Gooch v. Suhor

92 S.E. 843, 121 Va. 35, 1917 Va. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 843 (Gooch v. Suhor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gooch v. Suhor, 92 S.E. 843, 121 Va. 35, 1917 Va. LEXIS 7 (Va. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Whittle, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The dominant question presented by this writ of error involves the right of the plaintiff in error, Margaret R. Gooch, to administer on the estate of her deceased husband, W. H. Gooch, which right was denied her by the order under review. The determination of that issue depends upon a few controlling facts about which there is no room for disagreement.

W. H. Gooch, a man around fifty years of age, a resident of Clarksville, Mecklenburg county, Virginia, was married to Margaret Radcliffe, who was in her twenty-fourth year, on the morning of October 14, 1915, at the residence of her mother in Lexington, North Carolina. On the same day, but before the marriage ceremony was performed, the parties and their trustee, the Old Dominion Trust Company, executed and acknowledged a marriage contract, the general terms of which had previously been the subject of negotiation between them, whereby W. H. Gooch covenanted and agreed that he would cause to be paid to the trustee, within one year after his death, for his intended wife, if then living, $50,000, to be held in trust, and the principal to be invested in such way as the trustee should deem best, for the sole use and benefit of the second party as long as she remained unmarried and the widow of W. H. Gooch; and pay to her from time to time all net income, dividends or other yearly proceeds arising therefrom; and upon her marriage or death should pay the principal sum in such manner as W. H. Gooch by his last will and testament might appoint, or, for want of such appointment, to [38]*38his children and the lawful issue of such of them as might have died, share and share alike. In consideration of the premises, and that the contemplated marriage should be consummated, Margaret Radcliffe agreed with W. H. Gooch, his executors, administrators and heirs, that upon his death she would receive the $50,000, so to be held in trust for her benefit, in satisfaction of all rights of dower in his estate, and in full of all other rights, interests, claims or allowances in law or in equity, in his estate, real or personal, which she might or could have, or would be entitled to but for that agreement; and that upon the payment of the agreed sum to the trustee according to the stipulation of the agreement, she would release, quit claim and discharge the representatives and heirs of W. H. Gooch of and from all her interest in the estate. This contract was recorded in North Carolina and in Mecklenburg county, Virginia. Immediately after the marriage, the parties set out on their bridal tour to San Francisco. On the homeward journey, early on the morning of the 14th of November, 1915, while the train was at Weimar, in Texas, W. H. Gooch was killed in their apartment on the train by a pistol shot, alleged to have been self-inflicted.

Deceased died intestate, and was survived by the plaintiff in error, Margaret Radcliffe Gooch, and the defendant in error, Annie Wayne Suhor, the only child of W. H. Gooch and Lucy A. Gooch, his former wife from’ whom he had been divorced.

On December 15, 1915, Annie Wayne Suhor paid to the Old Dominion Trust Company, as trustee for the plaintiff in error, $50,000, in pursuance of the marriage contract, On November 18, 1915, J. H. Gooch, a brother of the decedent was appointed by the clerk of Granville county, North Carolina, administrator of the estate in that State; and, afterwards, he was also appointed by the clerk of Mecklenburg. county administrator of the estate in Virginia. Plaintiff in error likewise had applied for appoint[39]*39ment as administratrix for herself, or her nominees (which application was refused by the clerk), and she thereupon filed her petition in the Circuit Court of Mecklenburg county, in which she insisted that the marriage contract had been procured by fraudulent representations and concealment and was void, and renewed her motion to be permitted to qualify as administratrix. The petition contained the alternative prayer, that if administration should be denied her, it might be granted to her nominees, either the Virginia Trust Company, of the city of Richmond, Virginia, or R. M. Hester, of Mecklenburg county. The concluding prayer of the petition is that, if the circuit court should be of opinion that it was without jurisdiction in that proceeding to pass upon the validity of the marriage contract, it would appoint the Virginia Trust Company or R. M. Hester, or both, curator of the estate pending such proceeding as she might institute in a court of competent jurisdiction to determine the validity of the agreement.

The order of the circuit court disposed of the- different . phases of the controversy as follows:

1. It denied the prayer of the petition to grant administration either to the widow or her nominees.

2. It determined that the court was without jurisdiction in that proceeding to pass upon the validity of the marriage contract, and dismissed the petition, but without prejudice to the right of the widow, or of any distributee, or personal representative, to test the validity of the marriage contract in a proper proceeding before a court of competent jurisdiction.

3. It reversed the order of the clerk appointing J. H. Gooch administrator; and

4. It appointed the Old Dominion Trust Company of Richmond, Virginia, curator of the estate.

The ruling of the court setting aside the order of the clerk appointing J. H. Gooch administrator is not assigned [40]*40as cross-error under rule VIII, and, therefore, does not demand further notice.

Plaintiff in error relies upon the following assignments of error to reverse the order under review:

1. “The court erred in declining to entertain jurisdiction of petitioner’s motion to determine the incidental questions arising as to the validity of said alleged antenuptial agreement.”
2. “The court erred in overruling petitioner’s motion and declining to appoint her administratrix of the personal estate of the decedent, or to allow her to designate the appointee.”
3. “The court erred in appointing the Old Dominion Trust Company curator of the estate, for the reason that it is a party to said alleged agreement, and, therefore, an unfit person for the position of curator of the estate.”
4. “The court erred in dismissing petitioner’s motion, thereby terminating the controversy respecting the appointment of an administrator; and then appointing a curator, the court having no authority to appoint a curator except to preserve the estate during the pendency of such controversy.”

We shall direct our attention to the first assignment of error, because if the circuit court, in exercising a purely probate function in pursuance of statutory authority, and in the state of the pleadings and the parties at that time, rightly declined to take jurisdiction of the controversy concerning the validity of the antenuptial contract, then, demonstrably, there is no reversible error in the remaining assignments. For, as we have seen, the plaintiff in error, by the antenuptial settlement (which has been fully executed so far as the estate is concerned by payment of the $50,000 to the trustee) relinquished all her marital rights to her husband’s property. Therefore, unless and until the settlement is cancelled and annulled, neither the widow nor [41]*41any other person designated by her has the right of administration of the estate under section 2639 of the Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 843, 121 Va. 35, 1917 Va. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gooch-v-suhor-vactapp-1917.