60 Ala. 201 | Ala. | 1877
The power of the executor to sell for the payment of debts, is distinct from, and must not be confounded with, the power to sell for the purpose of raising an interest-bearing fund for the benefit of Mrs. Crenshaw,
"While the power of an executor, or administrator, over the choses in action in his hands for administration, is of necessity large, and he may be dealt with generally as if he was the owner of them, he is without authority to apply them in payment of his individual debts. Whoever accepts them as security for, or in payment of such debts, has full notice of the abuse of his fiduciary power and duty, and must be answerable for them.—Swoope v. Trotter, 4 Port. 27; Waring v. Lewis, 53 Ala. 615; Van Hoose v. Bush, 54 Ala. 342. The bill which had reached maturity, though the executor was the principal debtor, was also the debt of the testator; and it cannot, with any propriety, be said that Dew was receiving, or the executor applying the assets, in payment of his own debt, so far as that bill is concerned. The principle to which we have adverted applies, only when the assets are employed to pay debts of the executor, with which the testator is not chargeable, and for which the assets are not bound.
"When an estate is decreed insolvent, exclusive jurisdiction of all claims against the decedent is transferred to the Court of Probate, and they cease to be the subject of a suit, at law or in equity, against the ■ personal representative. He is without authority to pay any creditor, nor can he, by any acknowledgment or admission, relieve the creditor from the bar the statute creates, if he fails for nine months by filing his claim to commit it to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Probate. The distribution of the assets to creditors is through the decree of the court, and when the personal representative, in obedience to the decree, applies them, he is discharged from liability. There are claims, which the statute does not bar, though not filed : claims which do not accrue until the bar is complete, and claims in favor of infants and persons of unsound mind. The purpose of the provision of the statute, on which the appellant relies, is, that these creditors, having filed their claims within nine months after their accrual, or the removal of their disabilities, shall receive their just proportion of the assets. Of the personal representative, there can be no recovery; for he has applied the assets under a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, and in obedience to the statute. The recovery is from creditors who have received dividends under the decree of the court. The statute does not authorize a recovery from a creditor to whom the personal representative, having full and complete power to pay debts, and who, as to creditors, is presumed to know how much he can safely
The decree of the chancellor, dismissing the bill as to the personal representatives and heirs-at-law of Dew, must be affirmed.
The payment by Pippin to the executor, of the notes he gave for the purchase-money of the lands, was not, as the chancellor decreed, invalid. There was no want of power in the executor to accept Confederate treasury-notes in payment; and it was on this ground, and not because of any evidence of a want of good faith in the purchaser or the executor, the chancellor proceeded in rendering the decree.—Van Hoose v. Bush, 54 Ala. 342. The decree against John Pippin, William Pippin, and Thomas Dougherty, must be reversed on the cross-assignment of errors by them, and a decree here rendered dismissing the bill as to them.
The appellant Shelton must pay the costs of the appeal by Pippin and others, and one-half of the costs of his own appeal; the other half will be paid by the next friend of Mrs,