Trafford v. Wilkinson
Trafford v. Wilkinson
Opinion of the Court
The original bill, filed on September 3, 1877, makes this case. In February, 1845, Jesse Parker died testate, directing by his will all his estate of every description, both ■ real and personal, to be sold and converted into money, the proceeds to be divided equally between seven persons named, one of them being his sister Elizabeth Lile. Charles L. Parker was appointed executor, and qualified as such. On April 1, 1847, he made a settlement of his administration, showing a balance in his hands-of $10,836.65, of which the said Elizabeth Lile was entitled to one-seventh. She had intermarried, in Kay County, state of Missouri, with Malachi Lile, and died before she drew her share of her brother’s estate. She left seven children, two of whom, Caroline Moore and Polly Cox, have died, leaving children named in the bill. The complainant has taken out letters of administration on the estates of said Caroline and Polly, and has filed this bill, as their personal representative, for their shares of the legacy to their mother. The other five children of Elizabeth Lile drew their shares of the fund about the years 1847 and 1848. Charles- L. Parker died soon after his settlement,'
The record, as it now stands, discloses a state of facts, materially different from that set out in the original bill. Elizabeth Lile, it seems, died within a month after the-death of her brother, Jesse Parker, leaving seven children, two of them being Caroline Moore and Polly Cox, the intes-tates of complainant. . Henry W. Lile, one of these children, for himself, and as attorney in fact for the other-children, came from Missouri to Tennessee in 1847, and; received from Charles L. Parker, as executor of Jesse Parker, the shares of five of these children in the legacy to their mother, — the share of each being $225, — the shares^ of the other two children not having been paid because of" some defects in the powers of attorney. On December 17, 1847, Charles L. Parker died testate, leaving a widow and; one child, an infant. The widow dissented from the will, and, on September 12, 1848, intermarried with the defendant Manlove. The child died in the year 1852, intestate, and, on June 4, 1856, the defendant Manlove qualified as-administrator of his estate. In the meantime, and in 1848, the widow of Charles L. Parker filed her bill in this court, against Wilkinson and her son, for the administration of' her late husband’s estate, and such proceedings were had that a final decree seems to have been rendered on June 12, 1851, embodying a report of the clerk and master, showing-a balance of assets in the hands of Wilkinson, and the interest of the widow and child therein. This report shows that-the administrator reported “ a debt against the estate, due-to some heirs in Missouri, of about $600,” which was-deducted from the balance found and distributed. This-, fund remained in his hands until about April 8, 1868, when he resigned the administration, and the defendant Manlove was appointed and qualified as administrator de bonis non off the estate of Charles L. Parker, whereupon Wilkinson paid over to him the funds thus retained.
The right to the legacy under Jesse Parker’s will vested in Elizabeth Lile ; and, upon her death, her pei’sonal representative alone had any right of action, so far as appears. But, for some reason, not apparent in any thing in this record, Charles L. Parker, as executor of Jesse Parker, chose to pay the funds realized directly to her children. Having paid five of them their shares, he evidenced his willingness to pay the other two, not only by his acts, but by letter to Henry W. Lile, the attorney in fact. It appears from Wilkinson’s deposition, that Charles L. Parker, in his lifetime, spoke to him in relation to the two unpaid shares, and furnished him with the address of the agent, to whom he afterwards wrote. If, now, under these circumstances, Wilkinson had been, as alleged in the original bill, the ad
It now appears, however, and is admitted by the amended bill, that Wilkinson was administrator of Charles L. Parker, and not of Jesse Parker, and that the funds which came to his hands were the funds of the estate of Charles L. Parker, so returned in his inventory, and so found by the decree of this court settling his administration. The $600 retained were to meet “a debt against the estate, due to some heirs in Missouri.” There can be no doubt that the complainant’s intestates were these heirs, and that the money was due to ■them. And there can be just as little doubt that the money would have been paid to them if they had come forward with their claims within the time allowed by law. The administrator and the widow both recognized the justice of the claims, and the former took upon himself to advise the agent of the parties that there was danger of loss by reason of the Statute of Limitations. Thus far, there is not the slightest imputation upon the good faith of any of these defendants ; while, on the contrary, there was the grossest laches on the part of those beneficially entitled. And, if there were nothing else in the case, no one could blame the defendants if, after the lapse of twenty years, or even the much shorter period of seven years, they adopted any mode of disposing of the funds so that other parties, having the ulterior right to them, might derive a benefit from them.
The defendant Wilkinson having received the fund in controversy as administrator of Charles L. Parker, the right
The learned counsel of the complainant, in his argument, which has the decided merit of being clear and going" directly to the point of difficulty, concedes these general principles. “ The amended bill,” he says, “puts the right to recover upon the ground that Wilkinson is trustee for complainant’s intestates, not as legatees but as individuals.” His position is, that a “specific fund” in the hands of Charles L. Parker, fixed with a trust in favor of the complainant’s intestates, was turned over to and received by Wilkinson, and that this suit falls within the exception, and not the rule, of Hooper v. Bryant. He admits that there is no direct testimony establishing the trust, but urges that this can hardly be expected, as he has “ to go to the ranks of the enemy for proof.” He argues that the trust is sufficiently made out by the letter of Charles L. Parker to Lile, by the evidence of Wilkinson that Charles L. Parker fully informed him of the facts in relation to the funds, and the disposition which he directed to be made of them, and, most of all, by the subsequent conduct of the defendants, touching the funds. The letter of Charles L. Parker to Lile, written shortly before his death, recognizes the rights
The bill must be dismissed ; but, under the circumstances,, the defendant Manlove will pay the costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.