Estill v. McClintic's Adm'r

11 W. Va. 399, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 43
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 11 W. Va. 399 (Estill v. McClintic's Adm'r) 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
Estill v. McClintic's Adm'r, 11 W. Va. 399, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 43 (W. Va. 1877).

Opinion

GreeN, President,

delivered the opinion oí the Court:

In March 1861 Estill & Eakle filed their bill in the circuit court of Greenbrier county against Andrew Beard, late sheriff of said county, and as such, administrator of Thomas McClintic, deceased, to charge him with a devastavit in failing to pay certain debts due from his intestate to the plaintiff and to subject the real estate of McClintic, in the possession of his widow and heirs, [406]*406to tbe payment of these debts. In 1874 this bill was ' amended making the sureties of said Beard, as such administrator, parties defendant, and asking to charge them with the amount of the devastavit of the administrator, he having become insolvent. Numerous unpre-ferred creditors of McClintic Avere parties plaintiff in this amended bill, together with the original plaintiffs. McClintic liad been the administrator of Florence Biffe, and also of Amanda Ocheltree. "Wellington Herne and Avife distributees of Florence Biffe, also instituted their suit against said Beard as administrator of McClintic; and Joseph M. Ocheltree, a distributee of Amanda Ocheltree, instituted his suit against him as such administrator, each seeking to charge McClintic with a devastavit in administering each of said estates. These three causes were during their progress consolidated by an order" of the court and afterwards heard together. During the progress of these causes the accounts of Beard as administrator of McClintic- were twice settled by a commissioner, the dower of the AvidoAv of McClintic was assigned, the reversion of the heirs of McClintic in this dower land was sold, and also various other tracts of land belonging to McClintic. To the final settlement of these accounts of Beard as administrator of McClintic, as confirmed by the court by its decree of November 23, 1875, the appellants in this cause, some of the sureties of said Beard as such administrator object, as avcII as the appel-lees non-preferred creditors of McClintic; and these non-preferred creditors, appellees, in their counter assignment of errors also object to the confirmation by the court of several sales -of portions of McClintic’s lands. The first error assigned by the appellants is that said decree charges the said administrator of McClintic and his sureties with $1,332.02 with interest from November 1875, the balance due on certain slaAres of the estate sold by the administrator in December 1862, Avhich balance the administrator never received, but for which a judgment in.his favor Avas rendered by the court, at the [407]*407same term of the court that this decree was rendered. The facts relative to the sale of these slaves are thus' stated in the report of commissioner Walker, dated November 1,1867. “The administrator, it appears, hired out the slaves for some three years; those hired are credited to the estate in the years to which they properly belonged and after that time and during the war, he sold the slaves at public sale, and collected the price of one of them, which Caldwell, a former commissioner in this cause, credited to the estate at $400.00, which is adopted as a fair price; he holds the bonds of the other purchasers, who refuse to pay, alleging that the slaves sold at greatly exaggerated prices on account of the currency then in circulation; upon one or more of the bonds the administrator has brought suit, and the soundness or unsoundness of this plea will be tested. It appears from commissioner Caldwell’s report, that one of these bonds is on K,. M. Beard and M. C. Beard for $2,165.00; one on M. C. Beard for $950.00; and the third on H. F. Hunter for $1,200.00; all dated in December 1862. Commissioner Caldwell does not credit these bonds to the estate as against the administrator, but reports them among the unadministered assets, and your commissioner thinks properly, as the administrator was doing, as he thought, the best under the circumstances he could for the estate; and it has resulted, so, for had these slaves not been sold, they would have been an entire loss to the estate; as it is, whatever may be hereafter realized on these bonds will be saved. It seems to the commissioner, it would have been harsh to hold the administrator bound for the whole amount, unless he should hereafter recover from the purchasers.” This report was confirmed on April 29, 1869. After the amended bill, making numerous non-preferred creditors of McClintic formal plaintiffs and the sureties of his said administrator defendants, was filed, the court on the 23d of November 1874 made an order of reference to commissioner With-row, directing him to report the preferred and non-pre[408]*408ferred creditors of McClintic, and the amount due each, and whether there was any further liability on the part of Beard, as administrator of McClintic. On September 28, 1875 he reports that on M. C. Beard’s bond aforesaid $250.00 was paid January 12j 1863; and he scales the balance due on this bond and on the bond, of R. M. and M. C. Beard, at the request of the counsel for the non-preferred creditors; these he reduces to one-third of the nominal balance due on them, “as it then took $3.00 in Confederate money to buy one in gold.” So reduced the balance on these bonds was $1,664.04. The commissioner however expressed the opinion, that this ought not to be regarded as assets of the estate-then, as it was not certain it would be realized. The sureties of Beard, as administrator, excepted to this report so far as it could be regarded as charging the administrator with these bonds, and because in scaling them he makes the amount too large : the true scaled value being that ascertained by the jury in the suit on these bonds at that term of the court; this was $1,332.02. The non-preferred creditors by their counsel filed seven exceptions to this report; and the court in its decree of November 23, 1875 says: “That both the exceptants admitting that judgments were rendered at this term upon the debts, mentioned in said report in favor of the administrator as due from M. C. Beai’d, which judgments aggregate the sum of $1,332.02, with interest from November 6, 1875. The court adopts this as the amount chargeable against said administrator and his sureties on account of said debts.”

This action of the court is urged by the appellants, sureties of said administrator; as erroneous, and is also objected to by the non-preferred creditors, the sureties insisting that these bonds should be regarded as unad-ministered assets, which should not be charged against the administrator then, or till and unless the amount of said judgments were collected. When commissioner "Walker’s report was confirmed, in which these debts [409]*409were so treated, there was, as the report shows, difficulty in ascertaining what was the proper charge on account' of these debts, as they were in litigation, and it was difficult to say, as the law then was, whether they would be scaled, and if scaled, what was the proper mode of scaling them, there being then no statute on the subject in this State. When commissioner Withrow made his report, and more especially when the court acted on this report, all difficulty in ascertaining the. just amount due on these bonds had disappeared, as a jury had scaled them to $1,332.02.

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Bluebook (online)
11 W. Va. 399, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estill-v-mcclintics-admr-wva-1877.