Atkinson v. McCormick

76 Va. 791, 1882 Va. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 12, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 76 Va. 791 (Atkinson v. McCormick) 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
Atkinson v. McCormick, 76 Va. 791, 1882 Va. LEXIS 81 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Charles L. Wood by his last will, which was admitted to probate in the circuit court of Frederick county, March 5, 1878, first directs his executor to pay all his debts, and directs him to make sale of all his personal property, and all his interest in the partnership business of Wood & Smith, including all interest held by him, jointly or otherwise, with said Smith, in any and all real estate,' to raise a fund for that purpose, and any surplus arising therefrom, over and above the payment of his debts, he afterwards disposes of in a subsequent clause of his will. The will then proceeds as follows;

“ Secondly. I give and devise to J. Marshall McCormick, of the county of Clarke and State of Virginia, my ‘ Red Bud ’ farm, on which I now reside, containing about 500 acres, including the Red Bud ’ mill-property, and all other improvements belonging to and connected with said farm, situated in Frederick county, Virginia, in trust, nevertheless, for the sole and separate use of my daughter, wife of George W. Bowly, and the issue of my said daughter, free from the control, debts, liabilities, contracts and engagements of her said husband,, permitting her, the said Ann Mariah Bowly, to take and receive the rents, issues and profits arising from the said property, for her comfortable support. I prefer, however, that the said property should be sold, and that my said daughter should have the interest and profits accruing from the proceeds of such sale j and to that end I authorize and empower the said trustee to make sale of the same and to invest the proceeds thereof [796]*796upon good real or other security; the interest upon which he shall pay over to my said daughter, and her issue, if there be any. The proceeds of such sale, if one be made, shall be held by the said trustee, upon the same trust and limitations as provided for in the front part of this clause.”

Thirdly. He devises and bequeaths his “ Clover Hill ” farm, and also the interest and increase arising from all the rest and residue of his property, including any surplus arising from the fund provided for the payment of his debts; the interest upon which surplus, if there be any, he directs his executor to invest upon good security, the interest thereon to be paid to his wife during her life. The rents and profits of said real estate, and the interest and increase accruing from said personalty, he constitutes a fund for the comfortable support of his wife.

Fourthly. He directs, after the death of his wife, the said “ Clover Hill ” farm to be divided into two equal parts, one of which he devises to the said Marshall McCormick, to be held by him in trust for the sole and separate use of his said daughter, “Ann Mariah Bowly,' and her issue, free from the control, debts and liabilities of her husband.” The other equal part he gives to his adopted daughter Priscilla Leslie Wood, infant daughter of his deceased brother, “ and her issue, if there be any such, free from the control, debts, contracts, and engagements, of any husband she may in future take.”

By the sixth clause, in the event that either his said daughter Ann Maria Bowly, or his adopted daughter Priscilla Leslie Wood, should die without leaving issue, he •bequeaths and devises over the property he had before bequeathed to her. Lastly, he appoints J. Marshall McCormick his executor.

Nearly two years after this will was probated, on the 1st of January, 1880, George W. Bowly purchased from his brothers F. H. and L. Bowly with the consent and agree[797]*797ment of the heirs of their father, a stock of goods with the fixtures, &c., appertaining to the trade of a druggist, which belonged to the estate of his deceased father, Franklin Bowly, who had for many years carried on the business of a druggist extensively in the town of Winchester, at the price of $2,000, and executed his four bonds in $500 each for the same, in which his wife, Ann Bowly, united as security.

Three of these bonds were assigned to William M. Atkinson, the appellant, and C. B. Hancock in trust for the benefit of creditors of Franklin Bowly’s estate, among others William H. Brown & Bro. And this suit was instituted by them against George W. Bowly and Ann Bowly, his wife, and J. Marshall McCormick, her trustee, and William Atkinson and C. B. Hancock, who held the bonds aforesaid of George and Anna Bowly, in trust for their and the other creditors’ benefit, who were also made parties. The object of the suit was to have the fund in the hands of Atkinson and Hancock collected and distributed amongst them and the other creditors, and' as George Bowly had no property out of which the debt could be made, to have the trust fund of Ann Bowly, which was in the hands of McCormick, her. trustee, and which was liable for it, or so much of it as was necessary, applied to the payment of the two last of said bonds, the other having been satisfied.

The bill charges that the property of Mrs. Nannie Bowly, which is before set out in the bill, is justly liable to the payment of said bonds (notes), and that Mrs. Nannie Bowly intended to charge the same; that there are arrears of income now in the hands of Marshall McCormick, trustee; that there are funds belonging to Mrs. Nannie Bowly’s separate estate in his hands, or invested by him for her; that George Bowly has no property with which to satisfy -these notes (bonds), and that Mrs. Nannie Bowly has per[798]*798sonal estate belonging to her separate estate, and inasmuch, as your orators are remediless save in a court of equity? they pray that the persons above named and the other creditors secured by the assignment in trust to said Atkinson and Hancock, who are named, be made parties defendant; that Marshall McCormick, trustee, disclose on oath what funds he has in hand or invested for the separate use of Mrs. Nannie Bowly; that the will of Charles. L. Wood be construed, and Mrs. Nannie Bowly’s interest be ascertained; that her separate estate be subjected to the payment of said notes (bonds), and the proceeds distributed among the creditors, &e., and for general relief.

McCormick, trustee, filed his demurrer and answer, and an amended answer reserving the demurrer to plaintiff’s bill, which was filed on the 20th of Juné, 1882, and on the 23 d following, the court made a decree dismissing the plaintiff’s bill upon the ground that it is not sufficient in law, from which decree William M. Atkinson, trustee, appealed to this court, and the plaintiffs below and the other creditors, who were made defendants below, united in the appeal.

The first question which meets us is as to the jurisdiction of this court to entertain the appeal.

The court is of opinion that the important question, and the only material one in controversy, is as to the liability of the separate estate of Mrs. Ann Bowly, or the income arising from it, to satisfy the bonds of George W. Bowly and Nannie Bowly, his wife, which constitute the entire trust fund in the hands of the trustee, Atkinson, for the payment of the debts due the plaintiffs and the creditor defendants below. The court is of opinion that the whole trust fund is the subject of this controversy, and that the whole fund was represented in the suit below by the appellant. He was a proper and necessary party to the suit. It matters not whether he was before the court below as [799]*799plaintiff or defendant in form. He was really plaintiff upon the matter controverted by the trustee of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Va. 791, 1882 Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-mccormick-va-1882.