Carnan v. Turner
Carnan v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court (in which the facts áre sufficiently stated) was delivered by
The object of the biU tiled in this case is, to sell a certain portion of the real estáte of .Doctor Sluyter Bouchell, deceased, to pay a debt alleged to have been due from hini at the lime of his death, to the complainant, (the appellee,) upon the principle, that his personal estate is insufficient to pay his debts. The bill is against John Bouchell and Peter Bouchell, to whom the testator devised his tract of land in Csecil county called Providence, against Edward Foard, to whom it is alleged they conveyed the said tract without consideration, and ágainst John Carnan the surviving executor of Doctor Sluyier Bouchell. The sum due from the estate of the deceased to the complain - ant, is stated to be IB 1626 16 5, which was ascertained by a decree of this court at June term 1810, in a suit of the complainant against John Carnan and Sluyier Bouchell executors of Doctor S. Bouchell. That decree, with all the proceedings connected therewith, is made an exhibit in the said bill,, and on it the complainant wholly relies for evidence of his debt due from. Doctor S. Bouchell’s estate. One of the defendants, John Bouchell, became lunatic, and anctvering the said bill by his guardian, George Palmer, professed entire ignorance of the complainant’s demands, and put him on the establishment of them by proof. The bill was taken pro confesso against the other defendants, and the late chancellor decreed a sale of the said tract called Providence, appointing a trustee to make the said sale.
From this decree of the chancellor the defendants appealed, and it has become the duty of this court to review it and express an opinion on the points it presents.
We have with great care examined the record, and particularly that part of it which contains the decree of this court, and the proceedings connected with the decree, as it is exhibited by the complainant, and made the foundation of his claim of right, to sell a part of the real estate
The account thus examined, is an exposition of the triie meaning of the decree of this court, and with the court’s understanding of it, we cannot permit ourselves to doubt of the impropriety of the chancellor’s decree. It is bottomed on the conviction, that there was a large debt due from the late Doctor S. Bouchell at his death, to the complainant, and that there was a deficiency of personal assets to pay it, whereas in truth, according to the complainant’s own showing, there was no such debt. The complainant has a just claim against the executors of Doctor S. Bouchell, grounded on their receipts of rents of certain leasehold esiates, a long time a subject of litigation between them in the court of chancery, and in this court, but the real estate in the possession of the devisees of Doctor S:_
A view too of the account settled by John Cam an, sur-, viving executor of Doctor S. Bouchell, in the spring 1810, insisted on by the complainant as evidence in this cause, has convinced us, that the personal assets of the deceased, if the rents received by the executors after 1797 are to be so considered, were not insufficient to pay his debts. Thq executor has accounted for.a very small part only of those rents, and if the residue of the ^1874 17 8¿, had been by him brought into the settlement, a large balance would have been found against him, quite, adequate, as we conceive, to the payment of the demando! the complainant.
Without inquiry into the question, how, far a, judgment or decree obtained against executors can be, used in evidence against the heir or devisee of the deceased, we are clear in pronouncing the decree of the chancellor in this ease erroneous, and that it ought to be reversed;
DECREE REVERSED»
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