Rowan's creditors v. Rowan's heirs
Rowan's creditors v. Rowan's heirs
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
John Rowan, sr., among others, made the following devises:
By the first clause of the will, the testator had devised his entire estate to James Guthrie and Henry Pirtle, as his trustees, for the purposes named in the will. He also appointed these gentlemen his executors.
The various creditors of John Rowan, jr., seek to have ten thousand dollars of his portion assigned to pay his debts, and that it be subjected to the payment of their claims. This John Rowan, jr., and wife resisted, in his lifetime, and claim only a life estate in said property.
The trustees and executors do not assent, but submit the question to the chancellor for advice.
The chancellor decreed a portion to be laid off to John Rowan, jr., for the purpose of. paying his debts, and ordered it to be sold for that purpose. This decree was reversed by the appellate court because it was prematurely rendered,'it not then appearing that John Rowan’s (the testator) creditors
After this reversal, and pending the litigation, John Rowan, jr., died, and his children now resist the subjecting any portion of said estate, devised by their grandfather, to the payment of their father’s creditors, and the chancellor having dismissed the creditors’ suits, they seek a reversal.
It seems to us the testator did not intend absolutely to set aside any portion of his estate to pay his son John’s creditors, nor did he express any trust of that kind for his trustees and executors to execute. He had first devised his whole estate in trust to his said trustees and executors. He expressly directed that the Federal Hill farm should be allotted to his son John, and that the portions allotted to each of his children and grandchildren should be to them for life, and then to their heirs of testator’s blood. Having done this, he enlarged the powers of the trustees to sell not exceeding ten thousand dollars’ worth of the portion assigned his daughters and granddaughter to fit them out in a suitable establishment, and to sell a like amount of the realty allotted to his son John to pay his debts and buy slaves. But this was for the personal benefit of the devisees, and to depend upon the judgment and agreement of the trustees, and not as a trust for the benefit of the creditors.
The language is not directory, certainly not mandatory, but merely permissive, and it being for the benefit of the devisee, John, he might waive the benefit. This could be no injury or fraud upon his creditors, for it was a fund upon which they had no legal claim, and to which they could not legally look when the debts were created. It had been first devised to John for life, and then to his children in fee; and the subsequent permission to the trustees to sell a portion for the payment of John’s debt, and to buy slaves, strongly indicates, that if the circumstances should be such as to preclude any idea of benefit to him and his family, that the trustees were not to be bound to sell for such purpose; • and surely there is nothing to indicate that if John should elect not to
The testator was one of the distinguished lawyers of his day. Had he intended to set aside a sum to pay his son’s debts absolutely, he would have specified it as one of the trusts to be unequivocally executed by his trustees; but having devised it unequivocally to his son for life, and then to his children, he intended the children should be deprived of their fee only on condition that his trustees and son should approve of it, and certainly not Avithout the approval of his trustees.
"When John’s portion shall be allotted, the trustees'hold it in trust for John during his life, remainder in fee to his children; and such is the express trust and character of the holding, unless the trustees should determine to sell not exceeding ten thousand dollars’ worth to pay John’s creditors and buy slaves; and in this permission no criterion but their own assent is indicated of how much of this fund is to be paid to creditors, or how much laid out in servants; and this, too, strongly indicates that the judgment and approval of the trustees to any change in the character of the property devised was the controlling consideration with the testator; and leaving it thus merely permissive AAdth the trustees, the testator could hardly contemplate that they would arbitrarily exercise the poAver o\er the protestation of his son and to the detriment of his grandchildren.
It may be fairly presumed that the testator intended to vest the trustees with the power to sell $10,000 worth of this real estate absolutely, if they found that a reasonable portion would exonerate John from debt, and the situation of his famity be such as to require an outlay in servants. It was not contemplated that all this fund should be consumed in the payment of debts; hence the judgment and approbation of the trustees in the conversion of the property was made essential; and this is made the more imposing by the total absence of any express right given to John to have this enforced, should the trustees decline to do it.
John Rowan, jr., in his lifetime, having elected, so far as he was concerned, to hold under the previous devise, and objecting to a conversion of any part of the real estate, and the trustees never having assented to such sale and conversion, the chancellor very properly refused to compel them to do so, or to order and adjudge that any part of the estate so held in trust should be sold to pay any portion of bis indebtedness after be bad died.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.