Norwood v. Holliman

McClure, C. J.

In November of 1868, James Holliman died, leaving surviving him six children, one of whom was Elijah B. Holliman; the names of the other five do not appear of record. The estate, real and personal, of James Holliman, deceased, seems to have been worth $25,000 or $30,000. In February of 1869, Richard T. Holliman, the appellee in this suit, was appointed administrator on the estate of James Holliman, deceased.

In January, 1871, Charles M. Norwood, and Harriet L., his wife, filed their petition in the 'Probate Court of Ouachita county, asking that the said. Harriet L. Norwood be declared entitled to a one-sixtli interest in all the real and personal estate -of which James Holliman died seized, and that the administrator of said estate, Richard T. Holliman, be ordered to pay and turn over to the said Harriet L. Norwood, one sixth interest of said estate of James Holliman, deceased. The administrator,'Richard T. Holliman, is made a party defendant to this complaint, and it alleges that Elijah B. Holliman was a son of James Holliman, deceased; that in December of 1868, said Elijah B. Holliman died, leaving surviving him his wife, the said Harriet L. (the present appellant) and one child, Eugenia Maria Holliman; that said child, Eugenia Maria Holliman, died in August, 1870, leaving the said Harriet L. her sole heir; that in December of 1869, she, the said Harriet L., intermarried with her present husband, Charles M. Norwood. These are the facts upon which she bases her complaint, and upon which she bases her claim to the relief asked. In the Probate Court the administrator filed a general demurrer, which was by the court sustained. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court; the demurrer was again sustained, •and an appeal taken to this court.

Section 112 of the Code, in declaring the effect of a demurrer, says: “ The demurrer shall distinctly specify the grounds of the objection to the complaint; unless it does so, it shall be regarded as objecting, only, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constituté a cause of action.” It is in this light we shall examine this case. . •

The question presented, then, is : do the facts stated entitle the appellants to the relief asked? A response to this inquiry involves the examination of two statutes. The first of which is the tenth section of the statute regulating descent and distribution, as found in Gould’s Digest (page 422), which is as follows: “ In cases where the intestate shall die without descendants, if the estate come by the father, then it shall ascend to tlie father and his heirs; if by the mother, the estate, or so much thereof as came by the mother, shall ascend to the mother and her heirs; but if the estate be a new acquisition, it shall ascend to the father for his lifetime, and then descend, in remainder, to the collateral kindred of the intestate, in the manner provided in this act; and in default of a father, then to the mother for her lifetime; then to descend to the collateral heirs, as before provided.”

The estate in this instance -was not a “ new acquisition;” it came by the “ line of the father.” The facts alleged by Harriet L. Norwood, in her complaint, would not allow her to the relief asked under this statute, and there could be no error in sustaining a demurrer to the complaint, for the facts stated do not, to use the language of the code, “ constitute a. cause of action.”

The counsel for the appellants urge that the line of descent and distribution, as fixed by the section just quoted, has been, superseded, and that the facts alleged in the complaint entitle her to the relief asked tinder the provisions of section one of the chapter in the new digest (page 65), regulating the descent and distribution of the property of deceased persons, dying intestate. The section thus alluded to is, in substance, as follows — that the property shall descend :

First. To his children, or their descendants, in equal parts.

Second. .If there be no children or their descendants, then to Iris father, mother, brothers and sistei’s, and their descendants in equal parts, etc.

Under the provisions, of this section the appellants claim that at the death of Elijah 13. Ilolliman the one-sixth interest of the estate of James Ilolliman, deceased, which, by the law, passed to tlié said Elijah B., descended to Eugenia Maria Holliman; and that at the death of the said Eugenia, there being no children, or their descendants, or father (living), that this one-sixth interest in the estate of James Holliman passed to Harriet L. Norwood, the mother of said Eugenia Maria Ilolliman, as her sole heir.

Counsel for tlie parties .to this suit insist that the question thus presented involves the validity of tho chapters of what is called the “new digest.” While wc have no disposition to evade a question presented by the record in this ease, wo think it better to first examine the question presented by the demurrer, and see if the complaint would be sustained under either of the statutes from which we have quoted; for if it shall appear that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action under either statute, it might he claimed, that so much of the decision as related to the constitutionality and validity of the statutes was a mere obiter dictum. This being true, and the validity of the chapters of the digest being a matter of some doubt in the mind of the profession, we prefer to settle the question of their legality in a case where the opinion of the court would not be regarded as mere dictum.

From the beginning to the end of the complaint there is nothing in it which advises the court of the condition of the estate of James Holliman, deceased. It is true that the complaint states that the estate was worth some twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars; but what its liabilities were, is nowhere stated, nor is it’ alleged that the administrator had, or would have, a single dollar to distribute among the heirs of James Holliman, deceased, after the payment of his debts. Without these facts appearing affirmatively, the court below could not do otherwise than sustain the demurrer.

Counsel for the appellee urge that Mrs. Norwood and husband cannot bring the suit, on the ground that the toleration of such a practice would intercept the estate of Elijah B. Holliman, deceased, and cut off Ms creditors. In this we agree with Mm.

Mrs. Norwood had no right to bring such an action. If she was ' entitled to the estate descending to her former husband, it ought to have come to her through his administrator, freed from Ms debts. The Probate Court had no power to declare that one-sixth of the real estate should be turned over to Mrs. Norwood, as the administrator only holds the estate for the payment of debts.

Section one of the chapters of the new digest (page 48) declares that an executor or administrator shall not be compelled to make distribution until one year after the date of his letters. Section two of the same chapter declares that an administrator shall not be compelled to make distribution within two years after the date of his letters, unless-ordered to do so by the court, until bond and security be given by the legatee or distributee, etc.

Counsel for the appellee insists that the complaint should recite a tender of the bond required by section two, before he is entitled to an order for distribution. In this view-we agree with him. The complaint, as has been stated, does not mention the names or residences of any one of the •other distributees. This, we think, it should do, as section six of the chapter, now under discussion, declares that the distributees not applying for distribution, shall be notified in writing of such application ten days before any such order shall be made, etc. The thirty-third section of the same chapter also shows conclusively that the other distributees should be made parties, as it provides that guardians ad litem should be appointed for such of the heirs as are not residents of the county. There are many reasons why the other distributees should be made parties to any suit or proceeding which has for its purpose the distribution of the effects of an estate. The order of distribution, when made by the court, is in the nature of a judgment, and ought to settle the rights and interests of all the distributees. If this proceeding had been for the partition of an estate, the distributees would have had to have been made parties defendants, and we can see no reason for the relaxation of such a rule where the complaint asks for the distribution of an estate. "That portion of Gould’s Digest, page 129, which relates to legacies and distribution, is very similar to the chapter of the new digest on this subject; and so far as the old or new digest, on the subject of administration, is concerned, the complaint does not come within either. These things being true, the discussion of the constitutionality or the unconstitutionality of the chapters of 'the new digest becomes unnecessary, and all argument upon that subject, from this point onward, would be nothing but dictum, and treated as such by the profession. While it might, to some extent settle conflicting opinions, held by members of the bar, it is our experience that dictums, upon questions not necessarily before the court, seldom give the universal satisfaction as though the opinion had been prepared in a case where the question was directly involved.

The judgment of the Ouachita Circuit Court is affirmed.