Edmiston v. Long
Edmiston v. Long
Opinion of the Court
This was a suit by a judgment creditor of the estate of Bledsoe, to compel the administrator to sell property appertaining to the estate, to satisfy his judgment. The Probate Court rejected the application for the sale, and the creditor appealed. The District Court reversed the judgment of the Probate Court, and ordered that the administrator should proceed to sell the property of the estate to satisfy the creditor’s judgment, and directed its judgment to be certified to the Probate Court for execution thereof, from which judgment the administrator appealed to this Court.
The facts show that Bledsoe, appellant’s intestate, left a widow and one child, an infant: that before there was an administrator appointed, the widow sold a cow and divers articles of household furniture, and paid off some debts. The amount sold and the amount paid byo her were but small. The evidence further conduces to prove, that she caused to be secreted and run off a negro boy belonging to the estate, so that he could not be administered on, with the other property of tire estate ; that after the appellant had administered and returned an inventory embracing a house and three acres of land near to, and adjoining the town of Crockett, the same on
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- M. J. Edmiston, Adm'r v. John Long
- Status
- Published