Stovall v. Clay

HARALSON, J.

This bill is filed for the purpose, amongst other things, of settling a mercantile co-partnership between Russell Clay, deceased, and the ap-pellee, M. A. Clay, one of the defendants below. This co-partnership was formed, some time in the year 1870 or 1871, — the exact úme is^not stated. Russell Clay was the father of M. A. Clay, and it is averred, that said Russell furnished all the capital, and M. A. Clay owned no interest in it. It is shown that tlieco-partnership “continued to do business until the year 1870.” In addition to its regular business of buying and selling goods, the firm loaned money and took mortgages to secure the same, and purchased real estate, and it is charged that M. A. Clay collected and retained for his own use, the amounts secured by said mortgages. All this went on in the life-time of Russell Clay, — for more than six years after the co-partnership was dissolved by closing up its business. Said Russell died' intestate, in December 1886. He left a widow and several children, all of whom, including said M. A. Clay, are averred to be over twenty-one years old, and are made parties defendants to the bill. No administration was e"ver had on the estate of said Russell, until the appellants were appointed his administrators by the probate court, on the 16th of May, 1893. It is further averred, that after the death of saicl Russell, said M. A Clay took possession of the entire estate of the former, both real and personal, collected the debts due the estate and the debts due the firm of R. W. and M. A. Clay, and used the entire property and estate of said decedent as his own, and has possessed himself of and claims everything as Toelonging to him. The wife, Matilda Clay, died in 1892, and this bill was filed on the 20th day of July, 1893, about seven years after the death of said Russell, and more than fourteen years and a half, since the year said co-partnei’-shipceased to transact business. Not a single co-partnership transaction is shown to have occurred after the year 1878, nor is it averred that any settlement of said co-partnership has ever taken place. Afier a co-partnership has been dissolved for such a length of time, and neither partner has taken any steps to bring about a set*109tlement-, for more than six years afler the last known co-partnership transaction, it has been long and well settled, that the right to have an account and settlement of the co-partnership dealings is barred. Bradford v. Spyker, 32 Ala. 135 ; Brewer v. Brown, 68 Ala. 210 ; Wells v. Brown, 83 Ala. 161 ; Chandler v. Wynne, 85 Ala. 301. It is manifest, therefore, that for the purpose of settling said co-partnership, this bill cannot be maintained, and the demurrer to that part of it was properly sustained.,.

2 The bill is equally unfortunate, as to that part of it which seeks to charge the defendant, M. A. Clay, with the rents, income and profits arising from the lands belonging to said estate, which are alleged to have come into his possession, or under his control, and with the proceeds of the sales of such lands as are alleged to have been made by him. It is alleged, that “the said Russell W. Clay died intestate, owing but few debts. His entire indebtedness did not exceed five hundred dollars, and such debts have been paid off and discharged by the said M. A. Clay, with money which was the property of decedent. There was no administration of the estate of Russell W. Olay prior to the appointment of complainants. No property has yet come to the hands of complainants. The entire estate of deceased is now in the hands of'the said M. A. Clay.” For what purpose, then, do these administrators seek to recover these real assets? They do not belong to them on the facts alleged, for the purposes of administration-, but belong to the heirs, and there being no .debts to .be paid, the-existence of the administration itself, offers no bar to the collection of them from the appellee by suit at law by the heirs if otherwise entitled.' The relations of an executor or administrator to the real estate of his testator or intestate, are regulated by statute in this state, and are well settled and understood. He has no estite or intere-t in the lands of the deceased whom he represents. They pass, as at common law, to the devisee, or in case of intestacy, to the heir, at the instant of the death of the ancestor, subject to be intercepted, in'either case, by the exercise by the personaT representative, of the power conferred by statute. But this.is but a bare power with which the statute clothes the personal representative, to be exercised in the mode and for the purpose expressed in the statute, — to pay debts of th'édeceaséd, orto effect *110an equitable division between the heirs or devisees. We may repeat what was said in one of the cases on the subject as especially applicable to the case in hand: “While by no act of the heir or devisee can the power be frustrated, the existence of the power itself depends upon the existence of the necessity for its exercise — the payment of the debts of the testator or intestate. When the necessity does not exist, — when there are no debts chargeable on the lands, — it would be more than idle and useless ceremony, to suffer the personal representative to disturb the possession of the heir, or of the de-visee, or of the alienee of the one or" the other. A just and prudent personal representative would not, then, assert the power, for his only duty would be, if he could assert it, to receive possession in one moment, and restore it in the next. It is not for any such purposes the statute confers the power and authorizes its exercise.” Lee v. Downy, 68 Ala. 98 ; Calhoun v. Fletcher, 63 Ala. 580 ; Tyson v. Brown, 64 Ala. 244 ; Woods v. Legg, 91 Ala. 512 ; 3 Brick. Dig: 464, §§ 146-156. These administrators have not only failed to show that any necessity existed for the exercise of these statutory powers by them over these real assets, for the purpose of administration, but they have shown, that no such necessity ever existed. The demurrer to this branch of thd bill was, therefore, properly sustained.

3. The appellants sought, by an amendment to the bill, —in which they alleged that said M. A. Clay promised his sisters, the other defendants, to account to them for their share of their father’s estate in said co-partnership'assets, and for the other property of their father in his hands, which promises he continued to make up to the death of their mother, in N92, — to show that said M. A. Clay was an administrator de son tort of said estate, and became a constructive and continuing trustee for the parties interested, who could in equity be held to an account to settle his trust, and that such trust being continuous, was not barred by the statute of limitations of six years. But this amendment is of no avail, since such a promise, if ever made to the sisters, could, in no. event, be enforced by these administrators. If by virtue of such promise, the defendant, M. A. Clay, came under trust relations to his sisters, that fact did not bring him in the same relations to the complainants as administra*111tors. The sisters are all of age, and are competent to sue at law or equity, to enforce their own rights in the permises, if they have any.

4. These administrators seek by their bill to remove the administration and settlement of the estate of their intestate from the probate to the chancery court. This, it has been repeatedly held, cannot be done by them, unless they show some specific equity, which the court of probate, by reason of its limited jurisdiction, is incompetent to settle. This equity may be said to exist, when the affairs of the estate are so greatly involved, that the personal representative cannot administer it without injustice to himself or injury to the estate, except under the diteciion of a court of equity. Harland v. Person, 93 Ala. 273 ; Cary v. Simmons, 87 Ala. 524. The administrators have failed to show that any such ground for the removal.of the administration of the estate from the probate to the chancery court, exists.

5. We need not consider the ground pf multifariousness of the bill; for, if not multifarious, that fact, from the view we have taken of the case, would avail appellants nothing.

We find no error in the decree of the cbancerv court, of which appellants can complain.

Affirmed,