63 Ala. 280 | Ala. | 1879
The present suit is an action of trover, brought by the administrator of a surviving widow, against the administrator of her husband’s estate, and seeks to recover for the conversion of the personal effects of the deceased husband, of the value of one thousand dollars, claimed to be exempt from the payment of debts, under the act “To regulate property exempted from sale for the payment of debts,” approved April 23, 1873. — Pamph. Acts, page 64. Mr. Henderson, the husband, died October 14th, 1874, and Mrs. Henderson, the widow, died October 18th, 1874 — four days afterwards. They left no children, or lineal descendants. Administration was appointed on' the estate of Mr. Henderson soon after his death; and there was returned an inventory and appraisement of the personal estate and effects, showing a valuation of something over one thousand dollars. An order to sell these personal effects was applied for and obtained; and soon afterwards the administrator of Henderson sold the personal chattels for cash. The amount of this sale, together with the sum realized from the credits to which he succeeded as administrator, was less than one thousand dollars. No steps were taken, either by Mrs. Henderson, the widow, or by her administrator, or by the administrator of Mr. Henderson, to select and set apart for the widow the one thousand dollars worth of personal property exempt from administration, until the present claim was asserted. This money, proceeds of sale and collections, was disbursed, soon afterwards, in payment of Henderson’s debts, before any claim was asserted to it by the wddow, or her administrator. Henderson’s administrator was appointed November 2d ; the order of sale granted November the 9th, and the sale of the personal property made December 1st, 1874. The entire sales and collections amounted to seven hundred and eleven dollars.
On the 8th day of December, 1874, administration was taken out on the estate of Mrs. Henderson; but the administratrix “never made any demand, or instituted or set up any claim to any of the personal property left by said Willis E. Henderson, deceased, as exempt to her intestate from the debts of said W. E. Henderson, deceased, either in said Probate Court, or otherwise.” On the 11th December, 1875, the administratrix of Mrs. Henderson resigned her administration, and made her final settlement in February, 1876.
1. To maintain the action of trover, the plaintiff must have the legal title, general or special, of the property sued for, and the right to the immediate possession of the thing alleged to have been converted. — 2 Greenl. E’v. § 636; Stodder v. Grant, 28 Ala. 416; McNutt v. King, 59 Ala. 597. A partial or equitable interest, a lien not created by a convey^ anee of the legal title, or by delivery of possession, or a right .to a part of an unsevered bulk, does not confer a right to the immediate possession, and will not support the action of trovet. — Magee v. Billingsley, 3 Ala. 679.
2. The right of the plaintiff to maintain the present action depends on the proper construction of sections 3 and 13 of the act approved April 23, 1873. — Pamph. Acts, 64. Section 3 declares, that “personal property, to the value of one thousand dollars, of any resident of this State, after his death, shall be exempt from the payment of debts; Provided, such decedent leaves surviving him a widow or child.” The language of section 13 is, “That whenever an executor or administrator makes out an inventory of the estate of any decedent, who left surviving him a widow or minor child, it shall be bis duty to permit said widow, or the guardian of such child or children, if there be no widow, or she does not act, to select the property exempt from administration for the payment of debts; and if neither the widow (n)or guar
Mr. Henderson left a widow, but no child or children, surviving him. It is clear that the widow, surviving her husband as she did, w;as entitled to have set apart for her this thousand dollars of personal property, exempt from administration for the payment of her deceased husband’]? debts. She comes directly within the letter of the statute, and the fact that she survived her husband only four days can not vary the question. But we do not think the statute vested the title in her by its unaided force. Either she, or her personal representative, must have made the selection, or commissioners, appointed by the judge of probate, must have done so, before the right to the possession of specific property could vest in her, or her estate. It was possibly the duty of Mr. Henderson’s administrator, to apply for, and have commissioners appointed for the purpose, when the widow and her administrator failed to make the selection ; but we leave that question open, until its decision becomes necessary. Till the selection was made, in one of the modes pointed out in the 13th section of the act, no such title and right to the possession vested in Mrs. Henderson, or her administrator, as will maintain the action of trover. — See Ex parte Reavis, 50 Ala. 210.
It will be observed, that this is not an action for money had and received. Had it been, we would have felt it our duty to consider the case of Hastings v. Myers, 21 Mo. 519, as bearing on it. Neither is it a case of specific property exempt from administration, which requires no act to vest the title in the widow. — See Carter v. Hinkle, 13 Ala. 529; York v. York, 38 Ill. 522. "We base our opinion on the nature of the claim — a right to elect, under the provisions of the statute — which, as we have shown, fails to give a right to specific property, until one of the modes of selection has been pursued.
The rulings of the Circuit Court are not in harmony with our views ; and its judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.