sue the widow. The bill prayed an account and an application of assets, and for the filing of the report.
It appears, however, that the report has been filed, and that claims of the widow against the estate were allowed by the commissioners, and that complainants have appealed from the allowance to the circuit court. The question of the rights of the estate against her, or of her claim against the estate, having already been passed upon by the commissioners, and still being in course of litigation on the appeal, there can be no power in a court of equity to examine into the subject. Whatever remedy exists against her is a legal remedy for money had and received or for the value of the chattels sold, in the one case, and on the notes in the other. The remedy in the probate and circuit courts, both for investigating the accounts and settling claims and set-offs, is not only sufficient, as held in Rathbone's Estate, ante, p. 57, but is also imperative when once the controversy has been opened. Green v. Probate Judge 40 Mich. 244. And complainants themselves have become active participants in that litigation. Nothing can be done in equity which could not be as well or better done in the other tribunals where the
We have already decided that a bill of discovery can no longer be filed in this State. Riopelle v. Doellner 26 Mich. 102. This bill was not filed as such, but mainly to enforce an alleged liability which could be enforced a.t law, and which was already in a position to be investigated under the usual course of prohate. An answer under oath was waived by complainants. We think, therefore, that the case was improperly brought, and that it was not competent to grant the decree which was entered below, but that the case belongs elsewhere. We refrain from discussing the facts, because they are heyond our reach in the present suit, and will be considered in the proper tribunal.
The decree must be reversed and the bill dismissed with costs of both courts.