Brooks v. Miller

2 S.E. 219, 29 W. Va. 499, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 22
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 219 (Brooks v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Miller, 2 S.E. 219, 29 W. Va. 499, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 22 (W. Va. 1887).

Opinion

Ssyder, Judge:

In 1869, and for many.years prior thereto, there was pending in the Circuit Court of Kanawha comity a suit in equity [500]*500entitled Hollingsworth et al. v. Brooks et al. involving a controversy in regard to certain real estate and a salt furnace operated thereon in said county." By an order of said court made November 2d, 1869, in said cause, S. A. Miller and N. Fitzhugh were appointed commissioners and directed to rent said salt property for one year from and after December 31, 1869, requiring from the renter or lessee bond with good security-for the rent payable at the end of the year. Pursuant to said order said commissioners did rent said property to the Kanawha Salt Co. for the year 1870 for the sum of $20,250.00, and reported their proceedings to the court. Their report was confirmed and the commissioners were directed to withdraw and collect the notes for the rent. By a subsequent decree, entered November 8,1871, the court directed said commissioners to collect said $20,250.00 with its interest from said Salt Co., and to loan the same out, less, their commissions, at legal interest until the further order of the court, “requiring, however, from the persons to whom said loans may be made good security for the payment thereof;” and the "said decree further ordered, “that before receiving the said money from the Kanawha Salt Co.,- the said commissioners, Miller and Fitzhugh, shall give bond with good security, to be approved by the clerk of this court in the penalty of $25,000.00 for the faithful performance of their duties as required by law.”

On the same day said decree was entered, to wit, November 8,1871, the said commissioners, with James M. Laidley,. James H. Nash and Win. H. Hogeman, as their sureties, executed and filed with the clerk the bond required by said decree.

The commissioners, on October 31,1872, filed their report in which they state, that the money collected by them and the interest thereon aggregated $21,071.61, from which they deduct for commissions, taxes, &c., $1,669.08, leaving $19,-402.53, of which they report, that they had loaned the sum of $19,400.00, giving the names of eleven different persons to whom the loans had been made and the amount loaned to each. Among the persons and amounts so named are S. A. Miller $2,000.00, and N. Fitzhugh $3,000.00. Balance in the hands of commissioners. $2.53.

[501]*501On November 9,1872, Stuart Robinson, W. B. Brooks' and others, the owners of the leased property, filed their petition setting up their title to said rents, and asking the • court to enter a decree “ directing said Miller and Fitzhugh, special commissioners, to hand oyer to them the bonds held by them as aforesaid of the parties to whom said rents of 1870 were loaned as aforesaid, and also directing said special commissioners to pay over all other moneys, if any, in their hands arising from the renting of said property for said year 1870, &c. ” In said petition the petitioners state : “ Your petitioners further show, that said special commissioners, Miller and Fitzhugh, have collected the most of said’ rents for the year 1870, and under an order of the said Circuit Court made in said cause have loaned out said rents so far as collected to several parties, whose names and the amounts loaned to each one are stated in a report filed in said cause during the present term by said special commissioners, which is herein specially referred to for the names of the parties to whom said rents have been loaned and the amount borrowed by each one. It will also appear from said report that said special commissioners have in their jmssession the bonds of the borrowers, amounting, principal and interest, to upwards of $20,000.00. ”

On the same day (November 9, 1872,) the cause was heard and decree entered granting the prayer of said petition. The material part,of said decree is as follows :

“ And it appearing to the court, from the report of special commissioners, Miller and Fitzhugh, filed during the present term, that said special commissioners have loaned out $19,400.00, part of the rents of said' property for the said year 1870 to various parties, and that said special commissioners have in their possession the bonds of said parties for the amount loaned each one respectively, it is therefore adjudged, ordered and decreed that said special commissioners, Miller and Fitzhugh, hand over to the petitioners the bonds held by them as aforesaid of the parties to whom the rents of 1870 have been loaned as aforesaid, and that said special commissioners also pay over to said petitioners the remainder of the rents of 1870, if any, which they may have in their hands or under their' control. ”

[502]*502An appeal was taken from this decree and on July 13, 1874, the same was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. (7 W. Va. 559).

In April, 1877, W. B. Brooks in his own right and as trusteee for L. V. and Nora R. Brooks brought this suit in the Circuit Court of Kanawha county against the said S. A. Miller and N. Fitzhugh, commissioners, and their sureties, J. M. Laidley, Wm. FI. Hogeman, the administrator of J. FI. Nash, dec’d, and others. The plaintiff, after averring the foregoing facts in his bill, alleges, in substance, that W. C Brooks and L. V. Brooks, before the aforesaid decree of November 9,1872, was entered, assigned to him their part of said rents of 1870, and that on .January 1,1875, Stuart Robinson and others assigned their interests in said rents to Bennett H. Young; that commissioners, Miller and Fitzhugh, handed over and delivered to plaintiff and said Young the notes or bonds of various persons to whom they had loaned a portion of said rents under the order of the court a short time before January, 1877, and that the amounts of the bonds so handed over was about $14,400.00; that there is still in the hands of said commissioners unaccounted for more than $5,000.00, of which sum the said Miller, with the knowledge and consent of Fitzhugh, took and appropriated to his individual use $2,000.00, and the said Fitzhugh, with the consent of said Miller, took and appropriated to his individual use $3,000.00; that in January, 1876, the plaintiff and said Young divided the bonds turned over to them and also the amounts still in the hands of said Miller and Fitz-hugh, and in that division it was mutually agreed between them that said Young was to have the $2,000.00 so used by said Miller and the plaintiff the $3,000.00 so used by the said Fitzhugh ; and that said division was made for the convenience of the plaintiff and said Young, and to enable each to collect his own share from the said commissioners and their sureties; that the said commissioners have not kept and performed the condition of their said bond, but have broken the same by using and appropriating to their own use and refusing to account for and pay over a portion of said fund as hereinbefore set forth, and that said Miller and Fitzhugh and their sureties are liable to the plaintiff in his own right for the said $3,000.00.

[503]*503Tlie bill prays for an account and settlement of the transactions of said commissioners, and that the plaintiff may have a personal decree against them and their sureties for said $3,000.00 so taken and appropriated by said Fitzhugh, and for general relief.

I have omitted the averments of the bill seeking to recover the $2,000.00 alleged to have been appropriated by Miller, as the prosecution of that claim was abandoned by the plaintiff during the progress of the suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 219, 29 W. Va. 499, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-miller-wva-1887.