Court Opinion

ID: 8298536
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 11:09:55.582396+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:11.695276
License: Public Domain

Snodgrass, J.
This is a suit to recover the interest of John Armfield Franklin in the estate of John Armfield, who died testate, in Grundy County, Tennessee, in 1871, leaving a large personal estate to five legatees — testator’s wife and four others. The widow dissented from the will, and took her interest under the law upon dissent, so that only the remainder of the estate was left to pass under the will. The four legatees entitled to it were the present complainants, Ed N. Franklin, John Armfield Franklin, Mrs. A. Yanbibber, *122and Mrs. JB. Archer. One of these, John Arm-field Eranklin, died in November, 1871. Ed N. Eranklin was appointed and qualified as administrator of his estate December, 1876. John Arm-field Eranklin had, in fact, died testate, but his will was not discovered for many years thereafter, and not established, it being ‘contested, until several years later — facts to be more particularly stated hereinafter.
The defendant, J. W. Eranklin, was ■ named as executor in the will of John Armfield. He qualified as such in the County Court of Grundy County October 2, 1871, and made a settlement of the estate with the Clerk of said Court July 30, 1875. In this settlement he was. charged with $27,342.99 and credited with $12,209.54, leaving balance then in his hands of $15,133.45. On September 21, 1877, he made a final settlement, showing balance in his hands from former settlement, $15,133.45; collected since, $30,327.72; total, $45,-461.77; credits since, $14,228.35; due distributees, $ 1,232.82. Amount due the widow of this sum was $10,410.94, leaving $20,821.88 to pass under the will, or $5,205.22 to each of the three living legatees, and the same amount to J. W. Eranklin, who was the father and distributee of the dead one, John Armfield Eranklin. This sum he kept as such distributee and appropriated. The remainder he paid to the parties already named entitled to it. All the parties acquiesced in the settlement, and the present complainant gave his *123receipt for balance in full due him under it December 24, 1877.
In January, 1885, Defendant J. W. Franklin, as executor of John Armfield, collected a claim of his testator’s estate against the Dnited States Government of $18,000, which, after deducting executor’s compensation and attorney’s fees paid for its collection, and paying the widow, left in his hands for distribution the sum of $1,890 for each living legatee and the distributee of John Armfield Franklin. He appropriated this $1,890 as such distributee, and he also applied the same amount due Ed H. Franklin 'on debts which he held against Ed U. Franklin. The other legatees he paid in full.
In the • meanwhile, about the time of -the collection and disposition of this fund, a will of John Armfield Franklin was found. This will, which we quote for the purpose of construction hereinafter, is as follows :
“Washington, Ga., October, 1871.
“ This is my last will and testament. I will and bequeath to my brother, Edward H. Franklin, my entire estate, including my interest in my Uncle John Armfiold’s estate, my shotgun, Winchester rifle, watch, gold-headed cane, and every thing that is mine. He is to have the interest arising from a proper investment of the money from my uncle’s estate, to do with as he pleases, but the principal is to go to his children in case he has any. In case he dies without heirs, I *124want my sister, Mrs. Adele Vanbibber, to have it on same conditions. I appoint my brother, Ed N. Franklin, to qualify as my administrator and act without bond. I want him to buy a ticket to Louisville, Ky., for Alice and give her $500.
“J. A. FRANKLIN.”
It was offered for probate at the April term, 1885, of the County Court of Sumner County, was contested, and finally established as the will and ordered probated, and admitted to probate April 18, 1891,’ in the County Court, under decree of this Court pronounced March 6, 1891. "When the will was admitted to probate Ed N. Franklin qualified as executor. On April 28, 1891, he procured an order of the County Court annulling and revoking his appointment as administrator of the estate of John Armfield Franklin, which had been made, as before recited, on December 28, 1876.
Before this will was admitted to probate, Ed N. Franklin, in his own name, and as next friend of his minor children, legatees under the discovered will, filed a bill quia timet, alleging facts of discovery and pending contest of the will of John Armfield Franklin, and seeking to bring the executor of John Armfield to a settlement. This bill was filed March 24, 1890.
After the will was admitted to probate, and on April 29, 1891,. he filed an amended and supplemental bill as executor of said will, and as next friend of said minors, for same purpose — that is, to compel settlement by the executor, and to recover *125tlie distributive share of John Armfield Eranklin in John Armfield’s estate, which, as we have before seen, had been received and appropriated by J. W. Eranklin as distributee of the estate of his deceased and supposed intestate son.
The defense was the statute of limitations of three, six, and ten years. By cross-bill defendant also sought to have his own claims against Ed ET. Eranklin set off against any recovery Ed R. might show himself entitled to as legatee of John Arm-field Eranklin.
Whether the first bill quia . timet can be considered as arresting from date of its . filing the statute of limitations, as intimated such a bill might do in the case of Brown v. Brown, 14 Lea, 259, and thereby make it in time to save the bar of the statute of six years, if J. W. ■ Eranklin must be treated' as having held the $1,890 as dis-tributee and not as executor since it was received in January, 1885, the Court deems it unnecessary to decide, though it does decide that six and not three years is the least time that could bar such action. By the majority so determining, the Court also holds that, sued as executor who had made final settlement in 1877, but none as to the last money of the estate received in January, 1885, the only statute which could be applicable in ’ his favor was that of ten years. The question is whether that can be relied on as to final settlement of 1877. The Chancellor held it could not, and defendant appealed.
*126The theory upon which it is now insisted hy complainant that this statute did not run, is that the appointment of Ed N. Franklin as administrator of estate of John Armfield Franklin in 1876 was void, and that, therefore, there was no one capable of suing until the appointment and qualification of the executor in 1891.
The first appointment is assumed to he void because John Armfield Franklin did not die intestate, and it is insisted that the County Court therefore had no jurisdiction to appoint an administrator. If the contention be true that the appointment was void, then the statute did not run. If the appointment was valid — -if only voidable — the statute did run; and this is the main question in the case. The appointment Vvas not void. This question is not an open one in this State. Pinkerton v. Walker, 3 Haywood, 220; Baldwin v. Buford, 4 Yer., 20.
In England, at common law, the rule prevailed that an appointment of an administrator by the ordinary, made in derogation of the right of an executor qualified or acting with or without probate of the will (for there he could do almost • all the acts incident to his office except some relating to suits before probate: 1 Williams on Executors, top paging 338-347, 6th Am. Ed.), or who had not renounced the trust, or from whom the will had been concealed (by party obtaining letter, as explained by Judge Freeman in dissenting opinion in Brown v. Brown, 14 Lea, 383) was void. See *127Williams, on Executors, Vol. I., Book 6, Ch. 3, top page 655, 6th Am. Ed.
The rule was recognized at least to the full extent in case of an appointment where there were living executors appointed and qualified and capable of acting, in two eases in the Supreme Court of the United States. Griffith v. Frazier, 8 Cranch, 9 (Lawyers’ Co-op. Ed., Book 3, p. 471); Kane v. Paul, 14 Peters, 33 (Lawyers’ Co-op. Ed., Book 10, p. 341).
But in the former it was distinctly recognized as the rule that if a Court grant administration where there is an executor who has not qualified, its act, though erroneous, is valid until repealed (pages 25, 26), and the latter refers to this case as authority. Both are digested as deciding this principle by legitimate deduction in the Indexed Digest of Supreme Court Reports, Yol. I.,- p. 793.
■Here there is no cause for the application of the English doctrine of “concealment” if the entire rule on that subject prevailed in this State, because there was no. pretense that the will was concealed by defendant or any one else.
But in the 4 Yerger ease already cited Judge Catron points out the distinction between the executor’s right derived almost exclusively from the will under the English law, and his right under our law as affected by statute, and shows the English rule so "founded not applicable here (pages 19, 20, 21). And the distinction is further elaborated in Fay v. Reager, 2 Sneed, 200, and Kille*128brew v. Murphy, 3 Heis., 551; the latter case probably going too far in assuming the existence of certain power in the executor in advance of qualification, though the power did exist in tlie same person as widow, and hence the case was on this point correct upon its facts.
Under our law the County Court is a Court of general and exclusive jurisdiction on the subject of administration; and when it makes an appointment of an administrator on the estate of a deceased resident of this State, the appointment is valid until revoked.
Residence in a given county, like intestacy, is made a requisite of the power to appoint, and it has been said an appointment made by the County Court of a county in which a deceased had no residence at time of death is void. Wilson v. Frazier, 2 Hum., 30.
But the term was inaccurately used for voidable, for the Court, in the very case in which it was used, held that it was only voidable, and that to adjudge it void there must be a contest in the Court where made; and this exact point was afterward decided in the case of Johnson v. Gaines, Ex’r, 1 Cold., 288, and again explicitly determined in the case of Railroad Company v. Mahoney, 5 Pickle, 311.
There it was said that the County Court was authorized to determine for itself the existence of the facts which authorized the appointment, and, having done so, the appointment was not void. Page 318.
*129It is true that in that case there was no question of intestacy, and the question was one of residence or inhabitancy, and the principle was not extended there beyond the case of an admitted intestate; but intestacy, like inhabitancy, is one of the facts the County Court must determine, and the two questions fall together within the power of the Court to settle when the appointment of an administrator is asked. When the appointment is made, both are adjudged, and that is conclusive until reversed or vacated. Schluter v. Bank, Lawyers’ Reports, Annotated, Book 5, pages 513, 514, and authorities cited.
In the Schluter case, which was a well-considered one where many authorities were referred to in argument and by the Court, the Court said: “Our attention has been called to no case, and we are confident that none can be found, holding that the subsequent discovery of a' will, and its admission to probate, renders the prior appointment of an administrator absolutely void, so as to give no protection to persons who in dealing with the administrator have acted on the faith thereof.” Page 513, citing further Woerner on Administration, pages 563, 571, 588.
It would have been more nearly correct, if not absolutely so, to have said: “Ro modern case can be found so holding.” See also 4 Ohio, 138; 58 Maine, 225; 31 Maine, 504.
Like intestacy, as we have seen, the question of residence has been treated as a jurisdictional *130one, and there are ■ cases cited in the hooks in which it has been held that finding it incoi’rectly by the Court authorized to make the appointment, rendered the appointment void. There were a number of these cases in Massachusetts. See cases collected in 1 Williams on Executors, top page 631, 6 Am. Ed., note G.
But the rule is now changed in that State by statute to meet the hardship involved in such a judicial view (.Ibidand specially opinion in Record v. Howard, 58 Maine, 225.
The only apparent qualification of that doctrine (for it is not really so) is the appointment of an administrator on the estate of a living man, for this is universally held void, and that upon the ground that no Court is vested with such jurisdiction. Railroad Company v. Maloney, 5 Pickle, 319; Moore v. Smith, 73 Am. Dec., 122, and notes; 47 Am. Pep., 458, and notes; 107 Ill., 517.
Death is the one fact which must exist to give any Court jurisdiction. When it exists the others of residence and intestacy are open to proof. If decided erroneously the appointment may be voidable, but is not void. One Court went to the extent of holding that erroneous ascertainment of this fact did not make such an appointment void. But subsequently the same Court held that appointment void, it appearing that the Court in fact had not received evidence of it. Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution, 32 Am. Rep., 309 (N. Y.).
*131"When the question first arose in this State, it ■was by a divided Court that it was settled adversely to the validity of such appointment where the fact of death was found incorrectly in the appointment. 4 Lea, 251. But it is obvious from that ease that such fact was the only one the non-existence of which would render such appointment absolutely void.
To the same effect, as the question is now settled that the action of the County Court making the appointment is only voidable and not void, are the eases of Varnell v. Loague, 9 Lea, 158; Posey v. Eaton, 9 Lea, 504; Brown v. Brown, 14 Lea, 253; State v. Anderson, 16 Lea, 321.
There were three cases determined together in the last opinion. The facts of all are not given,but among the cases in which Anderson’s appointment was held not void was one in which there was a will naming an executor. Do distinction was taken as to the validity or invalidity of Anderson’s appointment as administrator on this account, because, though the question was made, the Court held that none existed. Counsel cite other unreported cases to same effect.
"We think no question is better settled in this State, and in the current of modern authority, or upon sounder reason. Wills may frequently be made and lie, as this, for years without discovery. The exercise of the jurisdiction ,of appointment of an administrator would be always unsafe and uncertain if the appointment was to be rendered *132void ab 'initio by the discovery of a will. The evils attendant upon such a rule are far greater than can possibly result from the contrary holding. It were better that rights thus acquired should be settled by the statute of limitations than that parties should never acquire any in cases of administration, or never be sure that those supposed to have been acquired were in fact so.
The old English rule to the contrary was in-1857 changed there by statute 20 and 21 Victoria, Chapter 77, Section 75, cited in 1 Williams on Executors, 6th American Edition, pages 619, 632, 639. And so it is generally changed where it ever prevailed in the American States by effect of statutes making executor’s power depend on Court appointment and qualification. 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 193, and notes; 1 Williams on Executors, top page 347, and notes, 6th Am. Ed.
The settlement made in 1877 was final in the sense of the statute, notwithstanding years after another claim due the estate, not therein included, was collected by the executor; and suit to recover balance due in that settlement could not be sustained after ten years. As neither bill in this cause was filed within ten years of that date, no recovery can be had on that account. The money received in January, 1885, was within ten years of the filing 'of either bill, and recovery, therefore, can be had as to the $1,890 due as John Arm-field Eranklin’s proportion of that fund.
The complainant will therefore, as executor of *133John Armfield Franklin, recover this amount with interest from the date it came to the hands of defendant as executor of John Armfield. He will recover interest because there was nothing to prevent a payment of that fund at that time, as there was a party in existence capable of receiving it— tiie representative of John Armfield Franklin’s estate.
After it is received, complainant, as legatee, has an interest, but what that interest is can only be ascertained after settlement of expenses of the estate incurred in litigation — it seems there are no debts or other charges against the estate. But it is obvious that large expenses have been incurred in establishing the will and prosecuting this cause, and it is only out of the net surplus that the legacy is to be settled. Of whatever this may be, complainant will be entitled to a life estate, and defendant to a set-off as to this, on account of his debts established as decreed by the Chancellor.
The corpus of the fund remaining after settlement of expenses and charges indicated, will, on the expiration of the life estate of Ed U. Franklin, belong to his surviving children, who take as a class under the will, the bequest being to a class of persons subject to fluctuation by increase or diminution of its number in consequence of future births or deaths, and the time of payment or distribution of such fund being fixed a.t a subsequent period on the happening of a designated event, and the bequest being of an aggregate fund *134given to the children as a unit and passing a joint interest. 7 Yer., 606; 11 Hum., 58, 478; 2 Sneed, 9.
The word “heirs” used in the will is manifestly-used in the sense of children.
The cause will .be remanded for an account to ascertain the amount, if any, which may be the subject of set-off in favor of defendant.
The costs of the cause accrued below will be paid two-thirds by defendant and one-third by complainant; that of this Court will be equally divided between them, both having appealed and assigned errors. The amount charged to complainant may be paid out of the fund recovered to be administered.