Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Anderson

150 S.E. 413, 155 Va. 535, 1929 Va. LEXIS 233
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 14, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 S.E. 413 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Anderson) 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
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Anderson, 150 S.E. 413, 155 Va. 535, 1929 Va. LEXIS 233 (Va. 1929).

Opinions

Chichester, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[538]*538The controversy arising out of these consolidated suits grows out of a complicated state of facts, and it is necessary, therefore, to discuss these facts in some detail.

Appellant here is the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, hereinafter called the Surety Company, or the appellant, and it claims to be aggrieved by decree of the Circuit Court of Nelson county, pronounced oh the 9th day of February, 1929, entered in these consolidated causes, whereby the court overruled all of the Surety Company’s exceptions to the report of John W. - Wheeler, commissioner, filed in the cause on September 12, 1928, and further adjudged by the decree of February 9th that the appellant as surety was liable on the bond of Mayo C. Brown as committee of Lucy C. Anderson in the sum of $2,430.99 with interest on $2,000.00, the principal thereof, from January 1, 1929, and ordered the appellant to pay this sum of money and costs to Ruth K. Anderson who was appointed receiver to collect the same, and also because the court decreed that the Surety Company was liable on the bond of Mayo C. Brown, receiver, executed in causes Nos. 1 and 2, for the sum of $2,420.66 with interest on $2,067.00, the principal thereof, from January 1, 1929, and directed the Surety Company to pay the latter sum to Ruth K. Anderson, receiver.

The record reveals the following facts: R. K. Anderson was the husband of Lucy C. Anderson and was, during his lifetime, the owner of three tracts of land involved in these causes. One tract, known as the Mill tract, contained thirty-one acres, more or less; another tract of small acreage, some two or three acres, known as the Store property on which R. K. Anderson at one time conducted a mercantile business, and the last tract known as the Home tract made up of several small tracts. Lucy C. Anderson, the wife of R. K. Anderson, was insane and had been so adjudged. R. K. Anderson, desiring to make sale of these several [539]*539tracts of land, instituted three suits in chancery at different times, the object of each being to dispose of his wife’s contingent right of dower. At the December term, 1918, of the Circuit Court of Nelson county, he filed suit (designated in the record as Suit No. 1) for the sale of the tract of land known as the Mill tract. L. Grafton Tucker was appointed guardian ad litem, and he filed his answer as such duly sworn to. Depositions were taken after notice and decree was entered at the September term, 1919, making S. B. Whitehead a special commissioner to join in the deed and a receiver to collect from R. K. Anderson one-third of the purchase price as the wife’s contingent right of dower. The property sold in this suit brought $3,200.00.

At the March term, 1919, R. K. Anderson filed his bill (Suit No. 2) asking leave to sell his wife’s contingent right of dower in the storehouse property, which he had arranged to sell for $8,500.00, $5,500.00 being the purchase price of the stock of goods and $3,000.00 for the land and storehouse. L. Grafton Tucker was appointed guardian ad litem, for the insane wife and as such filed an answer according to law duly sworn to. S. B. Whitehead, theretofore appointed special commissioner and receiver, resigned and Mayo C. Brown was appointed special commissioner in his place to join with the husband in the conveyance of the Mill tract for the purpose of conveying the wife’s contingent right of dower, and he was further appointed receiver to collect from the purchaser the wife’s contingent interest in causes Nos. 1 and 2, these causes having been consolidated, and he was directed as receiver to give bond, in the penalty of $2,500.00, and to collect one-third of the purchase price of the tracts sold in Suits Nos. 1 and 2, which amounts to $2,067.00. This sum was collected by Brown as receiver and he made his report to the court that he had joined with the husband in conveyance of the Mill property and that he had collected as receiver $1,067.00 (Mill property). [540]*540He also collected $1,000.00 as the wife’s contingent right of dower in the Storehouse property. He also reported that in lieu of collecting $2,067.00 he collected two bonds of T. B. Harvey, the purchaser, one for the sum of $900.00, payable two years after date, and one for the sum of $167.00, payable three years after date with interest thereon at six per cent per annum.

This report was confirmed and Brown was directed to withdraw the bonds and collect them and interest thereon as they-fell due.

At the July term of the court, 1919, R. K. Anderson by leave of court filed a bill (Suit No. 3) making his wife defendant and the court appointed L. Grafton Tucker guardian ad liiem who duly answered. The prayer of the bill was that the complainant be permitted to sell three tracts of land which he owned near Roseland, Nelson county, to his three daughters for $2,100.00, subject to the dower interest of his wife. Depositions were taken and at the September term, 1919, a decree was entered appointing Mayo C. Brown a special commissioner for the purpose of uniting with R. K. Anderson in a deed to his three daughters to the three tracts of land mentioned in Suit No. 3, for the purpose of conveying the contingent right of dower of Lucy C. Anderson in these three tracts. Mayo C. Brown was also appointed a special commissioner to collect from R. K. Anderson the sum of $700.00 (the wife’s contingent right of dower) for which he should take a certificate of deposit in one of the banks of the city of Lynchburg. The decree required a bond of $1,000.00 as special commissioner conditioned according to law. Mayo C. Brown filed his report of his acts under this decree and requested the court, instead of securing and filing a certificate of deposit of one of the Lynchburg banks, that he be permitted to take one of the bonds of T. B. Harvey for $700.00 payable to R. K. Anderson. The bond being amply [541]*541secured by deed of trust. The court confirmed this report and no bond was given by Mayo C. Brown as special commission in this transaction.

At the March Term, 1928, the death of R. K. Anderson and the appointment of Ruth K. Anderson as his executrix was suggested to the court and the consolidated causes were revived in the name of the heirs at law and distributees of R. K. Anderson.

L. Grafton Tucker, on his motion, was permitted to resign as guardian ad litem for the insane defendant, Lucy C. Anderson, in these causes, and the court appointed J. T. Coleman, Jr., as the guardian ad litem of Lucy C. Anderson and he was given leave to file his answer which he did, and Mayo C. Brown, the receiver, having made no settlement of his transactions as such, the court referred the united causes to one of its commissioners in chancery who was directed to take, state and report to the court, the following accounts:

(1) An account of the transactions of Mayo C. Brown, as receiver in causes Nos. 1 and 2 under the decree of the March term, 1919, and the amount due by him as such receiver; and

(2) An account of the transactions of the said Mayo C. Brown, as receiver in cause No. 3 under the decree of the September term, 1919, and the amount due by him as such receiver;

(3) . Any other matter deemed pertinent by the said commissioner, or requested to be stated by any interested party.

At the July term, 1919, of the Circuit Court of Nelson county, Mayo C. Brown, as committee of Lucy C. Anderson, asked leave to file his bill as such in these causes and L.

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Related

Minton v. First Natl. Exchange Bank of Virginia
145 S.E.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1965)
Gemmell v. Powers
195 S.E. 501 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1938)
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Anderson
150 S.E. 413 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.E. 413, 155 Va. 535, 1929 Va. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-anderson-va-1929.