108 N.C. 642 | N.C. | 1891
The order of reference was entered by consent of the parties, and the Court below, in all respects pertinent and material here, approved the findings of fact by the referee. It is not objected that there was no evidence to warrant such findings. Indeed, there was some. That it is not the province of this Court to review such findings of fact, is well settled by many decisions.
Regularly and properly, the defendants could not attack, collaterally, in this proceeding, the sale of the land made in the former special proceeding mentioned above to make assets to pay debts. That should be done by motion in the cause in a proper case, or by an action brought for the purpose. Sumner v. Sessoms, 94 N. C., 371; Garrison v. Cox, 99 N. C., 478; Smith v. Fort, 105 N. C., 446. But if this were not so, the defendants’ third exception could not be sustained, because the Court below distinctly found the fact that the sale of .the land complained of was made in good faith, and purchased by one who might buy and who paid a fair price for it. The sale was ratified by the Court, the purchaser took a proper deed therefor, and after-
It appears that the plaintiff paid several debts of his intestate with moneys other than such as constituted part of the assets of the estate in his hands, for which he was not allowed credit. It further ajspears, in that connection, that he received certain rents that he supposed to be assets, but the same were not allowed to be such, and the Court sustained the exception to the allowance of the same by the referee. This and like things done by the plaintiff show that, in paying debts of his intestate and charges of administration, he was not officiously paying the same with liis own funds simply for the purpose of creating a debt in his own favor whereby he might annoy and prejudice the defendants, but that he did so in good faith. The debt of the estate remaining unpaid is due to the plaintiff on account of moneys advanced and used by him to- pay debts of his intestate. The defendants'insist that such payments were officious, and also that the same are barred by the pertinent statute of limitation, and they cite and rely, in part, on Bevers v. Park, 88 N. C., 456. We think such payments by the plaintiff were not officious, but were such as were made through inadvertence, in part, as to what constituted assets in his hands, and also such as he might have made for the convenience and benefit of the estate. In such case, the administrator is entitled to be sub-rogated to the rights of the creditors whose debts he so paid with his own funds. In making such payments, he was not a mere intermeddler; he simply gave the estate, wherewith he was charged, the temporary benefit of his own funds in the course of administering the same. Williams v. Williams, 2 Dev. Eq., 69; Sanders v. Sanders, ibid., 262.
The defendants in their answer say that they “plead the statutes of limitation of ten, seven, six and three years, as prescribed in The Code, to all said claims, and aver that they are unable to plead the same more definitely to each and all of said claims.” This is clearly bad and insufficient