Williams's Devisees v. Williams's Administrator
Williams's Devisees v. Williams's Administrator
Opinion of the Court
— This is an appeal from an order of the Probate Court of Greene County, made on the application of the administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lawrence Williams, deceased, with the will annexed, giving said administrator authority to sell certain lands of said deceased, described in the application, for the payment of the debts of said deceased, when there was a will which devised said lands to certain persons named in said will. The order for the sale was contested in the court below by the heirs and devisees of said deceased testator. The contest seems to have been made on two grounds: The one was, that there was a will which deprived the court of jurisdiction; the other was, that, admitting the jurisdiction to exist, the court committed fatal errors in its exercise, as shown by the record. The order for the sale was granted. The heirs and devisees bring the case, here, and assign, as errors, a want of jurisdiction in the court below, and certain irregularities in its exercise, which the' appellants insist are fatal to the validity of the order.
With certain exceptions, the law charges the whole property of the decedent with the payment of his debts, and authorizes a sale of the same for that purpose. Rev. Code, § 2060. This charge the executor or administrator cannot defeat by a distri
From this view of the law, it seems evident that, at the contest upon the hearing of the application for the sale, the parties cannot go outside of the proof of the facts upon which the sale is allowed to be made. Therefore, the answer to the application offered to be filed by George Williams, Jackson Williams, and Lawrence Williams, three of the contestants, in which they state: “ 1. That all of the heirs and distributees of decedent are not made parties to the said petition; that Simeon Williams, a deceased child of said decedent, has an infant female child of tender years, named Simeon Williams, living with its mother, the widow of said Simeon, in the State of Arkansas, who should be a party. 2. That Jesse Hill, the executor of Lawrence Williams, deceased, delivered the lands and other property devised and bequeathed by the will of said Williams to the heirs entitled thereto, before the settlement of his executorship; that said Hill, after delivering said property, had ample property of the estate left in his hands to pay all the debts of said estate ; that he wasted and converted said property, and 'that his bond as such executor is a good and solvent bond, and that the sureties thereto are able to respond to any creditor who has been damaged by the devastavit of said executor; and that said creditors have not pursued said executor and sureties to insolvency; and said defendants say, that this court has no right or jurisdiction to order a sale of the lands devised to them,” is insufficient as a plea in bar of said application, and it was properly rejected by the court.
The first portion of the contestants’ answer is, in effect, a plea in abatement; but it does not show that said child Simeon has any interest in the lands in controversy. The second portion is a plea in bar, or intended as such. ’ The plea in bar waives the plea in abatement. Both cannot be pleaded together. Whether the child in Arkansas had any interest in the controversy is a matter of very grave doubt. I think it had no such interest in the lands sought to be sold whatever. They were not given to it, or its father or mother, by the will of the testator, who was its grandfather; and the legatees to whom the lands were given were in court, contesting the application for the sale. This appears from the evidence before the court on the hearing below, and from the will which was a part of the applicant’s evidence on the trial below. There was no error, then, in rejecting this answer as a plea in bar of the order for the sale.
I do not understand that it is contended at this bar, by the learned counsel for the appellants, with any serious confidence of its correctness, that the will of Lawrence Williams, deceased,
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