Davis v. See

194 S.E. 271, 119 W. Va. 490, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 147
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1937
Docket8569
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 271 (Davis v. See) 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
Davis v. See, 194 S.E. 271, 119 W. Va. 490, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 147 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

Paul J. Davis, committee for John Knight, an insane person, instituted this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Mineral County, seeking an accounting from Ernest A. See, a former committee for said Knight, as to the funds which went into his hands as such. In his bill, two specific items on which an accounting was sought were set up: (1) An item of $3,971.20 found to be due from See to his ward’s estate by a decree entered by said Circuit Court, on the 27th of July, 1933, and ordered to be paid or replaced on or before October 1, 1933; and (2) the sum of $4010.20, representing the amount paid for four notes of $1,000.00 each, executed by Caleb J. White and Mabel A. White to the Huffman Fruit Company, Inc., which the said See, as committee, purchased from the payee, under the assumed authority of an order of said Circuit Court, entered on the 29th day of August, 1931, but which order, the plaintiff avers, was violated by See. The bill does not allege a loss on account of the purchase of said notes. The claim of the plaintiff is based on the contention that the alleged violation of the court’s order with respect to the purchase of said notes created a liability on See, and the surety on his bond as committee, for the total amount paid therefor.

*492 The cause was finally heard upon the report of a commissioner. The Circuit Court found that on the claim of $3,971.20, See was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $20.89, which amount was paid prior to the actual entry of the decree giving effect to the court’s ruling. As to the item of $4,010.20, based on the Caleb J. White notes, the court relieved See and the surety on his official bond from all liability therefor, basing such action upon the following grounds: (1) No loss was clearly and satisfactorily shown; (2) no bad faith or carelessness that could be construed as negligence imposing liability had been shown; (3) little or no effort had been made by See’s successor to collect the White notes, although possibility of some recovery thereon was shown by the evidence; and (4) the said White notes were accepted by the plaintiff without protest and had been held by him without positive action.

From this decree the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

We see no reason to disturb the action of the court below with respect to the item of $3,971.20, and therefore affirm the same. The small sum found due having been paid, and the matter of costs involved controlled by our decision on other points raised on the record, there is no occasion to further consider that part of the decree.

No question is raised as to the right of the plaintiff to demand and receive from the former committee an accounting of the estate in his hands, and to maintain a proper suit or action to enforce the same. That such right is clearly vested in the plaintiff under Code, 27-9-4, has been held by this court in Straight v. Ice, 56 W. Va. 60, 48 S. E. 837. But the defendant, See, by his demurrer to the bill, raises the question of the jurisdiction of a court of equity to entertain a suit of this character, where, as he avers, there is an adequate and complete remedy at law. Waiving the question of whether or not, upon the situation developed by the record, the proceedings open to the plaintiff, under the statute, to secure an accounting and the right to sue at law to recover any amount found to be due furnishes complete and adequate relief, we have not understood that such remedy excludes the long established jurisdiction of courts .of equity to enforce *493 accountings by fiduciaries of estates in their hands for administration and settlement. The power of courts of equity with relation to trust funds in the hands of fiduciaries, which must necessarily include committees for the estates of insane persons, is illustrated by the following authorities. 3 Pomeroy, Equity Juris., section 1097; 5, idem, section 2358; Pratt v. Wright, 13 Gratt. (Va.) 175; Barnum v. Frost’s Admr., 17 Gratt. (58 Va.) 398; Cole v. Cole’s Admr., 28 Gratt (69 Va.), 365; Merchants’ Bank v. Jefferies, 21 W .Va. 504; Wilson v. Kennedy, 63 W. Va. 1, 59 S. E. 736; Chapman v. American Surety Co., 261 Ill., 594, 104 N. E. 247. Another point of demurrer that no loss was specifically alleged is without merit for the reason that, independently of any loss which might ultimately be shown, the plaintiff had a right to an accounting to determine the value of the assets transferred to him, and for which he will have to account. He is entitled to the protection of a decree of a court as to that value. He was not required to accept the ex parte statements filed by See, in which he assumes to give detailed statements of his transactions as committee, subsequent to the date of his last settlement, and up to the time when he ceased to act as such. The record shows that See was removed as committee on the 2nd day of November, 1933, and that the plaintiff’s appointment as such was made on the 18th day of April, 1934. The other points of demurrer, in view of the nature of the case, do not call for comment, and the demurrer, as a whole, was properly overruled.

In considering the question of whether or not See is liable on account of the transaction by which he purchased the Caleb J. White notes, a study of the background leading up to the purchase of said notes is required. It appears from the record that one J. R. Hayden was the owner of a tract of 266 acres of land, situated in Mineral County, and that in 1929 he conveyed the same to T. T. Huffman, Jr., and Fred N. Huffman for an actual consideration of $10,000.00, evidenced by five notes for $2,-000.00 each, secured by a deed of trust, and that said notes were by Hayden placed with the District National Bank of Washington, District of Columbia, as collateral *494 on a loan made by said bank to Hayden; that in 1930, the Huffmans conveyed 144 acres of said land to Harry C. Stouffer, who assumed the payment of four of the $2,-000.00 notes held by Hayden; that in 1931, the Huffman Fruit Company, a corporation, successor to the Huffmans in the remaining 122 acres, sold 104 acres thereof to Caleb J. White in exchange for certain property in the State of Maryland and a cash payment of $600.00, but leaving unpaid of the consideration the sum of $4,000.00, represented by four notes of $1,000.00 each, dated March 14, 1931, payable to the Huffman Fruit Company in one, two, three and four years, with interest, and secured by a deed of trust on the 104 acres of land so conveyed to said White, which deed of trust was, of course, subject in priority to that covering the entire tract of 266 acres.

The Huffman Fruit Company being still indebted to Hayden in the sum of $2,000.00, even should Stouffer pay the notes assumed by him, and being desirous of liquidating said indebtedness, proposed to the said Ernest A. See, committee for John Knight, that he purchase from it the four notes executed by Caleb J. White. T. T.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 271, 119 W. Va. 490, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-see-wva-1937.