Beall v. Beall
Beall v. Beall
Opinion of the Court
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The right of the complainants to a decree in this case, is based on the Act of the Legislature passed in 1843. This being a 'private Act, it is now assailed on the ground that it was fraudulently procured to be passed, without the assent of Alpheus Beall, whose property the complainants seek to inherit under it.
The witness was the immediate representative of Alpheus Beall, who resided in the same County with him, and it is usual to entrust the members of the Legislature from the respective Counties, with the management of such bills as relate to their
This evidence, in our judgment, was competent for the consideration of the Jury, being a circumstance relating to the passage of the Act, which is now assailed for want of the assent of Alpheus Beall to its introduction and passage through the Legislature. What effect it might have had on the minds of the Jury, is another question.
Their testimony was objected to, on the ground that theyw'ere securities for the defendant on her administration bond. The facts in regard to the competency of these wutnesses at the time of the trial, are as follows: In September, 1848, letters of administration were granted to the defendant on the estate of Alpheus Beall, and the Bethells became her securities on her administration bond. In January, 1849, it was represented to the Court of Ordinary, that the bond given was for too small an amount, and the Court required bond and security for a larger amount, passing an order that the defendant should give a new bond for a larger amount, and that the old bond and the securi
The Bethells were only securities for the defendant, from September, 1848, until January, 1849, about four months. On the 21st April, 1851, the defendant executed to the Bethells, a bond of indemnity, in the sum of $34,000, indemnifying them from all liability whatever, On account of their seeurityship on her administration bond, as above stated, with ample security. Both of the witnesses stated at the trial, on their voir dire, that they were not interested in the event of the suit, but that they had signed the first bond as securities, with Thompson Graham, asaheady mentioned. The witnesses, upon the foregoing statement of facts, were rejected by the Court, and the defendant excepted ; and the question is, whether they were properly rejected, on the state of facts made by the record ? In Adams vs. Barrett, (3 Kelly, 277,) this Court held, that to render a witness incompetent on the ground of interest, it must be shown that he will either gain or lose by the direct legal operation and effect of the judgment, or that the record will be legal evidence for, or against him, in some other action, and that the interest to exclude a witness, must be a present, certain, and vested interest, and not an interest uncertain, remote, or contingent. The complainants have filed their bill in this case, against the administratrix of Alpheus Beall, to recover two-thirds of his estate, alleged to be in her hands. There is no allegation that she has wasted any portion of that estate; the only question in controversy between the parties, as shown by the record is, as to the right of the complainants to recover, as legal distributees of Alpheus Beall. The witnesses offered by the • defendant, were her securities on her administration bond, and they were offered, not for the purpose of showing she had properly administered the effects of the intestate, but for the sole purpose of defeating the complainants’ legal right to recover any portion of the intestate’s estate. In such a case, the witnesses offered were competent, according to the rule, as stated by Mr. StarJde, for he says, “ in an action against an administrator, one of his securities for the due administration of
There being a bare possibility that an'action might be brought against the witnesses at some time, as sureties on the administration bond, is not sufficient, it would seem, under the general rule, to exclude them from testifying to the facts which they were called to prove in this case.
The defendants in error, however, insist that according to the rulings of this Court, the record of this suit against the defendant as administratrix, could be given in evidence in an action against the securities on the bond, and therefore, the witnesses were incompetent. It is true, that this Court has held, that in an action upon an administration bond against the securities thereto, the judgment or decree rendered against their principal, was prima facie evidence against them, but this Court never has held, that when securities to an administrator’s or guardian’s bond, have been discharged, by the Court of Ordinary, that a general judgment or decree to account, rendered against such administrator or guardian, was even prima facie evidence that their principal had wasted the effects entrusted to them, previous to their discharge, unless that fact was specially alleged, and appeared on the face of the proceedings; but on the contrary, we held, in Woods vs. Vason, (1 Kelly, 89,) and in Bryant, guardian, vs. Owen and wife, (1 Kelly, 375,) that in order to make such discharged security even prima facia liable, the judgment or decree must purport to charge the administrator or guardian with some act of maladministration before his discharge.
That the judgment or decree, which may be rendered against the administratrix in this case, and a return of nulla bona on the execution issued thereon, would be prima facie evidence of waste on the part of the administratrix, is.' readily admitted, but at what time ?
To make the record even prima facie evidence against the first securities, it should appear on. its face that the waste was
We are of the opinion, there is no error in the refusal of the Court to charge the Jury as requested, in relation to the assent of Alpheus Beal to the passage of the law, or in the charge as given.
That portion of the defendant’s answer which alleges that the Act of the Legislature was fraudulently procured by Frederick Beall, is not, in our judgment, responsive to the allegations in the complainant’s bill, and therefore, is not evidence for her.
Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mary C. Beall, administratrix, &c. in error v. Wm. H. Beall and another
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published