George v. Pilcher

26 Am. Rep. 350, 69 Va. 299, 28 Gratt. 299
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 29, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 26 Am. Rep. 350 (George v. Pilcher) 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
George v. Pilcher, 26 Am. Rep. 350, 69 Va. 299, 28 Gratt. 299 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

William O. George, a citizen of Virginia and resident of the city of Richmond, died in said city intestate on the 16th day of August, 1869. At the time of his death, he was possessed of some personal estate, and-was the owner of real estate supposed to be worth from sixty to seventy-five thousand dollars. Caroline Jackson, a negro and former slave of William O. George, was the mother of two children, Lee and Adelaide, of whom the said William O. George was the father. He removed the mother and her two children to the city of Philadelphia in the year 1854 or 1855, where they have ever since resided.

[301]*301In a very short time after the death of William O. George, the woman Caroline and her two children, her daughter, Adelaide, having intermarried in Philadelphia with one Constant C. Willamin, set up a claim to the estate of William O. George, based on an alleged marriage of the said William O. George and the said Caroline in the city of Philadelphia on the 21st day of April, 1869.

The claim was disputed by Dr. Miles George, a half-brother, and others, descendants of another half-brother, and half-sister of the decedent, who denied that any such marriage had ever taken place, or if it had, that it conferred any title under the laws of Virginia, to the real estate of the decedent in Virginia, and they claimed to be the only heirs at law and distributees of the decedent.

John M. Pilcher, a tenant of William O. George at the time of his death, was indebted for rents, some of which were due at the death of said decedent, some fell due after his death, and another portion was payable at a future day. To recover the rents in arrear, Lee George, who had become the administrator of the personal estate of the decedent, sued out a distress warrant against Pilcher and levied it on his goods and chattels; and thereupon Pilcher filed his bill in the-circuit court of the city of Richmond against the rival claimants of the estate of William O. George, praying that they might be required to interplead and have their claims settled by the court, and offering to abide the judgment of the court touching the rent owing by him; he further prayed an injunction to stay all further proceedings on the distress warrant.

The injunction was granted, and an order made directing the parties to interplead and assert their respective claims.

[302]*302Caroline George, Lee George, and Willamin and wife at once filed their answers to the plaintiff’s bill, - asserting their claim,, which has been before stated, and at the same time filed a petition for the removal of the cause into the circuit court of the United States. The motion for removal was resisted by the other defendants, and was overruled. The other defendants did not file their answer until the 11th day of November, 1873, after all the depositions had been taken in the case.

In their answer they set up the claim on their part before stated, and controverted the claim of the other defendants. Whereupon the court directed the parties, the said Caroline George and the other Pennsylvania claimants, as plaintiffs on the one side, and the other parties as defendants on the other side, to proceed to trial before a jury on the following issue: “Whether the ceremony of marriage was duly solemnized between the said William O. George and the said Caroline, in the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on the 21st day of April 1869.”

The trial was had as ordered, and'resulted in a verdict for the defendants in the issue. The plaintiffs *■ moved to set aside the verdict, upon the ground that it was contrary to the evidence; which motion was overruled; and they excepted. Other bills of exceptions were taken to rulings of the court in the progress of the trial, which will be noticed further on.

The chancellor entered a decree approving the verdict of the jury, and, adjudging that the alleged marriage did not take place; that Miles George and the -other defendants in the issue were the lawful heirs of William O. George, deceased, and ordered payment of the rents to them. An appeal.from this decree, al[303]*303lowed to Caroline George and the other plaintiffs in the issue, brings the case here for review.

The first error assigned is the refusal of the court ■ below to order the removal of the cause into the circuit court of the United States.

The petition for removal was filed under the second section of the act of congress approved March 2, 1867. 14 Stat. at Large 558. An affidavit was filed according to the provisions of said act. The petition recited the affidavit, stated the cause relied upon for the removal, and was otherwise regular.

The record shows, that some of the defendants not uniting in the petition were also non-residents.

On motions for removal of two causes made in this court at the August term 1872, it was held, that where. there are several plaintiffs in a suit in a state court, some of whom reside in the state and some out of it, and all of the defendants reside in the state, the nonresident plaintiffs are not entitled to have the suit removed into the United States court under the act aforesaid. Beery & als. v. Irick & als. and Newton’s ex’or v. Bushong & als., 22 Gratt. 484.

Afterwards, at the October term 1878 of the supreme court of the United States, in a case which was the converse of the case in 22 Gratt. supra, that court held, that where the plaintiff and one of the defendants in a suit were residents of the state in which the suit was brought, and the other two defendants were non-residents, the non-resident defendants were not untitled to have the case removed under said act. Case of Sewing Machine Companies, 18 Wall. U. S. R. 553.

Mr. Justice Clifford, in the conclusion of the opinion of the court delivered by him, says: “Either the non-resident plaintiff’ or non-resident defendant may [304]*304remove the cause under the last named act (act of 1867), provided all the plaintiffs or all the defendants join in the petition, and all the parties petitioning are non-residents, as required under the judiciary act; but 'it is a great mistake to suppose that any such right is conferred by that act where one or more of the plaintiffs or one or more of the petitioning defendants are citizens of the state wherein the suit is pending, as the act is destitute of any language which can be properly construed to confer any such right unless all the plaintiffs or all the defendants are non-residents and join in the petition.”

This would seem to he conclusive against the petitioners in the case before us. The plaintiff, Pilcher, is a resident of this state, and all of the defendants are not non-residents, and all did not join in the petition.

But it was argued at the bar on behalf of the petitioners (the appellants here), that while the suit is in the name of Pilcher as plaintiff, against all the other parties as defendants, yet Pilcher is a nominal plaintiff; and that the suit is really and substantially a controversy between the petitioners on the one side, all of. whom are non-residents, and the other defendants on the other side; and the case must be considered as if it were a suit by the petitioners against the other defendants, or vice versa;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Am. Rep. 350, 69 Va. 299, 28 Gratt. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-pilcher-va-1877.