Teague v. Corbitt

57 Ala. 529 | Ala. | 1877

BRICKELL, C. J.

1. The principle to be extracted from our decisions is, that the court of chancery retains its original jurisdiction over administrations, the marshaling and distribution of assets, and the compulsory payment of legacies. The jurisdiction may be invoked by heirs, distributees, -or legatees, at any time before the concurrent jurisdiction of the court of probate has attached, without the assignment of .-any special reason; though it can not be by the executor or administrator except under special circumstances, where the powers of the court of probate are inadequate, or injustice to himself or injury to the estate may arise.—McNeil v. McNeil, 36 Ala. 109. No proceeding had been commenced in the court of probate for a final settlement of the administration, and none for distribution, prior to the filing of the present bill, and the case presented by it, falls within the ■original jurisdiction of a court of equity.

2. All the next of kin are, as a general rule, necessary parties to a bill for a final settlement and distribution of the estate of a deceased intestate, so that the rights and claims of all may be conveniently established at the same time and in the same suit.” — Story’s Eq. PI. § 89. It is not necessary to consider whether the averments of the bill disclose a case in which the court would dispense with the presence of a personal representative of Thomas J. Lawrence, a deceased distributee, and permit the original complainants as his next of kin to recover directly his distributive share. The statute -confers on the court authority, when the estate of a deceased person must be represented, and there is no executor or administrator, to appoint an administrator ad litem, for the particular proceeding. — Code of 1876, §§ 2625-26. The bill averring there was no personal representative of Thomas J., an administrator ad litem was appointed in pursuance of the statute, and the cause of demurrer in this respect removed, if it was well taken.

3. A plaintiff having a joint demand, may proceed in equity, against one or more of the parties thereto, without joining the others. — Code of 1876, § 3754. If the absence of Kelly, one of the sureties on the bond of the administrator, without the State, and beyond the jurisdiction of the court, was not, as we incline to think it was, (Moore v. Armstrong, 9 Port. 667,) a sufficient reason for omitting to make him a party, the complainants had the right under the statute, to proceed without him.

4. The bill discloses the relationship of the complainants do the intestate, and the statutes of descents and distributions *538fix their character as heirs and next of kin, and define their respective interests. It was not necessary to aver that they were entitled to recover of the defendants any particular sum, nor was it necessary to aver the amount of assets the administrator had received, and for which he was liable to account. The general averment that the intestate left a large real estate which the administrator had converted into money, or choses in action, by sales under decrees of the court of probate, and that he had received large sums of money from the. assets, real and personal, for which he was liable to account, bring the bill within the general rule, that a general charge or statement of the matter of fact is sufficient. — Story’s. Eq. PI. § 28. Greater particularity would have compelled the complainants to enter into mere matters of evidence. The demurrer to the bill was properly overruled. This disposes of the cross-assignment of errors made by the appellees.

5. The administrator claimed a credit for payments made on a judgment rendered against him in the Circuit Court of Henry county, on the ninth day of September, 1870, in favor of Hastings E. Owens, founded on a promissory note of the intestate and one Teague, on which the intestate was the surety of Teague. The date of the note was the first day of April, 1857, and it was payable to William G. Porter & Co., on the first day of January, 1858. There are credits endorsed on the note in the handwriting of one of the payees, the last of which bears date, December 5 1859, not reciting by whom they were made. The suit ripening into judgment on this note, was commenced on the fourth day of May, 1870. The intestate died in October, 1866, and administration in chief on his estate was, in November, 1866, committed to Daniel, a son-in-law. The note was presented to Daniel, as administrator, on the 10th day of March, 1867. In October, 1869, Daniel was removed from the administration, and on the 14th of December, thereafter, administration de bonis non, was committed to the appellee, Coi’bitt, as general administator of Henry county. On the 10th day of February, 1870, the note was presented to Corbitt. In March, 1870— the precise day is not shown — the personal representatives, of the payees transferred the note to Owens, the partner in the practice of law of the administrator, and who remained his partner until after the rendition of judgment; the particular time of the expiration of the partnership is not shown. The consideration of this transfer, beyond the payment by Owens of the fee of the attorney of the payees who had the custody of the note, does not appear. Owens instituted the suit by *539himself, as his own attorney; and Corbitt insisting the statute of limitations was a bar to a recovery, and for that reason having refused payment, as attorney for himself as administrator, assumed the defense of the suit. The suit by consent was taken up and tried at the first term of the court, when it was not regularly triable until twelve months thereafter. No plea was filed, but there was an oral suggestion to the-court that the note was barred by the statute of limitations,. Owens admitting the credits endorsed on it were in the handwriting of one of the payees, but offering no evidence to show that such payments had been actually made. These payments were in fact made by Teague, and not by the intestate, as is now shown by the evidence. Teague and his place of residence was known to Corbitt, but he made no-inquiry of him as to whether these payments were made by him or the intestate. It was not suggested to the court, that the burthen of proving these credits rested on the plaintiff to avoid the bar of the statute, nor was there any authority to satisfy the court such was the law referred to or introduced. The administrator, in his capacity of counsel for himself, was content with an oral suggestion that the statute was a bar, and the admission of the plaintiff that the credits-were in the handwriting of one of the payees. On these undisputed facts, we can not hesitate to declare the administrator is not entitled to a credit for any payments made on this judgment.

An administrator is bound to defend the estate he represents against claims which he may know or have good reason to believe are not well-founded; or against which a ground of defense exists, the intestate could have preferred. In making such defense he is bound to the same degree of diligence that he is in the prosecution of causes of action accruing to him in his representative capacity.—Fagan v. Fagan, 15 Ala. 335; Pearson v. Darrington, 32 Ala. 227. Whenever he claims a credit, and it becomes matter of dispute with creditors, or with the heirs or distributees, the burthen of' proving its correctness devolves on him. If it be a debt against the intestate, he must prove it by the same degree of’ evidence the creditor would have been compelled to introduce, if it had not been paid, and he had been compelled to an action for its recovery.—Savage v. Benham, 11 Ala. 49; Gaunt v. Tucker, 18 Ala. 27; Pearson v. Darrington, supra. The application of the assets to the payment of claims which do not of themselves affordyirima facie evidence of theirvalidity; or, if affording such evidence, which he knows, or-*540has good reason to believe, or the means of ascertaining by proper diligence, to be unjust or illegal, is a devastavit. If he pay a bond founded on a gaming, or any other illegal consideration, or a debt, the consideration of which has failed, or which has been paid by the intestate, with knowledge of the facts, or without using proper diligence to be informed of them, he must bear the loss, if those to whom he stands in the relation of a trustee, think proper to charge him. 2 Lomax’s Executors, 488, top p.

A judgment against him, in favor of a creditor, is prima Jade evidence against other creditors, and distributees, of the validity of the demand on which it is founded, and of his liability to pay it. It is not conclusive, and when he claims a credit for payments made on it, other creditors or distributees may show the invalidity of the demand, and that the judgment was the result of his laches in making the defense. The case of Pearson v. Darrington (supra), is an illustration of the principle. A judgment had been recovered against the administrator, founded on a note given by the intestate to merchants, to whom he had consigned cotton for its payment. A letter was among the papers of the intestate which could, and" ought to have been seen by the .administrators, from the payees, showing a sale of the cotton, .and after applying the proceeds of sale to the payment of the note, there was a balance due the intestate. The administrator defended against the judgment, but was unsuccessful, not introducing proof of the facts shown by the letter, of the ■existence of which he was probably ignorant. This court •said: “The exercise of proper caution and care required from Darrington an examination of the papers of the testator before judgment was rendered against him for the full amount of the note. Such an examination would have brought to his knowledge the letter. We hold, therefore, that Darrington could, by the exercise of proper diligence, have known of the defense, and was guilty of negligence in omit"ting to set it up.” Credits for payments on the judgment were disallowed.

An exception to the general principle we have stated, prevails in this State in reference to the statute of limitations. 'The personal representative is not bound to plead the statute: .a failure to interpose it as a defense, does not deprive him of :a right to a credit when accounting for the personal assets, ■.for debts which in good faith he may have paid, or judgments fairly recovered against him, which he may have paid, though the statute barred all legal remedy on such debts. *541But if, as in the present case, he refuses payment of a demand barred by the statute, on that specific ground, no other-ground of defense existing, inducing litigation involving the estate in costs^ and acts as his own attorney, he must exercise the same degree of diligence that would be required in making any other defense, and especially must this be true, when he stands in intimate and confidential relations to the creditor, which require that his conduct should be jealously scanned. It is not possible for us to believe that if the administrator had exercised reasonable skill and diligence in the defense of the suit any court would have rendered judgment against him. More than thirty-five years before the judgment this court had announced in terms not dubious, the principle to be found in the text-books in ordinary use by the profession: When an indorsed credit on a note is relied on for the purpose of taking the case out of the operation of’ the statute of limitations, such payment must be proved to have been made at the time it bears date.”—Watson v. Dale. 1 Port. 247. In June, 1838, in the case of MaGehee v. Greer (7 Port. 537), the principle was again announced, and it was said: “A payment on a note is, we think, precisely equivalent to an admission, that at the time of the payment, the debt is due; but it is necessary that the party relying on such payment should prove the date of the payment; to permit that fact to be established by the credit entered on the note, would be manifestly allowing the party relying on it to make evidence for himself.” It is apparent the administrator knew of this principle, and it is equally apparent he-did not, as a diligent counsel, faithful to his client, making a real defense, present it to the court. These authorities commending themselves to the common sense, and the sense of justice of all men, were not introduced or read,, or referred to, or their application suggested. Indeed, on the facts as shown by the record, the defense must have appeared to the court before which it was made, as more seeming than real. The case is taken up out of its order, twelve months in advance of the time when it was triable in the ordinary course of proceeding. The administrator makes-the oral suggestion that the statute of limitations is a defense. Does he deny that the credits endorsed on the note were real payments made by his. inteátate ? He does not so inform the court. Does he insist the plaintiff shall be required to prove these payments to have been made by the intestate to remove the bar? He does not so inform the court. It was not for the court to enter into a particular inquiry as to the facts on *542which a defense submitted for its decision, in such, general and indefinite terms, was grounded. In the case of McGehee v. Greer (supra), the note was presented to the defendant, who said he was entitled to a credit on it for a claim on one -Bend; and he was informed there was a credit on the note for such claim, and the note, with the credit, according to ■the best recollection of the witness, was shown him. The court say, considering a demurrer to the evidence: “We think, therefore, that as it is fair to infer that if the date of the credit had not been correct, the defendant would have ■objected to it for that cause — it must be considered as proven, that he admitted the credit made.” What was the objection to the credits on this note which were presented to the Circuit Court at the time of the judgment? If the payments which they indicate, had been made by the intestate, the statute was not a bar.—Taylor v. Perry, 48 Ala. 240. No other •objection to these credits was stated, (if this can be regarded ns stated expressly,) than that they were indorsed on the note in the writing of one of the payees. The judicial mind was never called to pass, and did not pass on any other. A specific objection of this kind would naturally induce a court to suppose that no other could or was intended to be raised. The objection in itself is simply frivolous. The true ground of objection, that which if properly presented, would have been fatal to a recovery, that the plaintiff was bound to prove a payment by the intestate at the time of these credits, and these credits being in the handwriting of the payees, and not of any person having authority to bind the intestate, was not evidence against the administrator — was not presented. Not being presented, and the only fact shown being frivolous, and • called for by the defendant, who, if really insisting on the statute of limitations, had no proof to offer, the court, we repeat, under the circumstances, would very naturally suppose the defense was seeming, not real. That if it was intended to require proof should be made of the credits as payments, the fact would be stated, as in the case of McGehee v. Greer, it was inferred if the defendant had denied the correctness •of the date of the credit, he would have done so in express words when the credit was shown him. An attorney in this ■.State, pursuing the course the administrator pursued, could .not acquit himself of liability to his client, who had been mulcted into a judgment reasonable skill and diligence on his part could have avoided. An administrator being an •.attorney, who blends his professional relation with his representative capacity, is bound to exercise for himself the *543same skill and diligence he could demand from an attorney employed by him. Every attorney owes his client reasonable skill and diligence, and is responsible for all injuries clients sustain which are traceable to a want of it.—Goodman v. Walker, 30 Ala. 482.

6. Again, it is apparent the administrator can not be reimbursed the payments made on this judgment, unless he is allowed to retain from the assets in his’hands arising, from the sales of the lands of the intestate, made under decrees of the court of probate. The money for which the lands were sold, as to the heirs, and as to all questions of charge or liability, or of descent or succession, must be regarded as a .substitute for the lands.—Williamson v. Mason, 23 Ala. 488; Chaney v. Chaney, 38 Ala. 35. Between an administrator or executor, and the heir or devisee, no relation of privity exists, and the real assets can not be bound by any admission or acknowledgment made by the personal representative. Hence, though the executor or administrator is not bound to plead the statute of limitations, and by omitting to plead it, or by an express promise in writing, may revive a demand the statute, bars, and thereby charge the personal assets, no .such charge can be created on the real assets.—Smith v. Bond, 2 Ala. 660. He is the owner of the personal assets as trustee; but the lands descend, if not devised, to the heir, or if devised, pass eo instanti the death of the testator, to the devisee; and as to the heir or devisee, his admissions or acknowledgments are res inter alios. Said Chancellor Kent, in Mowers v. White, 6 Johns. Ch. 373: “The executor possesses the personal estate as trustee, and the heir the real estate as owner; and is he to be charged, at the mere pleasure of the executor, with the debts of his ancestor ? Does it rest entirely in the discretion of the executor, whether the heir is or is not to be permitted to use the statute of limitations, which the law has provided as a measure of defense against a simple •contract demand, which, perhaps,' he knows to be unjust, though his ancestor has not left him the requisite proof? I can not bring my mind to assent to so unreasonable a proposition, nor to admit the heir is not entitled as against the creditor seeking to charge his estate, to use every lawful plea, unaffected by the .act or admission of the executor.” An administrator or executor paying a debt against the testator or intestate, is simply subrogated to the place of the creditor, and is clothed with his rights. If the debt is of a preferred class, the preference inures to him, if it is a charge on a part of the estate, to the benefit of the charge he *544is entitled.—McNeill v. McNeill, 36 Ala. 109. If in the hands of the creditor, it would not charge any part of the assets; the administrator or executor has not power, by mere payment, to convert it into a charge. If he takes the responsibiblity, as he may, when in good faith, exercising the discretion with which the law vests him, of paying debts barred-by the statute of limitations, he must be content with the right the creditor could have acquired,by his promise to pay,, a right to charge the personal assets only, he cannot create for himself the higher right to charge the real assets.—Collinson v. Owens, 6 Gill, and Johns. 4. A judgment against him, is as to the heir res inter alias actce, and is not evidence-of a debt against the ancestor, and if payment of it is claimed from the l'eal assets, oz’, if having paid it, he claims to retain from such assets, the heir may protect hiznself by showing the debt on which the judgment is founded was, at the time of its rendition, barred by the statute of limitations.—Darrington v. Borland, 3 Port. 38; McCoy v. Nichols, 4 How. (Miss.) 31; Mason v. Peter, 1. Mumf. 437; Robertson v. Wright, 17 Grattan, 534; Vernon v. Valk, 2 Hill Ch. 257. There was zio ground on which the administrator was entitled to a credit for payments made on his judgment. The chancellor erred in sustaining the exceptions to the report of the-register, disallowing such credit.

7. The principle which is generally recogzzized, that a trustee, who is an attorney or solicitor, can make no chaz’ge against the trust estate for services rendered to it in his professional capacity,has not been adopteC in this State. -Since-the case of Harris v. Martin (9 Ala. 895), the rule has been to allow thezn coznpensation for professional services necssaí’ily azzd bonce fide rendered for the benefit, or called into use-by the necessities of the trust estate. The amount of such compensation is not to be ascertaizzed by inquiring the usual and ordinary compensation for such services when rendered, and no other relation than that' of attorney or solicitor is bozme. The true inquiry is, as is said in Harris v. Martin (supra), “ what would a prudent individual, invested with the functions of administrator, feel authorized to pay an attorney, taking into consideration all the circumstances of the estate?” We are not prepai’ed to dissent from the conclusions of the register as to the compensation allowed the administrator, as an attorney or solicitor in the several causes in the Circuit Court and the Court of Chancery of Henry county, except as to the case of Owen, Adm’r v. Corbitt, Adm’r, and Gamble, Ex’r v. Fowler & Corbitt, *545Admr’s, to which we will refer hereafter. On questions of this character, referred to a register, and when he is compelled to draw conclusions of fact, dependent in a large degree on the evidence of witnesses examined before him, every reasonable presumption will be made in favor of his decision, and it will not be disturbed unless plainly wrong. Kinsey v. Kinsey, 37 Ala. 393. There should have been no compensation for professional services rendered in this court. In no one of the cases was there any service rendered which could not have been rendered by the administrator as an individual, and in the capacity of a suitor. Any party may appear in person in this, or any of the courts of the State, and submit their causes. The mere submission of a cause, without argument and without brief, requires no professional skill, and compensation for it as a professional service, cannot be allowed a trustee. The. chancellor should have sustained the complainant’s exceptions to the report of the register, allowing compensation for professional services in this court.’

8. A reasonable compensation should have been allowed the administrator for the services of the attorney employed by him to resist the unsuccessful application to compel him to give a new bond. It was litigation into which he was forced in his representative capacity, and he is entitled to reimbursement for the expenses of it.—Williamson v. Mason, 23 Ala. 488. In this, as in all cases in which a trustee claims a credit, it must be shown he has paid the counsel the amount for whic a credit is claimed.—Bates v. Vary, 40 Ala. 421. But no e’lowance should have been made to the administrator, for any professional service rendered by him in that proceeding. Having employed counsel to defend it, and no necessity existing for any assistant or additional counsel, it would be unjust to impose on the estate the bur-then of compensation to the administrator for an unnecessary service. It is not material that the compensation allowed to both, is equivalent only to reasonable compensation to the attorney he employed. If the attorney was satisfied with less than reasonable compensation, the estate, not the administrator, must profit by it.

9. The compensation for professional services in the case of Owens, Adm’r v. Corbitt, Adm’r, was not ascertained on a proper basis and the inquiries before the register were not directed to its proper ascertainment. The necessity of professional services, was in respect to this case the most material inquiry. All service rendered by the administrator, *546before the heirs and distributees intervened, was in the preparation and filing answer to the original bill. The heirs intervened by leave of the court, and employed counsel to defend the suit, who assumed the duty and responsibility of rendering whatever professional service the case should require. The administrator, if he continued to render professional service in it, rendered services not necessary, and for which compensation as solicitor should not have been allowed him. Eeasonable compensation for preparing and filing the answer, should have been allowed, but no more.

10. The suit of Gamble, executor, against Fowler, and, Corbitt, administrator, grew out of the wrongful act and negligence of Corbitt, in suspending, and failing to keep alive the execution against Fowler. A loss of the judgment in consequence of the act of the administrator in suspending, or the neglect to keep the execution alive, would have been visited on him. Compensation for his services as a solicitor in defense of this suit, should not have been allowed. An administrator can not by his negligence, or his wrongful act, involve the estate in litigation, and compel it to bear the costs.—Savage v. Dickson, 16 Ala. 253.

11. An administrator is entitled to an allowance on final settlement for reasonable counsel fees paid by him for services- rendered, except in the maintenance of improper contests with the heirs or distributees. The contest must, in the absence of some peculiar fact, be regarded as improper, when it is unsuccessful.—Anderson v. Anderson, 37 Ala. 683; Harris v. Parker, 41 Ala. 604; Pinkard v. Pinkard, 24 Ala. 250. This rule was not observed by the register in the allowance of a fee to the administrator for a defense of the present suit. The exceptions of the complainants to the report of the register should have been sustained to the extent we have indicated, and overruled in other respects. Let the decree be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

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