Hodder v. Nelder
Hodder v. Nelder
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit is brought to recover from the defendant the succession of one Edward Pearse, deceased. The p]aintifl~ obtained judgment in the court below for $633 38, estimated as one-thirteenth part of said succession; from which the defendant appealed.
The case has been carelessly argued before this court, and we are consequently loft to infer from the record, and points filed, (which are by no means explicit) the matters really in dispute between the parties; the principal, of which, we believe, reiates to the claims set up by the defendant against the estate of Pearse. To arrive at any just conclusion on this subject, it is necessary m state some of the leading facts. .
Previous to the year 1814, Pears~ & Nelder were joint owners of a plantation and slaves, situated in the parish of Plaquemines. Some time in that year Pearse died, after having made a will, by which he appointed his partner, Nd-der, one of his executors, and constituted him his universal ~egatee-who under this title took possession of the estate, paid its debts, and enjoyed the advantages resulting from it uninterruptedly until 1828, when suit for its recovery was commenced. The amount of Pearse's succession, according to an estimate of i~s value at the time of his death, is twelve thousand and four hundred dollars. As he left a mother living at that period, he could only legally dirpose in
The defendant assumed the character of universal lega: tee, without the benefit of an inventory, and, consequently, made himself personally responsible for the debts of Pearse’s estate, which it appears he afterwards ’ paid, as we have already seen, to the amount of $4,949 43. This sum, together with what the testator owed to him, places him on the footing of a. creditor of the succession for $10,217 93. Now if the legatee had been permitted to enjoy, as. owner under Peai’se’s will, the whole of the estate of the latter, the confusion of situations as creditor and debtor would still-exist, as contended for by the counsel for the plaintiff. But the recovery of two-thirds in favour of the representatives of the mother of the donor, certainly leaves an incum-brance of two-thirds of the debts of the succession, on the portion by them recovered. In other - words, Nelder.no longer holds the double character of creditor and debtor, in relation to those parts of Pearse’s estate. We’ think the court below erred, in its conclusions on the rules of law relative to confusion, in their application to the present cáse. As the defendant’s title to one-third of the whole succession is maintained, he should lose in this proportion the benefit of the amount due to him as creditor thereof, according to the doctrine of confusion established by law; for as to this part, he remains precisely in the situation he would be, in relation to the whole, had he not been disturbed by thépi’e?
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be avoided, reversed, and annulled. And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff and appellee do recover from the defendant and appellant, the sum of one hundred and one dollars and seventy-eight cents, with costs in the court below; the ap-pellee to pay those of this court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HODDER v. NELDER
- Status
- Published