Evans v. Stewart

81 Va. 724, 1886 Va. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 18, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 Va. 724 (Evans v. Stewart) 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
Evans v. Stewart, 81 Va. 724, 1886 Va. LEXIS 136 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 8th day of September, 1875, John T. Evans, senior, of Alexandria, departed this life intestate, seized of a large estate, real and personal, the latter amounting to about $100,000. He left no widow, but did leave three daughters surviving him—namely: Virginia Stewart, Mary O. Watkins, [726]*726and Ann Maria Ellis, all of whom resided in the State of Virginia at the time of their father’s death. There was a fourth child—a son—John T. Evans, junior, who had grown to manhood, married, but had no children, abandoned his wife and home, and left Virginia a number of years prior to his father’s death.

Administration upon the estate was granted to Isaac C. O’Neal, who duly qualified and partially administered the personal estate which went into his hands, but reserving undistributed one-fourth of said personal estate, the share of said John T. Evans, junior, if alive.

On the 2d day of October, 1879, said Virginia Stewart filed her bill in the corporation court of the city of Alexandria against Isaac O. O’Neal, administrator as raforesaid, and D. S. Watkins and Mary O. Watkins, his wife, and Joshua Ellis and Ann Maria Ellis, his wife, setting forth the death and intestacy of John T. Evans, senior, and the qualification and partial administration of the personal estate by said administrator; that her late father had four children—said oratrix, Mary C., now the wife of D. S. Watkins; Ann Maria, now the wife of Joshua Ellis, and a son, John T. Evans; that the said John T. Evans had not been heard of for more than seven years, and was belieA'ed to be dead; and expressing a willingness on her part, and, as she was informed, a like willingness on the part of the other distributees, to execute the refunding bonds required by law in such cases, prayed that said administrator be required to discover on oath what sum of money he held as the distributable share of John T. Evans, junior, and that said administrator be required to pay over to said oratrix one-third of the same, on the terms prescribed by the statute in such cases, and for general relief.

The administrator did not answer, and the bill was taken for confessed as to him.

[727]*727Watkins and wife and Ellis and wife answered the bill, admitting the truth of its allegations, and alleging that John T. Evans, junior, had not been heard of for more than eleven years, and that they believed he had been dead for more than that time; and that John T. Evans, senior, before his death, believed, and so declared, that his son, John T. Evans, junior, was dead. And said respondents asked that the administrator be decreed to pay them their respective shares of the amount retained by him as and for the share of said John T. Evans, junior.

An account was ordered and taken, founded upon the depositions of witnesses taken in the progress of the investigation made by the commissioner. Based upon the facts reported by the commissioner, the said corporation court, on the 8th day of September, 1880, entered a decree in the cause, declaring that John T. Evans, junior, left the State of Virginia in the year 1866; that since that time he has not returned to the State, and not having been heard from since, he must be presumed to be dead, and to have died prior to the first day of January, 1874; and that it further appearing to the court from said report that John T. Evans, junior, did not die until the year 1875, and also that the said John T. Evans, junior, left no children, the three surviving children of John T. Evans, senior, to-wit: Mary O. Watkins, Ann M. Ellis, and Virginia Stewart, are entitled in equal shares to the whole of the personalty whereof John T. Evans, senior, died the owner and possessor, and that the widow of the said John T. Evans, junior, is not entitled to share in the distribution of same. And it appearing from said report, by one statement, that the sum retained by the administrator as and for the share of said John T. Evans, junior, is $24,943.34, and by another statement to be $23,043.82, and there being a question raised whether either of said statements were strictly accurate, the court reserved its judgment [728]*728thereon. But it appearing that the sum of $21,000 was certainly due on account of the share so reserved by the administrator, and that of that sum each of the aforesaid distributees, the surviving children of John T. Evans, senior, is entitled to the sum of $7,000, it was decreed that the administrator pay out of the sum so reserved for John T. Evans, junior, to Virginia Stewart, or Olaughton & Walker, her attorneys, the sum of $7,000; to Mary C. Watkins, or John M. Johnston, her attorney, the sum of $7,000, and to Ann M. Ellis, or John M. Johnston, her attorney, the sum of $7,000. And further, that said distributees should thereafter have distribution of the residue of the sum reserved on account of the share of the said John T. Evans, junior, and not thereby distributed.

Two days later, to-wit: on the 10th day of September, 1880, Mary Jane Evans, by leave of court, filed her petition in the cause, asserting that she was entitled to an interest in the estate as the wife of John T. Evans, junior, when the court partially heard the cause again, and then entered a decree rescinding so much of the decree of the 8th day of September, 1880, as orders the payment of $7,000 to each of the distributees therein named, out of the fund reserved by the administrator as the share of John T. Evans, junior, in the personal estate of John T. Evans, senior, and as declares that the widow of John T. Evans, junior, is not entitled to share in the personalty so reserved, but reserving the question whether there is such widow or whether she is so entitled, and in lieu of so much of said former decree as directed $7,000 to be paid to each of the distributees therein named, ordered the sum of $3,500 to be paid to each of them, out of the fund reserved by the administrator as aforesaid.

The petition is in the name of Mary Jane Evans, wife of John T. Evans, junior, by Robert T. Lucas, her next friend, and sets forth that she is the lawful wife of John T. Evans, [729]*729junior; that they were lawfully married in the city of Washington on the 13th of January, 1848, at the house of Joseph K. Plant; that the marriage was solemnized by H. Slicex, a regularly ordained minister, and she files as an exhibit the marriage record. The petition further sets forth that no children were born of said marriage; that she was living with her husband in the city of Washington in 1865, and he, having failed in his business of hatter, then abandoned and left her totally dependent upon her own exertions for a livelihood, which she earned as a seamstress; that her said husband, until the year 1871, paid her casual visits, since which time he has totally abandoned her voluntarily, and without cause; that she has heard of him at various intervals since said desertion, and has made every effort to communicate with him, but has failed; that she last heard of him about eight years prior to the filing of her petition, when he was in Virginia; that her husband, said John T. Evans, junior, by the death of his father, the said John T. Evans, senior, is entitled to a distributive share with the plaintiff and defendants to this suit in the estate of the said John T. Evans, senior, deceased; that petitioner has waited for said John T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 Va. 724, 1886 Va. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-stewart-va-1886.