Green's Adm'r v. Thompson

5 S.E. 507, 84 Va. 376, 1888 Va. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 20, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 507 (Green's Adm'r v. Thompson) 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
Green's Adm'r v. Thompson, 5 S.E. 507, 84 Va. 376, 1888 Va. LEXIS 89 (Va. 1888).

Opinions

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the year 1855, Francis J. Thompson died intestate, in the county of Culpeper, leaving a widow, Martha II. Thompson, and two sons, Francis J. Thompson, Jr., and George C. Thompson, his only heirs and distributees. The intestate is described as a retired merchant, who lived on the interest of his money,, which was invested—a small portion in State and railroad stock, hut mainly in the bonds and notes of his Mends and neighbors in the county of Culpeper, amounting in the aggregate to about the principal sum of $21,000. He also owned seven slaves, valued at some $5,000, and some household and [378]*378kitchen furniture; this being all his personal property. He owned at his death a house and lot in the town of Culpeper. Soon after his death, which occurred in 1855, his son, George C. Thompson, qualified as his administrator in the county court of Culpeper county, and gave bond with the requisite security in the penalty of $52,000, indicating that at that time the personal estate amounted in value to about $26,000, the practice and rule then and now being to require bond in a penalty at least double the amount to be administered.

George C. Thompson, the first administrator, failed to have an appraisement, and returned no inventory of the personalty which went into his hands as administrator. The settled accounts show that this administrator, after holding his trust for a little over one year, during which time he sold the household and kitchen furniture, collected and disbursed $5,052 76 of the assets which went into his hands, and resigned his trust. And in 1856, John Cook Green qualified as administrator de bonis non of said intestate, and gave bond as such, in the penalty of $32,000, indicating that the property or assets that went into his hands were estimated at about $16,000. The record shows that he made annual settlements of his administration accounts, paying the debts of the intestate and making various advancements to the distributees. These settlements were-regularly made before one of the court’s commissioners, confirmed by the court according to law, and recorded, no exception having ever been taken to any one of such accounts. After exercising the trust reposed in him as administrator for four years, J. C. Green died in June, 1860. By reference to his said settled accounts, it appears that he, during the period of his administration, paid to the creditors and distributees the sum of $12,500; and by the last settlement of his accounts, made after his death by his administrator, James "W. Green, there was found to be due from the estate of the intestate, Francis J. Thompson, to the' estate of John C. Green, as of April 4th, 1860, the sum of $4,571 72. This settlement was [379]*379made in 1860, was confirmed and duly recorded, and its correctness has remained unquestioned and in no way impeached from its date down to the institution of this suit in September, 1884, a period of more than twenty-five years.

The duties of J. 0. Green, as administrator de bonis non of Francis J. Thompson, having terminated at his death as aforesaid, in July, 1860, James W. Green duly qualified as administrator de bonis non of said intestate, Francis J. Thompson, and gave bond in the penalty of $20,000. And said James W. Green and George Morton qualified as executors of said John O. Green, deceased. Thus there were three successive administrators of the personal estate of Francis J. Thompson. The evidence in the record shows that the only assets belonging to the estate of the intestate, Francis J. Thompson, which went into the hands of his third administrator, James W. Green, were these: 1st, A bond of Henry Shackelford to said F. J. Thompson for $2,609 13; 2d, A bond of Judge Bichard H. Field, originally for $4,000, subject to a credit of $1,000 of the principal, collected by J. 0. Green, leaving of principal due, $3,000’ 3d, A bond of B. G. Ward, secured by deed of trust on W. P. Hewby’s land for $2,831 83, with interest from July, 1867, subject to a credit of $1,000 paid J. C. Green September 17th, 1857, $1,831 83.

These debts, especially the one first named, the Shackelford debt, constitute the focal point of controversy in this suit. Some of the interest on two of these debts was, collected by James W. Green; and he paid out to the creditors and distributees of his intestate, F. J. Thompson, about $900 in money, and he assigned the Shackelford bond to the estate of J. 0. Green in discharge of the debt due the latter estate as aforesaid, from the estate of F. J. Thompson, (presently to be more particularly referred to) the $900 thus paid out by James W. Green, administrator, and- the Shackelford bond assigned by him as aforesaid, making the aggregate sum paid out by him during his administration of $5,500. He also made several [380]*380settlements of his administration accounts before the proper commissioner, and these were duly confirmed by the court and recorded. These settlements show a balance due the administrator July 17th, 1881, of $904 99. James W. Green, the third administrator, died in April, 1884.

It thus appears by the record that the aggregate amount disbui’sedby the three administrators of F. J. Thompson, deceased, to his creditors and distributees, was $23,800, of which $18,000 was paid out by his first two administrators in less than five years after the intestate’s death, and this out of an estate of the estimated value, in 1855, exclusive of the slaves, of $21,000.

In the view of the case, as above stated, the unadministered assets of said estate consist now of only the Field and Newby bonds, amounting in principal alone to the sum of $4,831 83. To this sum add the aggregate amount of $23,800 paid out by the then administrators, and we find that the sum of $27,800 of the assets of said estate are clearly accounted for by those administrators, exclusive of the slaves.

It has already been stated, that one of the bonds whi&h constituted the assets that went into the hands of James W. Green, as administrator of F. J. Thompson, was the bond of Henry Shackleford to said Thompson for $2,609 13, which was secured by a trust deed on a tract of land of 414 acres, known as i( Cleveland.” The deed securing this debt was dated November 24th, 1845; and other debts were secured thereby. Under this deed the land (Cleveland) was sold in 1867, and M. G. Shackleford and Lucy B. Shackleford, daughters of Henry Shackleford, became the purchasers, and the land was conveyed to them. On the day of their purchase (21st November, 1867,) James "W. Green, administrator of F. J. Thompson, took the bond of said M. G. and Lucy B. Shackleford for the sum of $4,002 62, which was the amount of the original bond of Henry Shackleford to said Thompson, together with the accrued interest to March 23d, 1866, and M. G. and L. B. Shackleford ■ [381]*381secured this bond by a deed of trust on said land, dated 21st November, 1867. And on the 23d of November, 1867, said James W. Green, administrator as aforesaid, transferred this bond to himself, as executor of John C. Green, in payment of the debt of $4,571 72, due from E. J. Thompson’s estate to-the estate of John C. Green, before referred to; and said James W. Green credited the estate of his intestate by the amount of said Shackleford bond, and charged said estate with the payment, by said transfer of said debt, which became thus a part of the assets of the estate of J. C. Green, all of which appears by the settlement of the administration accounts of James W. Green, who was the administrator of E. J.

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Related

Moorman v. Arthur
18 S.E. 869 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1894)
Gibson v. Green's Adm'r
16 S.E. 661 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 507, 84 Va. 376, 1888 Va. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greens-admr-v-thompson-va-1888.