Court Opinion

ID: 8256788
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:32:32.479344+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:01.242656
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice FiSHER
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a final decree of the superior court of chancery dismissing the complainant’s bill. The bill alleges that the complainant recovered a judgment at the April term, 1838, of the circuit court of Wilkinson county, against the defendant for the sum of $4,083; that sundry executions issued upon said judgment, the last of which was returned nulla *211bona; that the judgment still continues in full force and unsatisfied.
The bill further alleges that the defendant is the administrator of the estate of one Catharine O. Philbrick, deceased; that as such administrator he has made certain settlements of his accounts with the probate court, by which it appears that the estate is indebted to the defendant in about the sum of $17,000. The answer admits that the estate will, upon final settlement, be indebted to the defendant in this sum. The object of the bill is to subject the money thus received or due to the defendant, to the payment of the complainant’s judgment.
In any light in which we can view the question, it cannot be regarded otherwise than as a proceeding to compel the defendant to appropriate money which he has either received or may receive from a particular source, to the payment of the judgment against him. The money due to the defendant could not be treated otherwise, so far as this case is concerned, than money actually retained by him in payment of his debt against the estate. Suppose, then, that the fact be admitted, that the defendant has received from the estate the sum of $17,000; that he has the money in his possession, and refuses to apply any part of it to the payment of the judgment against him, could this bill be maintained, and a decree entered compelling him to make the payment? Most clearly not, for the obvious reason, that the law has declared under what circumstances a man may be imprisoned for debt, and what facts must be ascertained by the verdict of a jury, before a writ for this purpose shall issue. The question is not what the law ought to be in such case, but what the legislature has declared it to be. The judgment is not a claim against the estate, and the court has therefore no right to pronounce a decree that the judgment shall be satisfied out of the goods and chattels of the estate in the defendant’s hands to be administered, for the plain reason that his accounts upon final settlement may be disallowed, and he adjudged to have no valid claim against the estate.
Decree affirmed.