Cooper v. Cooper's Ex'or

77 Va. 198, 1883 Va. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 77 Va. 198 (Cooper v. Cooper's Ex'or) 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
Cooper v. Cooper's Ex'or, 77 Va. 198, 1883 Va. LEXIS 48 (Va. 1883).

Opinion

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the hustings court of the city of Petersburg, rendered at the January term thereof, [200]*2001880, and an interlocutory decree of the said court, rendered on the 28th January, 1878, in a chancery suit therein depending, entitled Cooper v. Cooper’s executor and ais. A transcript of the record of this cause, filed with the petition of the appellants, Susan A. Cooper, the widow of Joseph H. Cooper, deceased, Annie B. Cooper, Susie H. Cooper and William H. Cooper, the last three of whom are_ infants of the said Joseph H. Cooper, deceased, suing by the said Susan A. Cooper, their mother and next friend, presents for the consideration of this court the following case:

Joseph H. Cooper, a resident of the city of Petersburg, Virginia, died in the month of July, 1873, leaving a widow and two sets of children. He died seized and possessed of an estate comprising realty of the appraised value of $19,050, and personalty appraised at $7,732.26, not including two hundred shares of stock in the Citizens’ Savings Bank of Petersburg, which, at the time of his death, were worth, approximately, $20,000, making, in the aggregate, an estate of the value of $46,782.26. He left a will disposing of all his property, and nominating two of his personal and business friends as his executors, and expressing the hope that “they will not fail to qualify,” and suggesting that his wife should becQme the guardian of his little children, and assist in educating them.

At the first term of the hustings court of the city of Peters-burg, after the death of the said Joseph H. Cooper, to-wit: at the July term, 1873, John B. Stevens, one of the two persons nominated executors in the wil-1 of the said Cooper, offered the said will for probate, and took upon himself the trust of administering the said estate, and executed his official bond as executor in the penalty of $85,000. The will bears date June 14th, 1869. The testator died in July, 1873.

By his will the testator made the whole of his estate, real and personal, assets in the hands of his executor, to pay all of his just debts, excepting, however, two hundred and twenty-five shares of stock in the Citizens’ Savings Bank of Petersburg, [201]*201which he bequeathed specifically; and then gave to his wife one-third of his whole estate, real and personal, in fee simple; and the remaining two-thirds he dispensed among his two sets of children.

The widow neither renounced the provision made for her by the will, nor demanded her dower until December, 1817, when she filed her petition in the cause, alleging that she had been lawfully deprived of her jointure, and praying to be endowed of the real estate in proportion to her deprivation of her jointure; and praying also to have a homestead assigned and set apart to her and her infant children out of her husband’s estate. In response to that petition, a decree was entered in the cause January 28th, 1878, by which the court decreed that “it appearing that the said Susan A. Cooper failed, within one year from the date at which the will of the said Joseph H. Cooper was admitted to probate, to renounce the said will, and waive the jointure made for her thereby, the court is of opinion that she cannot now renounce said will or waive the jointure therein given her, and demand her dower;” and the court refused the prayer of the petition as to the assignment of dower, but did decree to the said Susan A. Cooper and her infant children a homestead out of the estate of Joseph H. Cooper, deceased, which was commuted in money to the amount of $1,500, and was paid to her by the executor by agreement between her and the creditors, sanctioned by the court. Against this decree, and the final order in the cause, entered at the January term, 1880, the said Susan A. Cooper, for herself and her infant children, obtained an appeal to this court.

The petition of the appellants, filed with the record of the case, raises three questions for the decision of this court:

First. Has John B. Stevens, executor of the will of Joseph H. Cooper, deceased, performed his duties as devolved upon him by the law, and the will of his testator; or has he, in the eye of the law, committed a devastavit in his administration of the estate, [202]*202for which he should he held to account to this widow and her infant children, the appellants in this cause ?

At the time of the death of the testator, Joseph H. Cooper, his apparently large estate was, admittedly and beyond all question, amply sufficient to pay all the debts due by him, and to leave a considerable sum for distribution among the legatees under his will, in addition to the 225 shares of stock of the Citizens Bank of Petersburg, specifically bequeathed to his wife and children as aforesaid; yet this chancery suit, to obtain a final settlement of the estate, instituted in June, 1876, by Joseph D. Cooper, one of the legatees aforesaid, which soon assumed the form of a creditor’s suit, revealed the astounding fact that the estate was wholly insolvent, with an indebtedness of over $25,000, and assets of about $8,000, and the beneficiaries under the will, the widow and children of the testator, without a dollar of bequest.

The petition of the appellants charges, that the said John B. Stevens, executor aforesaid, was guilty of a devastavit in delaying, for three years, to convert the estate into money, in its proper order, for the payment of the debts; the consequence of which delay was serious loss from depreciation of property and the great accumulation of interest on the debts outstanding against it; and also in permitting the 225 shares of Citizens Bank stock to perish in his hands.”

The will of the testator, Joseph H. Cooper, is the source of duties and responsibility devolved and assumed by the executor, John B. Stevens, in the case under review.

In the second item of the will the testator says: “I wish my executor to sell at his discretion, and when advisable to do so, all of my real estate and stock, except the stock in the Citizens Savings Bank.” And by the third item he gives these 225 shares of stock, in proportions, to his wife and children, of both sets, and then adds: I believe it best for my wife and all the children that they should not dispose of this stock, but to continue to pay monthly instalments until the stock is worth one [203]*203hundred dollars. It will then be, in my opinion, a good paying stock, but should it prove otherwise, I would advise the selling of it, and invest in something else.”

It will thus be seen that the will of the testator, Joseph H. Cooper, gave to his executor full discretion to determine the time when it would be advisable to sell the real estate and stock of the testator, “except the stock in the Citizens Savings Bank” ; which said stock he not only did not empower his executor to sell, but did, expressly and specifically, bequeath to his wife and children, accompanied with his parting advice that they should not dispose of this stock, &c.

If the executor honestly exercised the discretion conferred upon him by the will, then, by the principles settled by this court in the cases of Mills and als. v. Mills’ executor and als.; Mills and als. v. Lancaster and als., 28 Gratt. 442; Lingle and alsv. Cooke’s adm’r, 32 Gratt. 262; Staples and als. v.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Va. 198, 1883 Va. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-coopers-exor-va-1883.