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22 Ark.] OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 535 TERM, 1861.] Pope's heirs et al. vs. Boyd's adx. POPE ' S HEIRS ET AL. VS. BOYD ' S ADX. The statute of non claim has no application to a debt secured by a deed of trust, where the creditor seeks to subject the trust property to the payment of his debts; which he may do, without authentication and exhibition of his claim to the administrator of the debtor. . Upon the execution of a deed of trust, no estate in the trust property remains in the grantor, (18 Ark. 519), and a purchaser of such property at execution sale .against the grantor, acquires no title; and so cannot invoke the aid of the equitable doctrine of contribution by other purchasers of parts of the trust property. The case of Lemon's heirs vs. Rector, (15 Ark. 438), that the personal representative, and not the . heir, is the proper party in a suit to recover the personal assets of an estate, approved. Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court in Chancery. Hon THEODOR1C F. SORRELLS, Circuit Judge.' BELL & CARLTON, and GARLAND & RANDOLPH, for appellants. Did complainants lose their rights under the Deed of Trust,and all interest, in the trust property, because they did not "probate a claim" against the estate of Richard C. Byrd, within two years from the date of .administration upon his estate ? We think not, most clearly. It .is true, that it has been well settled by the various decisions of this court, upon that subject, that a claim prosecuted against an estate, must be presented to the administrator, duly authenticated, within two years from the date of administration, or be "forever barred." "Walker a,s admr. vs. Byers, 14 Ark. 24 2 ; Dawson et al. vs. Bennett et al., 18 Ark. 334. It is submitted in this case, that there is no prayer for judgment or allowance, or any thing else as against the estate of Byrd. We don ot seek a judgment against the administrator of
536 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT [22 Ark. Pope's heirs et al. vs. Boyd's adx. [JANUARY Byrd's estate, or to diminish the assets in any manner whatever, consequently there is no remedy, as against his estate to bar. Byrd's administrator is merely a nominal party to the suit. NO question can arise as to the right of Johnson and wife and John Pope, the complainants, to sue for money due the estate of John Pope, deceased, under the law as laid down in the case of Lemon's heirs vs. Rector et al. 15 Ark. 434. because. these complainants do not ask . or sue for money to be paid directly to them as heirs, but ask that the new trustee may receive the money, to be . paid out and distributed, under the decree of this court, to such persons as the court may directeither to them or to some administrator de bonis non, to be appointed for that purpose. WATKINS & GALLAGHER, for appellees. The trust never existed; but was neglected and abandoned from the first : therefore, the property was liable to sale on execution against Byrd. 1 Rob. Va. Rep. 659. Statute of non-claim bars the claim of complainant, not only against Byrd's estate but as to the trust property. Mr. Justice COMPTON delivered the opinion of the court. On the first day of March, 1852, Richard C. Byrd, who was then indebted to the legal representatives of John Pope, deceased, and others, executed a deed of trust, to secure the payment of said indebtedness, by which he conveyed to Freder-ick W. Trapnall, as trustee, certain lands, and the following negro slaves; Clarissa, Scott, John, Narcissa and Matilda, together with sundry articles of personalty, other than slaves. Under the provisions of the deed, Byrd was to make payment within five years by fixed installments, payable annually ; and in clefault of payment, he was to surrender posses -sion of the property to Trapnall, who was authorized and required to sell it for the benefit of the creditor. After the execution of the deed, Trapnall and Byrd died; Trapnall, in June, 1853, and Byrd, in June, 1854. Previous to the death Of Byrd, two of the
22 Ark.] OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 537 TERM, 1861.] Pope's heirs et al. vs -. Boyd's adx. slaves, John and Scott, were sold by the sheriff under execution against Byrd, at the suit of a creditor not provided for in the deed of trust, and are now in the possession of Mrs. Boyd, who claims title to them under the sale made by the sheriff. The bill which was brought by the heirs of John Pope, deceased, and others claiming as beneficiaries, against Mrs. Boyd, Marcus L. Bell as administrator of Byrd, and otherssoughf to subject the two slaves, John and Scott, to the payment of the debts secured by the deed of trust; and was, at the hearing, dismissed for want of equity. Several questions have been raised and argued. 1. The claims mentioned in the bill not having been duly authenticated and presented to the administrkor of Byrd, within the time prescribed by law, it is contended for Mrs. Boyd, that they were barred by the statute of non claim. True, it was laid down in Walker as admr. vs. Byers, 14 Arlc. 246, and is now the settled doctrine in this court, that any , claim or demand against the estate of a deceased person, capable of being asserted, at law or in equity, against the executor or administrator, must be authenticated by the affidavit of the'claimant, as provided by statute, before it can be legally exhibited against the estate, or paid by the representative. But in that case, after laying down the rule as we have stated it, the court said: "To this general rule, however, the statute itself points out one exceptionthat of a suit pending against any person at the time of his death, which, by law, survives against his executor or administrator, and although this express exception might seem to exclude all other by a common rule of interpretation, there are doubtless other exceptions, as for instance all proceedings on the part of the widow for dower ; which are grounded on a right in the property itself, out of which she is to get her eL.tate of dower ; proceedings for specific performance of a contract which do not seek to diminish the assets, that the law takes into custodyscire facias, to revive a judgment against an executor or administrator, because, such revival does not oper-ote to exhibit the judgment revived, affidavit being neverthe-
538 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT (22 Ark. Pope's heirs et al. vs. Boyd's adx. (JANUARY less required, when it might be presented for allowance and classification. Nor need this enumeration of exceptions exclude the idea of other possible cases, that might not interfere with the policy of the statute." Looking at the grounds upon which these exceptions stand, as well as_ at the general rule itself, it would seem to be clear 'that, within the meaning of - the decision in Walker vs. Byers, the statute of non-claim has no application whatever to the case now before us. The complainants do not assert their claims against Byrd's estate, or ask any decree against his administrator ; on the contrary, as before stated, and as shown by the frame of the bill, they seek to subject to the payment of their claims the two slaves as part of the trust property, which Byrd, in his lifetime, conveyed to the trustee for that purposethus divesting himself of title to the slaves, and making it impossible to regard their condenination, after his death, to the payment of the trust s debts, as diminishing the assets of his estate. If, instead of proceeding against the trust property, the complainants had proceeded, as at their option, they might have done, against the estate of Byrd, (Sullivan vs Hadley, 16 Ark. 144,) then the statute of non-claim would have been . an insuperable obstacle to a recoverybut not so, as to the remedy which the complainants have adopted in this case. 2. It is also insisted for Mrs. Boyd, that the trust property other than she holds, having gone into the possession of several persons, by purchase or otherwise, subject to the provisions of the deed of trust, such persons should have been made parties to the bill ; and compelled, individually, to contribute to the extin-guishment of the trust debts, in proportion to the value of the interest which each held in the trust property. The principle contended for, is founded in natural justice, and has been in some cases applied by couIts of equity. (Stevens vs. Cooper, 1 John Ch. Rep. 423) ; but it can have no application in this case. On the execution of the deed of trust to Trapnall, no such estate, legal or equitable, in trust property; as was subject to sale under execntion, remained in Byrd, the grantor, (Crittenden
22 Ark.] OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 539 TERM, 1861.1 Pope's heirs et al. vs. Boyd's adx. vs. Johnson, 6 Eng. 94 ; Pettit vs. Johnson, 15 Ark. 55 ; Biscoe et al. vs. Royston, et al. 18 Ark. 519 ; consequently, Mrs. Boyd acquired no title whatever, under the execution sale, to the slaves,. John and Scott, And having no title or interest in them, she is not in an attitude to ask that the equitable doctrine of contribution shall be applied. If the conveyance of Byrd had been a mortgage, Mrs. Boyd would have acquired, by her purchase, Byrd's equity of redemption ; and if she were vested with such an interest in the slaves, then the proposition insisted on, would deserve a more extended examination. The only remaining objection urged in the court below and insisted on here, is, that in 'behalf of Pope's estate, the bill should have been prosecuted by an administrator, and not by the heirs. This objection was, we think, well taken, and ought to have been sustained. The facts, in this case, are substantially the same as those ii Lemon's heirs vs. Rector, 15 Ark. 438; where, after referring to the general rule, that there can be, regularly, no suit for the recovery of the personal assets of an estate, but by the executor or administrator, who has the right to sue both at law and in equity, as also to the special cases in which this general rule had been relaxed, the court held that the heirs could not maintain the bill.. No ground of defense reaching the equity of the case having 'been successfully urged, the decree of the Chancellor dismissing the bill lor want of equity must be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to the court below, to grant the coin-plainants leave to amend their bill so as to bring the proper parties before the court, and to dismiss the bill if they fail to do so.
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