Brockenbrough v. Turner

78 Va. 438, 1884 Va. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 28, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 Va. 438 (Brockenbrough v. Turner) 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
Brockenbrough v. Turner, 78 Va. 438, 1884 Va. LEXIS 20 (Va. 1884).

Opinions

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Frances A. Cox died in the year 1859, leaving a will, in which she bequeathed to Elizabeth Pearson an annuity of three hundred dollars for her life, and directed her executors, James Smith and Thomas Brown, to invest a sum sufficient to insure, from the interest thereof, the regular payment of the annuity. After the death of Mrs. Pearson, the sum so invested was directed to be equally divided between Sarah Ann Richards, Jane E. Rogers, Thomas N. Murphy, Mary McGuire and John N. Murphy. The said •executors qualified, with R. L. T. Beale, B. F. Brown and Willoughby Newton as their securities. The said Newton is dead and insolvent; the said Smith alone acted—Thomas Brown taking no part in the administration of the estate.

The said Smith reserved a bond of one Dandridge Cox of $5,150 as the funds from which to raise and pay the annuity to the said Elizabeth Pearson, secured by trust deed on the Mt. Zion estate.

An annuity was also charged upon the estate of Frances A. Cox, as the heir at-law of Robert Bailey, dec’d. The said Smith reserved also a bond of R. H. Lyell for $550 to secure the payment of this annuity. The annuitant, Eliz[440]*440abeth Pearson, died in 1878. The annuity to the said Elizabeth Pearson was paid during her life.

During the life of the annuitant, the said Smith had. purchased of Sarah Ann Richards, Thomas JST. Murphy, and John N. Murphy their shares in the funds reserved above.

The above named Dandridge Cox, having become insolvent, the said Smith caused a sale of the Mt-. Zion estate to-be made, in the year 1868, and it was purchased by Joseph W. and Garrett P. Dungan, at the price of $5j310. These purchasers executed to James Smith and Thomas Brown, executors of Frances A. Cox, their five bonds for $853.59, making together $4,267.95, and paid in cash to James Smith the residue, after paying the expenses of executing the trust to the trustee. These bonds were payable, respectively, on the first day of January, 1870, the first day of January, 1871, the first day of January, 1872, the first day of January, 1873, and the first day of January, 1874.

After purchasing the three interests above mentioned,. Smith assigned two of these bonds—to-wit: the one payable on the first day of January, 1871, and the one payable on the first day of January, 1872, both being then due, to William F. Brockenbrough, and received in satisfaction a bond belonging to said Brockenbrough, less in value than the two, and the difference in money. The transaction was dollar for dollar, the bonds being assigned and received.at their full value, there being no profit whatever in the transaction to the said Brockenbrough, the exchauge being made for the accommodation of the said Smith, who, having become the owner of these bonds, wished to exchange them with Brockenbrough for the bond held by him, with William Harding as one of the obligors, in order to exchange the same for his own bond held by said Harding. The said Brockenbrough knew at the time of the transfer of these two bonds to him, that the said Smith was the owner of the three shares, and that Smith still held bonds suffi[441]*441cient to meet the interest of the two parties, which he had not purchased.

A part of the Mt. Zion tract of land was sold by the Dungans to William Dawson, with the assent of Smith, and the bonds taken payable to James Smith. These bonds were six in number, for $192.00 each, making $1,152.00.

About one year after this Smith assigned these Dawson bonds to William Harding, and the Dungans bonds, falling due January 1st, 1874, to pay a debt due said Harding by Smith. Besides these assignments Smith collected the bonds falling due January 1st, 1870, amounting to $904.80; the bond which fell due January 1st, 1873, making for that $1,058.47, and the cash payment at the re-sale of $1,042.05, less the expenses of executing the trust, making about $3,000. So that he assigned of this fund $2,560.77 for value, at no discount, and collected the residue, including the Lyell bond, which he is accountable for.

At the time of these assignments Smith was a man of good property and good standing, and was the owner of the fund, by purchase, to a greater amount than he so assigned. He accounted to the annuitant during her life, and at her death, Smith failing to pay over to. Jane E. Rogers and the children of Mary McGuire, Eliza, and Jane, who had intermarried with George Turner, they brought suit against him and his sureties on his official bond, and the said William F. Brockenbrough, and the personal representative of William Harding, who is Lucien T. Harding, and W. W. Walker, who is alleged to have collected, as the agent of William Harding, or in some other way, some of these bonds, or to still hold them.

It is admitted that James Smith has defaulted as executor of Frances A. Cox, and his liability on account of the estate is not denied; but the question involved in this case is as to the parties to make good his defalcation; whether R. L. T. Beale and B. F. Brown, his sureties on his official [442]*442:bond or the said Brockenbrough and Harding, named above; and if the latter, whether jointly and equally, or inversely in the order of their purchase respectively.

The circuit court of Westmoreland, on the 8th of April, 1881, entered a decree against James Smith and his sureties in favor of Rogers and wife for the sum of $862.80, with interest from September 1, 1878; and in favor of George ‘Turner and Jane, his wife, for $570, with interest from May 1, 1878, and in favor of Mary McGuire for the like sum of -$570, with interest from May 1, 1878; but provided that ■the said decree should not be enforced against the sureties ■of Smith on his official bond until the bonds and sums assigned to and collected by William F. Brockenbrough -and William Harding and his legal representatives, as aforesaid, shall have proved insufficient for the payment of ■the sums so decreed to the said complainants; and decreed against the personal representative of William Harding for •the sum collected by William in his lifetime, and against W. W. Walker the amount which had passed to him, amounting together to the sum of $1,001.41; and the sum ■remaining then due to the complainants being $1,345.01, .that sum was decreed against Brockenbrough, and receivers were appointed to collect the same. The effect of which decree was to exonerate the sureties on the official bond of this executor from all liability, and place it upon Brockenbrough and Harding, and W. W. Walker.

It will be remembered that Brockenbrough paid full value for the bonds received by him, and that the bond assigned by him was Harding’s bond, which was passed to Harding by Smith to pay Smith’s debt, and that Brockenbrough was in no wise benefited, either directly or indirectly, by his share in the transaction; and that Harding also paid a full equivalent to Smith for what he received.

• The above facts are admitted, and not controverted at -all, and are set forth in the opinion of the judge who de[443]*443.cided the case in the circuit court. It must be borne in mind that the first investment made by the executor to meet the annuity, was necessarily changed by the failure •of Dandridge Cox, and his consequent failure to pay the annual interest out of which the annuity had to be paid; that the land was sold, and other bonds taken, five in number, which fell due as above indicated.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

National Surety Corp. v. Commonwealth Ford, Inc.
11 Va. Cir. 311 (Richmond City Circuit Court, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 Va. 438, 1884 Va. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brockenbrough-v-turner-va-1884.