Yarbrough v. . Arrington

Thomas E. Yarbrough married Mary, a daughter of Frederick Battle of Nash County, in 1836, and shortly afterwards the father delivered *Page 205 to the husband several slaves. In 1840, Thomas E. Yarbrough removed to Arkansas, and carried the negroes with him. Being considerably indebted, and in the expectation that the slaves might be taken in execution if they remained any longer in his possession and apparent ownership in Arkansas, he requested his father-in-law early in 1843 to convey to the children of himself and his wife the said slaves, instead of conveying them to himself; and in May of that year Frederick Battle, by deed, conveyed the slaves, then being six in number, to Frederick and Emily, the two children of Thomas E. Yarbrough and his wife. In 1844 Frederick Battle died intestate, leaving a widow, and the said Mary and several other children; and Nicholas W. Arrington became his administrator and sold the personal estate, except some of the slaves. In that year, also, James S. Yarborough took from (292) Thomas E. Yarborough and his wife, Mary, in Arkansas, their joint bond for $1,200, and indorsed the same to the present plaintiff, who instituted an action of debt thereon in Nash County Court on 1 May, 1845, by original attachment, levied on the share of the land which descended to Mrs. Yarborough from her father, and obtained judgment therein for the debt, interest, and costs. The land levied on was sold and discharged a part of the judgment, and fieri facias was returned nulla bona as to the residue.

The plaintiff then filed this bill against Thomas E. Yarbrough and his wife, Nicholas W. Arrington, the administrator, and against the widow and other next of kin of Frederick, the intestate, praying satisfaction of the judgment out of Mrs. Yarbrough's distributive share of her father's estate, and to that end that all proper accounts should be taken which might be necessary to ascertain it. The bill charges that the defendants Yarbrough and wife have no other property in this State out of which satisfaction could be had.

The bill was taken pro confesso against Yarbrough and wife, after notice by advertisement for them, as nonresidents.

Arrington, the administrator, answered and insisted that the plaintiff had no right to call him to account in the premises. He admits that there are some slaves unsold, and that probably there will be a surplus of the estate after the payment of the intestate's debts, for division among the next of kin. But he insists that no part of it will belong to Mrs. Yarbrough, or very little, for the reason that the negroes, which her father, at the request of her husband, conveyed to their children, were intended and were in reality an advancement by the intestate to the daughter and her husband; and he states that they are of value nearly and probably fully equal to a distributive share of the estate. (293) *Page 206 There seldom arise, upon as few facts as exist in this case, as many legal questions of interest. That respecting the advancement, and the effect upon it of the act of 1806, is particularly so. Another is whether a share of a general residue, or a distributive share of an intestate's estate, be equitable property, out of which the court of equity should decree satisfaction of a judgment debt, even against persons resident here; or is it in the nature of a chose in "action," to be reached by the creditor through an assignment coerced by a capias adsatisfaciendum? As subsidiary to the latter question, it would be fit also to consider what effect the statute exempting females from imprisonment for debt would have upon it. And another question is, whether the Court should assume the jurisdiction and decree the satisfaction even out of the debtor's equitable property here upon a return of nullabona in an attachment against a nonresident, or should not leave the creditor to his legal remedy in the country of the debtor's domicile, or, at least, require him to establish that there, as well as here, the debtor had no property liable to legal process. In addition, it would be a subject for serious consideration whether the Court would aid a judgment rendered in attachment on a bond obtained from a married woman and not respecting her separate property, or whether those facts in themselves do not constitute a case of surprise and undue advantage taken of a person not sui juris and incapable of making defense, which would induce this Court to let the creditor get on as well as he could at law. Several of those points were made at the bar, and argued with much ability; and, perhaps, the Court might safely decide them upon (294) the lights derived from the discussion. It is deemed best, however, to pass them by for the present, as the cause may be decided, we think, upon another point, about which there seems to be little doubt.

The Court holds that the plaintiff cannot have a decree, because none that could be made would effectually protect the defendant Arrington for making the payment to the plaintiff which it would require of him. Independent of that objection, it may be much doubted, as the bond on which the demand arose was made in Arkansas, whether the case, as against the nonresident judgment debtors themselves, does not fall within the sixth proviso of the first section of the act of 1787, which says that the act (authorizing proceedings in equity against nonresidents) shall not be construed to warrant proceedings against a person residing without the State, unless the ground or cause of action on which the bill be brought took place within the State. But admitting that the proviso *Page 207 does not embrace this case, and that the Court would decree between the plaintiff and the absent defendants, were they the only persons to be affected, it is quite clear that no decree ought to be made which would also affect third persons, unless it would be a complete protection to them for doing whatever the decree should require of them. The Legislature did not intend that, under color of a decree against a nonresident, one should be made against a citizen, also, which nevertheless would leave him exposed to further litigation and liabilities abroad. Such would be the case here. For, as Yarbrough and wife have not been served with process nor appeared in the cause, the decree would have no binding extra-territorial effect; and at the suit of the present plaintiff, the courts of Arkansas would not enforce the decree, if it were necessary to its execution to ask their aid. Irby v. Wilson, 21 N.C. 568. That would, indeed, be no reason why the courts of North Carolina should not decree against the nonresidents in a case within (295) the act of 1787; for they must obey the Legislature, and it would be for the plaintiff to consider what use he could make of a decree elsewhere, in case he should wish it. But it is otherwise in respect to a third person resident here, who is brought in as a defendant, against whom a decree is asked, which affects both him and the absent party personally. In that case he has a right to say the Court ought not to bind him unless the absent party can be also bound, as between them, so that the decree shall bar any claim of the one defendant on the other. Now, it is perfectly clear, if the plaintiff could not enforce this decree abroad against Yarbrough and wife, because they were not parties to it, that for the same reason it could not be set up as a defense by Arrington to a demand of Yarbrough and wife on him for her distributive share. The consequence would be that Arrington dare not put his foot out of North Carolina without exposing himself to a suit for the distributive share, in which he would be compelled to pay it over again. That is so obviously unjust that no court ought to be drawn by any hardship into making such a decree, unless compelled by a positive legislative mandate. Such is the case in respect of attachments at law. But there is no statute in this State authorizing attachments in equity, which in substance this is; and, therefore both in respect of the justice due to the absent parties and, still more, in respect to the security of the garnishee, as he may be called, the Court cannot make the decree asked, but must dismiss the bill with costs.

PER CURIAM. Bill dismissed with costs.

Cited: Logan v. Simmons, 41 N.C. 182; Love v. Bowen, 55 N.C. 50. *Page 208

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