McMillon v. McMillon
McMillon v. McMillon
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The allegations of the bill are, that in the year 1860, Wm. I. Menzies recovered, in the circuit court of Decatur county, a judgment against J. S. Douglass and William Henry, and that complainant and one Alston became their sureties upon appeal bond to the supreme court, where there was an affi nuance and judgment rendered against Douglass and Henry and complainant and Alston for #707.47 at the April term, 1861.
This statement of the bill is (evidently by inadvertence) incorrect. The judgment of this court, 3d
The bill was filed September, 1874, for the purpose of enjoining an execution issued upon said judgment on the — clay of July, 1874, upon the ground, first, that a former execution, issued in the year 1861 or 1862, had been levied upon personal property of Douglass of value sufficient to satisfy it, and "that the same liad been released or abandoned without his knowledge or assent, either by the direction of Menzies or by the fault of the officer. It is further charged, that Douglass had died and his estate had been administered so as to leave a surplus for distribution among his heirs and distributees; that at least $700 of the judgment has been paid, and there was a receipt out for that amount, if not for the whole of said judgment, which he hopes to be able to find or prove. Again, it is charged that there was a compromise, by which the defendants were to pay the principal of the judgment and the plaintiff was to lose the interest.
The bill attaches a fund in the chancery court belonging to ~Wm. Henry, who has removed from the State, and prays that the same be applied to the payment of the judgment in the event complainant is not discharged, Henry being, as claimed, in any event, liable before complainant.
The administrator of Menzies5 estate (he having died) admits in his answer the receipt of $707.42 on
Henry answered, insisting that he ought also to be released for the reasons stated in complainant’s bill, as he was only the surety of Douglass on the note upon which the judgment was originally obtained. He prays ihat his answer be taken as a cross-bill, praying for the same relief; but it does not appear that any steps were taken to prosecute it as a cross-bill. No process was issued upon it, or was it answered, and it can therefore only be regarded as an answer.
Early in the progress of the cause the chancellor made an order dissolving the injunction so far as to allow the administrator of Menzies to receive from the clerk and master a sufficient amount of the funds of Henry, which had been attached in the case, to satisfy the balance of the judgment, upon executing a refunding bond. The administrator, however, seems not to have availed himself of this privilege, and on final hearing the chancellor held that complainant was entitled to an injunction, and so decreed, and directed that the funds of Henry be released and paid to him.
In December, 1870, the estate of Douglass was being administered in the chancery court, when this debt was reported in favor of the executor of Menzies as a debt of $707.49. The report was confirmed without exception, and the sum paid. The proof shows that there was a contest in regard to whether a number of claims were filed in time, or whether the creditors have properly made themselves
While this question is not very fully and distinctly made in the bill, yet we think, under the circumstances, it is sufficiently made to entitle the complainant to the relief.
Decree affirmed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.