39 N.C. 97 | N.C. | 1845
The case made in the bill is, that the defendant is the executor of John H. Blount, and as such, sold his personal estate at public sale; and that he procured one Benjamin Skinner to bid for the crop of corn that was then growing, and to purchase the same time for him Leigh; and that he returned (98) an account of sales of the estate, to the county court, in which the said Skinner was set down as the purchaser, although, in fact Leigh was himself the purchaser, through Skinner as his agent; that subsequently, Leigh cultivated the crop, gathered it, and sold it for much more than it had brought at the sale, and that he had applied the excess to his own use. The bill further states, that the plaintiff was a creditor of Blount by bond, and brought suit thereon against the executor, who pleaded plene administravit and retainer; and that, upon the trial of the issues joined thereon, the plaintiff read, as his evidence to charge the executor with assets, the accounts of sales which had been returned by him; and the jury there upon found, that the defendant had assets applicable to the plaintiff's demands, to the amount of $653.99, and that he had no other assets; and that thereupon, the plaintiff took judgment for that sum of $653.99, and for the residue of his debt, namely, $2,130.16, he took judgment quando. The bill states, that the plaintiff read the account of sales in evidence, under the belief that it set forth the assets truly, and that the persons were really the purchasers of the property who were there stated to have been so, and at the price therein set forth; and that the plaintiff did not know to the contrary, until recently before the filing of this bill; and that, upon the discovery that the defendant was, himself, the real purchaser of the corn, and that, by reason thereof, the first sale was void, and that he had resold it for a great advance in price, he applied to the defendant to account with him in respect of such additional sum as was realized from the corn, by applying the same to the discharge of the balance due the plaintiff on his judgment; which the defendant refused. The plaintiff then filed this bill, and the prayer is for a decree to the same effect.
The defendant put in a demurrer to the bill, which was overruled; and then he was allowed to appeal. If the crop was still growing, when the trial at law took place, it is probable it might be reached at law by a scire facias on the judgmentquando, and there would be no necessity for resorting to this Court. Marav. Quin, 6 Term, 10. It does not appear in the bill how the fact was, as it ought properly speaking. But we take it for granted, that the crop had been gathered and sold the second time, for the advanced price mentioned in the bill. Still, we think the bill can not be sustained.
There is no doubt that creditors may come into a court of equity against executors, or against them and the heirs or devises, for accounts and for payment out of the proper fund. It seems to be the common mode in England, at the present day, for administering estates, and is certainly much the most convenient, as it saves vast expense and trouble in trying issues at law, as to the assets, where every voucher is to be proved, over and over again, against every creditor, and as considerable portions of the assets in that country, in almost every case, are equitable. We hold the same thing here. Simmons v. Whitaker,
The plaintiff must pay the costs in this Court.
PER CURIAM. DECREED AND ORDERED ACCORDINGLY.
Cited: Powell v. Watson,