McMeekin v. Hynes' ex'r
McMeekin v. Hynes' ex'r
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was instituted by the appellant against S. D. Tompkins as executor de son tort of W. R. Hynes, deceased.
The facts alleged constitute a cause- of action against the appellee, and the principal ground of complaint is, that the •court below erred in overruling the demurrer of the appellant to the first paragraph of appellee’s answer.
The second paragraph is but a denial of the facts alleged, ■and the first contains the averment that, since the institution of the action by the appellant, an administrator of the goods and effects of the decedent had been appointed, and qualified in the Jefferson county court, and that the administrator- alone is entitled to the -assets of the estate. The demurrer to this plea should have been sustained. There is no averment that the assets in his hands had been delivered to the administrator either before or after the institution of the action by the appellant, and following the elementary authorities on the question, a plea that the assets had been delivered to the administrator after the institution of the action by the creditor would be held bad on demurrer. (Williams on Executors,.vol. 1, pages 218, 219.)
. The plaintiff below had a cause of action, if the facts alleged are established, and was seeking the recovery before there was any administrator, and the fact of the latter’s appointment cannot have the effect to destroy the cause of
The case of O’Bannon v. Cord has no application to the •question here.
He may show that he has exhausted .the assets by the .•payment of the just debts of the deceased other than his (Own, and under our statute, when the estate' is insufficient ■to pay debts, the chancellor, with the lawfully appointed administrator before the court, would, no doubt, undertake •to administer the assets so as.to produce equality in the •.distribution between creditors. •
The demurrer to the' first paragraph of the answer should have-been sustained, and the judgment is therefore reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings not ■ inconsistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.