Pettit v. Cooper
Pettit v. Cooper
Opinion of the Court
MOTION.
Motion to partially annul a decree rendered at a former term. In this case, treated as a bill retained in court for the purpose of administering the estate of Geo. P. Cooper, deceased, an order of reference was made by the chancellor to ascertain and report the amount due Orlando Brown for services as agent of the executrix in managing the estate of the deceased under the will. The widow and children of the deceased, who were also the devisees and legatees under his will, were parties to the suit, as well as the personal representative appointed upon the resignation of
The cause was transferred to the docket of the Commission Court, and tried in 1879. That court held j in a written opinion, that the suit was virtually a suit for the administration of the estate of Geo. P. Cooper, that the court had jurisdiction to adjudge the claim of Brown, and that the claim was a proper charge on the estate of the deceased. The court further held that the decree below should be modified by charging Brown with the value of certain Confederate money received by him as the property of the estate, and that he should be limited to a recovery against the personal assets then in, or thereafter to come into the hands of administrator Anderson, and against any realty that may remain not partitioned, or specifically set apart to either of the devisees under the will of Cooper, no interest to be allowed either for or against him. A decree was drawn up, in accordance with this opinion, embodying the modification and limitation, the latter in the language of the opin
The heirs and devisees of Cooper now, April 14, 1882, move the court to set aside and vacate the last clause of the above decree, upon two grounds:
1. That so much of that decree, as well as the corresponding part of the previous decree, was inadvertently rendered.
2. That the court had no jurisdiction to - render any decree respecting the realty of said estate, the heirs and devisees not being before the court" either as appellants or appellees.
If it be true that the heirs and devisees of Geo. P. Cooper were not before the court at the rendition of these decrees, it is very clear that they are not now
If, however, the heirs and devisees were before the court, by reason of the fact that the claim of Brown was declared by the chancellor “to be a proper debt and charge against the estate,” and that the appeal was by the general representative of the estate, and could now be heard to make this motion, it is impossible, upon the record, to say that the part of the decree in question was inadvertently rendered. It' is in strict compliance not only with the conclusion announced in the opinion of the Commission Court, but was specially directed by that opinion to be embodied in the decree. It may be erroneous, or even void, ‘ but it cannot be said to be inadvertent: State v. Disney, 5 Sneed, 598; Russell v. Colyar, 4 Heis., 154.
It is suggested in the argument accompanying the motion, that Brown has obtained from the clerk of this court an execution on that part of the decree, and sold under it the remainder interest of the heirs and devisees in land allotted to the testator’s widow in dower, she having dissented from the will. And
Motion disallowed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.