Hughes v. Pike

Gregg, J.

It appears of record, that at the September term, . 1867, an administratrix of the estate of William Harviek, obtained a decree for the payment of six hundred dollars and. the foreclosure of a mortgage, on certain real estate, made to-secure the payment of the writing obligatory for that sum.

' The decree was very irregular; it is in form final, yet it requires a further report to be made, and it fails to describe the lands ordered sold, etc., hut sufficient appears to show the determination of the court.

At the November term, 1870, the appellant, as administrator de bonis non of said estate, appeared and filed his application to have the decree enforced, showing that it was in no way satisfied, etc. ' The appellee was notified, and he appeared and resisted the enforcement, of the decree, and showed that in 1868 lie told the appellant that if he did not abandon said decree and have it satisfied, he would have him enjoined from enforcing it, and that appellant said he would satisfy the decree if the Probate Court would authorize him so to do, and relieve him from liability; that his “object was simply to discharge his duty in the premises.”

That the appellant, in person, went before the Probate Court and represented that the decree had not been paid off, and that the new Constitution of Arkansas prohibited the ■collection of notes, judgments or decrees, wherein the consideration was the sale of slave property, and asked for an ■order directing what to do. And, by consent of the court, in Ms own handwriting, entered up an order directing himself to enter satisfaction of said decree on the chancery record of the county, and releasing him from all responsibility, as'-such administrator, for the amount of the decree.

The matter being thus presented to the court, the chancellor refused the application, and adjudged that the appellant was barred from further proceeding’ on said decree, and that he pay costs. From which, the administrator has appealed to this court.

The question now is, whether the action of the appellant, as such administrator, and of the Probate Court, amounted to a satisfaction of the decree, or estopped the administrator from further claim thereto?

It is clear there was no defense, in law, sufficient to deprive the heirs of Harvick of their right to the amount of this decree, and it is quite clear from the record, that the administrator was not faithfully discharging his trust. It was far from-his duty to be petitioning the Probate Court in a manner that amounted to about the same as asking that the decree be released to the appellee. And if this sum had been lost to the estate, when he was sanctioning and conniving at such, proceedings, he certainly ought to have been held personally liable therefor. But we are of opinion that his promise to-enter satisfaction of the decree, even under-the sanction of an order of the Probate Court, was no satisfaction. Had he improperly procured such order, and released the decree, he would have been liable to the estate; if the court had made such order without his procurement, it would have been without authority of law, and he was not bound to obey it. It would, in fact, have been his duty to disobey'it, and it was and is his duty to be vigilant in collecting and taking care of the estate, and not to barely perform such duties as the law forced him to do, as his own language intimates. This proceeding, therefore, was not a satisfaction of the decree, nor was the Probate Court, as contended for, an arbitrator between, the parties.

No award was made and no judgment sought of any competent court. The appearance before the Probate Court was ex parte, and to ascertain if that court would order the administrator to satisfy a decree in chancery, by which both appellee and appellant were to be discharged from responsibility at the cost of the estate. . While it is clear that the administrator had no right to give away or thus waste the assets of the estate, it is equally true that the . Probate Court had no authority to require him to do so; and certainly no power to adjudicate upon the validity of the decree in chancery, and any promise the administratdf may have made to cancel that decree, was not only wanting in consideration, but was without authority in law to bind him, and in violation of his duty as such trustee. A mere offer to perform, what another may consider just between disputants, is. no sufficient consideration, in law, to compel an individual to abide such findings much clearer is it insufficient to compel a trustee to misapply. or waste the' cestui que trust’s estate.

In the case of Underwood■ vs. Milligan, this court said: “As Marshall had no power, as administrator, to enlarge the liability of his intestate, or bind the assets in his hands by any agreement of his, the proof of this agreement did, not establish the account sought to be recovered of Milligan, as administrator de bonis non,” etc., 10 Ark., 256.

We are of the opinion that the decree was not satisfied; that there was no judgment vacating it; that Hughes’ promise, as administrator, to satisfy the decree, was without consideration, contrary to his duty and void; that he, as such administrator, should be charged with the amount of the decree; that the Chancery Court erred in overruling the application to have said decree enforced. Its order and decree is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to refer the matter to a master, and ascertain the amount due upon the original decree in favor of said estate, and order the same paid by a day certain, and in default thereof, that the lands referred to, in the decree, be sold to satisfy such demand. ■