Hinson v. Naugher

Decision Date25 May 1922
Docket Number6 Div. 575.
PartiesHINSON v. NAUGHER ET AL.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Appeal from Circuit court, Fayette County; T. L. Sowell, Judge.

Bill by Dora Hinson against C. E. Naugher, as executrix, and others named as devisees and legatees of the will of William T Naugher, deceased. From a decree sustaining demurrers complainant appeals. Affirmed.

W. L Harris and Wm. W. Monroe, both of Fayette, for appellant.

J. J Mayfield, of Montgomery, and S. T. Wright, of Fayette, for appellees.

THOMAS J.

A petition was filed in the probate court of Fayette county for the probate of the will of William T. Naugher, deceased, which was admitted. Thereafter this complainant, Dora Hinson, procured the removal of administration of that estate to the circuit court in equity.

The bill by said Hinson thereafter filed in said court of equity was original in form and prayed: (1) That the court take jurisdiction of the "cause and the administration of the trust herein mentioned"; (2) that "C. E. Naugher, as executrix and trustee of the said last will and testament of said William T. Naugher, deceased, be required to enter into bond with good and sufficient surety," etc.; that she "be required to make and file in this court a full, true and complete inventory, *** her accounts and vouchers, and make settlement at *** certain and specified intervals of time"; (3) that the provisions of the will of decedent be construed as to "the rights, powers, duties, and limitations of said respondent C. E. Naugher, as executrix and trustee, under items 3, 4, 5, and 6 of said will," and the "scope of the powers and discretion invested in said executrix and trustee under the terms of said will" be defined; (4) that a reasonable attorney's fee be allowed; and (5) for general relief.

The order of removal of the administration from the probate to the equity court was accomplished at the instance of said Hinson, daughter of William T. Naugher, deceased, and one of the devisees and legatees under the terms of said last will and testament by means of her sworn petition containing the averments necessary under the statute. Thereafter the administration of said estate and trust properties was a pending cause in the circuit court in equity. Gen. Acts 1915, p. 738; Acts 1911, pp. 574, 575; Parker v. Robertson, 205 Ala. 434, 88 So. 418; Dent v. Foy, 204 Ala. 404, 85 So. 709; Dooley v. Dooley, 205 Ala. 281, 87 So. 545; Crawford v. Carlisle, 206 Ala. 379, 89 So. 565, 568(1); McKeithen v. Rich, 204 Ala. 588, 86 So. 377; Dent v. Foy, 206 Ala. 454, 90 So. 317.

Recent decisions of this court are to the effect that the administration and settlement of a decedent's estate in equity is a single and continuous proceeding; and when the administration of an estate is once removed from the probate court into a court of equity, its jurisdiction becomes exclusive and efficient, and the court must operate to a final settlement governed by its own procedure. McKeithen v. Rich, supra; Dent v. Foy, 206 Ala. 454, 90 So. 317.

Complainant's filing of her bill in the circuit court in equity, to which the administration of the estate of William T. Naugher, deceased, had been removed on her "sworn petition," was not an interruption of the due course of administration of the estate, but was an authorized incident of a proper procedure in a court of equity consistent with an orderly administration of the estate and its trust funds by the executrix and trustee under the last will of said decedent.

In Rice v Davidson, 206 Ala. 226, 89 South 600, a bill was filed in equity to restrain a trespass on land that was the subject of a pending bill in the same court to quiet title. Held:

"The two pending 'bills' between the same parties, involving the subject-matter or title to the same lands, became one and the same cause."

In Coley v. English, 204 Ala. 691, 87 So. 81, a bill was filed to enjoin the cutting and removing or depredations upon any of the timber situated on the land described in the deed of the Englishes to King, pending the determination of a bill by complainant for the specific performance by the Englishes of their contract to convey said land to complainant, which was then pending. Held that, on the averments of the bill for injunction, no real question was presented with respect to any right, interest, or title in complainant to the timber passing by the conveyance to King in 1905. And for such reason the bill was held to be without equity. These last-cited authorities are different from the case made by the instant bill, in that they were respectively for the sole purpose of preserving the subject or status quo of pending litigation. However, it remains a fact that in both cases bills original in form were considered by the court as sufficient to present the necessity vel non of the exercise of the restraining power of the court to preserve the subject-matter of the other suit, and in the one case held sufficient and in the other as insufficient in fact.

In the instant case the removal of the administration of the Naugher estate from the probate to the circuit court in equity had been effectuated under the statute by a sworn petition of Dora Hinson, who thereafter (as complainant) exhibited her bill in said court for construction of the will, filing inventories, etc., and other acts deemed necessary and proper to the preservation of the estate or trust properties in the due administration thereof, in accordance with the terms of the testator's will as affecting the properties and objects of his bounty and powers of the trustee and executor. It must be admitted that, had not the removal been accomplished by a petition (under the statute), rather than by a bill original in form directed to the judge of, and filed in, said court of equity, to which the administration was removed, the instant bill would lie under the well-recognized jurisdiction of a court of chancery in the administration of trust estates. The reason for the acquiring of jurisdiction in such matters by a court of equity has long been declared:

"In whatever way or for whatever purpose or in whatever form trusts arise under wills, they are exclusively within the jurisdiction of courts of equity. Indeed, so many arrangements, modifications, restraints, and intermediate directions are indispensable to the due administration of these trusts that without the interposition of courts of equity there would in many cases be a total failure of justice." 3 Story's Eq. Juris. (14th Ed.) § 1424 et seq.; 3 Pom. Eq. Juris. §§ 1155, 1157; 5 Pom. Eq. Juris. § 7

The earlier decisions of this court required that a special equity be shown for removal of administration of estates from a probate to a chancery court. Trotter v Blocker, 6 Port. 269, 289; Sellers v. Sellers, 35 Ala. 235, 240; Cowles v. Pollard, 51 Ala. 445, 447; Clay, Adm'r, v. Gurley, Adm'r, 62 Ala. 14; Carroll v. Richardson, 87 Ala. 605, 610, 6 So. 342. The recent decisions are under the statute (Birmingham Trust & Savings Co. v. Cannon, 204 Ala. 336, 342, 85 So. 768; Fowlkes v. Clay, 205 Ala. 523, 88 So. 651; Jemison v Brasher 202 Ala. 578, 579, 81 So. 80), where the right of removal of the administration of estates from the probate to a court of equity is provided for the parties indicated (Gen. Acts 1915, p. 738) without regard to a special equity being averred and shown.

Having taken jurisdiction, equity will administer the estate and apply the substantive law having application, in accordance with its own established procedure. No rule of law prevents the exercise of such original jurisdiction of a court of equity by reason of the removal of administration of the estate from a probate to a court of equity by separate petition under the statute, or that would render the instant bill for construction of the will and for inventories, etc., improperly filed or multifarious. The matters of relief sought-construction and inventories-have been held relevant and proper to a due administration of such an estate in equity. Parker v. Robertson, supra; Dooley v. Dooley, supra; Martin v. Cameron, 203 Ala 548, 549, 84 So. 270; Richter v. Richter, 180 Ala 218, 60 So. 880; Baker v Mitchell, 109 Ala. 490, 20 So. 40; Tygh v. Dolan, 95 Ala. 269, 10 So. 837.

It is not proper on this appeal to determine the nature or character of estate vested in the respective parties by the will of Mr. Naugher or to define the extent of the powers of his executrix and trustee. Such is for primary consideration of the circuit court in equity. Ashurst v Ashurst, 175 Ala. 667, 670, 57 So. 442; Powell v. Labry (Ala.) 92 So. 266. The averments of the bill are sufficient to indicate that complainant is within a class indicated by statute having the right to effectuate a removal of the estate without averment of a special equity, and that she has such an interest in the estate of her deceased father that she may maintain the bill for construction of the will and for the requirement of an inventory, a necessary step in the due administration and protection of such a trust estate. The sustaining of demurrer by the decree, not rested on any special ground, may not be justified on the grounds assigned challenging the sufficiency of the bill and complainant's averment of interest to have construction of the will, and for other orders necessary to the preservation of the estate, since it is of statutory requirement (Code, § 2686) that, in a proper case, settlements may be compelled by attachments or account stated by the court. The recent significant amendment thereof is that-

"Any executor or administrator may be required by citation to file his accounts and vouchers and to make a settlement notwithstanding any provision in any will or other instrument to the contrary," etc. Acts 1919,
...

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31 cases
  • Segrest v. Segrest
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • December 4, 2020
    ...becomes exclusive and efficient, and the court must operate to a final settlement governed by its own procedure.’" Hinson v. Naugher, 207 Ala. 592, 593, 93 So. 560, 561 (1922)."(Some emphasis added.) Accordingly, the removal of the administration of a decedent's estate from the probate cour......
  • Reid v. Armistead
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • December 21, 1933
    ... ... Upshaw v. Eubank et al. (Ala. Sup.) 151 So. 837; ... Schowalter et al. v. Schowalter, supra; Hinson v. Naugher ... et al., 207 Ala. 592, 93 So. 560; Gunter v. Townsend ... et al., 202 Ala. 160, 79 So. 644; Nabors et al. v ... Woolsey, 174 Ala ... ...
  • Powell v. Labry
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • October 18, 1923
    ... ... F. Lyman would not be considered on that appeal from demurrer ... to the bill removing that administration. Hinson v ... Naugher, 207 Ala. 592, 594, 93 So. 560 ... The ... will is now for construction. Items 2 and 3 were specific ... devises of the ... ...
  • Upshaw v. Eubank
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • December 21, 1933
    ...of the will as necessary to enable her to perform her duties as executrix" in the administration of the trust. In Hinson v. Naugher et al., 207 Ala. 592, 93 So. 560, the administration of the estate had been removed into circuit court in equity before the petition was filed for a constructi......
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