Cary v. Macon

4 Va. 605
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 1803
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Va. 605 (Cary v. Macon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cary v. Macon, 4 Va. 605 (Va. Ct. App. 1803).

Opinion

This day came the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid, and the arguments of counsel, delivered the following opinion :

The various statements of accounts by the commissioner, and the conflicting opinions delivered at different times by the court of chancery, apparent in this voluminous record, ^render it extremely difficult, if not impracticable, to pursue and decide on each particular opinion : this court will therefore proceed to establish some general principles, according to which the accounts are to be adjusted.

The account of Robert Carter Nicholas, commencing in the 22d page of the commissioner’s first report, ought to stand, as far as it goes, with the small corrections made therein, and omitting the several articles of credit for interest which is hereinafter provided for. There appears no satisfactory proof or reasonable presumption, that any further sum of money or quantity of tobacco came to the hands of the said Nicholas, than is accounted for. The claim for an omitted crop of tobacco made in the year 1777, is merely conjectural. The annual crops are estimated, probably near the truth ; but of those, part were carried to the warehouses, and part kept at the plantations, without even a guess at the quantity of each, and yet all the latter is admitted to have come to the hands of John Ambler, after being carried to the warehouses. Robert Carter Nicholas, gives credit for tobacco sold Norton in 1778, and in December 1779, without mentioning the quantity or when made ; and there seems no reason to doubt but the crop claimed, made prior to both, was included. However, if the appellee, or John Ambler, shall desire it, let an issue be made up and tried whether any and what quantity of tobacco, and of what value, came to the hands of the said Nicholas, more than is accounted for, and if any found, to be added to his debit. The articles of loan office certificates and of cash received at the treasury to be extended and the estate charged with one thousand five hundred and thirty-one pounds, the amount of the certificates received of Ambler and Norton, in January 1778. That what is called the private account, stated in the 38th page, and the annual balances of the Westham account, commencing in the 8th page of the same report, ought to be incorporated with the said general account, in due order of time, and the articles of all to stand as nominally entered, without scaling, as to the said Nicholas, who *was a debtor during the paper era; but to be scaled when carried to the accounts of the estate, and others who were creditors during the same period. That Robert Carter Nicholas, ought to be allowed a commission of five per centum on all his receipts, including those in the Westham and private account; his account to be closed at the end of each year, and interest charged on the balance: the commissions and interest to be kept in a separate state from the account till its close in June 1780, and then the balance to be carried to that account; and if the balance then due from the said Nicholas, shall exceed two thousand five hundred and ninety pounds, (the specie borrowed,) the surplus to be scaled according to the time when such excess occurred: but if the balance shall be that only or a lesser sum, it is to stand as specie, being so much unpaid of a specie debt, and the principal is to bear interest until June 1789, a middle month of that year in which a payment was made, but no particular time ascertained. His estate is also to be charged with a moiety of one hundred and fifty-five pounds thirteen shillings and five pence, the estimated net profits of the Westham estate for each of the years 1779, 1780 and 1781, with interest from the end of each year, to June 1789, when the seventeen hundred and fifty pounds paid to John Ambler, being deducted, the executors of the said Nicholas’s will, are to be decreed to pay the balance, with interest, from that time till payment to the appellee in part of his claim.

It was proper for the commissioner to make the discriminations in the account of Robert C. Nicholas, which was kept generally with the estate of the testator, but the following errors in making it ought to be corrected, besides the sixty pounds for Byrd’s .tickets here charged to John Ambler, but afterwards properly charged to the estate, to wit:

October 1770, seventy pair of shoes charged to John, and none to Edward Cary, when it is presumable that they were for the whole slaves. The commissioner states that Edward had forty-two, and John ninety. One third part, therefore, should be charged to the former, and two thirds to the latter.

*The same occurs in May 1771, in November 1772, in November 1773, in November 1774, and in January 1776, and to be corrected in like manner.

January 1778, five pounds eighteen shillings and three pence, paid Harwood for wdrk at Jamestown, and fifty-four pounds nineteen shillings and nine pence, for sundries furnished from Westham, charged here to John Ambler, but should have been to Mrs. Ambler.

Mrs. Ambler is charged by Mr. Blair and Mr. Jacquelin Ambler, with rent for the land and hire for the slaves at the Cottage. She was therefore to pay the expense of feeding and clothing the slaves, their levies and taxes, and the doctor for attending them, and the taxes on the stock and her chariot, and the plate, if any : John only chargeable for the land tax and his riding horse, with his servant and horse, if he kept such. All other of the foregoing articles, which are here-charged to John, are to be charged to Mrs. Ambler, as are also the several articles for corn purchased, for sundries furnished from Westham, and sixty-two pounds ten [841]*841shillings cash, paid in part of John’s board. She was entitled to the crops, and if any part of them has been credited to John Ambler, it is to be corrected and transferred to her credit. In the credits of the account, besides the tobacco sold to Norton, here credited to the estate, but afterwards rightly to John, so much only of the money drawn for to Robert C. Nicholas and Jacquelin Ambler on Athaws and Norton & Sons, ought to be credited to the estate, as was due from those merchants to the testator, including the crop of tobacco of 1768, shipped in 1769, the goods imported in 1769, in consequence of orders from the testator, the rings and the premiums of insurance connected with them, and also the money received by Norton & Sons of Hindman and Company, with the annual interest arising therefrom. The residue of those drafts and the interest thereon, ought to be credited to Edward Cary and John Ambler, in proportion to the quantity of tobacco by them respectively shipped, between whom severally, *and the merchants, and not with the estate or executor, the accounts should be stated from thenceforth, giving them credit for the proceeds of their respective tobaccos, and charging each with his proportion of the said surplus drafts.

It is just to proportion by the ratio adopted by the commissioner, such goods as were imported for the slaves and plantation use, and his charge is so far approved. But though he reports that those cannot be discriminated from what were imported for the use of the children, if the invoices are produced, the nature of the articles will point' it out, and the amount ought to be deducted and charged to the estate. If no invoices are shewn, an estimated allowance should be made by a comparison of the total amount with the probable demands of the estate, for it does make a difference.

The accounts of Edward Cary Ambler are to be stated without other interest than his proportion of that which is charged to Robert C.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Va. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-v-macon-vactapp-1803.