American Surety Co. v. Quincey

99 S.E. 641, 125 Va. 1, 1919 Va. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 641 (American Surety Co. v. Quincey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Surety Co. v. Quincey, 99 S.E. 641, 125 Va. 1, 1919 Va. LEXIS 1 (Va. 1919).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Florence B. Quincey, a resident of New York, died June 1, 1909, leaving a will made a few days prior thereto, which contained the following provisions pertinent to this controversy :

“Second. I will, devise and bequeath in trust for my be- ' loved son, Chas. E. Quincey, Jr., as hereinafter set out, all the remainder of my property — real, personal and mixed— of whatever kind, and wherever situated, and for the purpose of carrying out this clause of my will, I direct that my executor hereinafter named shall make as speedy a settlement of my estate as is practicable, and that, upon the settlement of my estate, he transfer and turn over to the trustees hereinafter named for the use and benefit of my beloved son, Charles E. Quincey, Jr., as hereinafter set out, all the remainder of my estate in kind, including moneys, other personal property, real and mixed property, and, for this purpose, I invest my said executor with full power to sign, acknowledge and deliver all instruments necessary to the passing of the legal title in all said property to the said trustee, and I impose upon my said executor the duty thus to sign, acknowledge and deliver all said instruments.
“Third. I hereby nominate and appoint the Rev. Parker Morgan, who resides at the date of the execution of this will at or near the corner of Forty-fifth street and Fifth [4]*4avenue; in New York city, trustee under this will for my said son, Chas. E. Quincey, Jr., and I now prescribe the following rules and directions to govern the trust hereby and herein created, in addition to such rules and requirements-as may be imposed by statute in such cases. The said trustee shall receive from my executor, hereinafter named, at. the time of the settlement of my estate all the residue of my said estate of whatever kind and wherever situated, and he shall hold the same in trust for the use and benefit of my said son, Chas. E. Quincey, Jr., and he shall manage and control the same for his use and benefit. * * *
“Fourth. I hereby nominate and appoint Willis Bruce-Dowd, whose address at the date of the execution of this-will is 141 Broadway, New York city, N. Y., to be the executor of this my last will and testament, clothing him with all the powers and imposing upon him all the duties set out • in this will and testament and all those prescribed by law and statute.”

The original will was probated in New York June 29, 1909, and a duly authenticated copy thereof was admitted to probate in the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond, July 14, 1909. Willis B. Dowd, the executor therein named, qualified as such in New York on June 29, 1909, and in Virginia on May 18, 1910.

No bond was required of or given by the executor in New York, but when he qualified in Virginia he executed a bond in the penalty of $40,000 with the American Surety Company, of New York, as his surety. Some months later, on October 24, 1910, on the motion of the American Surety Company, the Chancery Court of the city of Richmond entered an order requiring the executor to give a new bond in a like penalty, and at the same time, on the motion of the surety company, directed him to file within thirty days from the date of that order, with the commissioner of ac[5]*5«counts, a full report of his transactions as executor in the State of Virginia.

The new bond was given on December 22, 1910, with the National Surety Company as surety, and on December 27, 1910, the executor filed with the commissioner of accounts a statement purporting to cover his transactions as executor in Virginia. The commissioner declined to allow some of the disbursements claimed by the executor and, nearly two years later, returned to the clerk’s office a statement showing money received and paid out by the executor in his capacity as such in this State. The receipts and disbursements shown in this statement balanced each other, but a disbursement of $9,759.40 purported to be a payment from Dowd as executor in Virginia to himself as executor in New York, and this is the principal occasion and subject of this controversy. The report of the commissioner of accounts remained in the clerk’s office for more than thirty •days without any exceptions thereto, but it was never formally confirmed or recorded. The judge of the chancery court makes the following comment thereon: “The report •on its face showed that the property was assessed for taxes for 1911 and 1912 and these taxes were not paid, and in my judgment the account showed error to this extent upon the face of it, and could not be confirmed. With the taxes unpaid, no amount could be properly disbursed. Sec. 492-b, Pollard’s Code 1904.”

This suit was brought by Chas. E. Quincey, Jr., and his father, Chas. E. Quincey (the latter being the husband of the testatrix and interested as tenant by the curtesy in certain of the property passing by the will) to surcharge and falsify the ex 'parte settlement of the executor’s account; to require the sureties to pay such sums of money as might be found to be due by each of them by reason of the failure of the executor to faithfully discharge the duties of his [6]*6office; to have the estate administered and settled by the court, and for general relief.

The. cause was referred to John B. Minor, a commissioner in chancery, to state and settle the Virginia accounts of Dowd as executor. In an elaborate and ably prepared report, in which Commissioner Minor dealt with all the questions of law and fact in the case, he rejected the credit of $9,759.40, disallowed commissions, and reported that the executor was indebted to the estate in Virginia in a total sum of $10,966.72, as of December 24, 1911, of which $8,-224.48 was chargeable to the American Surety Company, and $2,742.24 to the National Surety Company. The National Surety Company settled its liability by paying $2,000, which was agreed to on behalf of the Quinceys and accepted in full. The American Surety Company, however, resisted the liability and filed numerous exceptions to the report of the commissioner. These exceptions were overruled, and a decree was entered confirming the report and directing payment by the American Surety Company of the sum above indicated as its liability on its bond. From that decree this appeal was allowed.

A demurrer to the amended bill, upon which the cause was heard, was overruled, and this action on the part of the trial court is assigned as error. The ruling complained of was plainly right, .and, except in so far as the demurrer raised questions arising on the final hearing and hereinafter disposed of, does not call for any discussion.

The next assignment of error goes to the merits of the case, and, stated generally, is a denial of the complainants* right to a decree against the American Surety Company for the amount reported against it by the commissioner and approved by the court.

[1] The first proposition advanced in support of this assignment. is that the evidence was not sufficient to surcharge and falsify the ex parte account, and that, therefore, there [7]*7should have been no reference to a commissioner, but, instead, a decree dismissing the bill.

Conceding without discussion that the ex parte

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 641, 125 Va. 1, 1919 Va. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-surety-co-v-quincey-va-1919.