Harman v. Davis

30 Gratt. 461
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 Gratt. 461 (Harman v. Davis) 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
Harman v. Davis, 30 Gratt. 461 (Va. 1878).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A bill was filed at the June rules of the ccunty court of Tazewell county by Mrs. Nancy Harman, widow of Edwin. H. Harman, deceased, and her infant sons, Charles W. Harman and Davis K. Harman, heirs and distributees of the. said decedent, against John Mosby Davis, the administrator of the said E. W. Harman, deceased, and Henry B. Harman and Reuben C. Fudge, his sureties in his administration bond, for their distributive shares in the estate *of said decedent. The bill alleges that for a number of years previous to the death of E. H. Harman, he and the said J. M. Davis had been in partnership in the mercantile business on Bluestone. in the county of Tazewell, the profits of which were very handsome; and that in the year 1858 they formed a partnership in the mercantile business with John E. Neel, which was carried on for upwards of a year, at the expiration of which time they bought out the said Neel and continued the business themselves, until the war put a stop to all transactions of the kind; and the said E. H. Harman entered the service of the Confederacy and was^ killed in battle. And the said J. M. Davis being the sole survivor of the firm, it devolved on him to settle up the partnership concerns, and to receive in his capacity as administrator of the said E. H. Harman, his share of the partnership fund and effects, and to account for and pay over the same to them, his distributees. And the prayer of the bill was that he should be compelled to settle the said partnership accounts. and his administration accounts, and account for and pay over to them their distributive shares in the estate of said decedent. and for general relief.

The defendant, J. M. Davis, answered the bill, to which the plaintiffs replied generally, and an account was ordered and tak.en and reported, showing a balance against the administrator, J. M. Davis, of $7,942.39; to which the defendants filed exceptions, and depositions were taken. Said exceptions were afterwards withdrawn, and the following decree was entered: “This cause came on to be heard this the 2d of July, 1873, upon the papers heretofore read, and the report of Samuel C. Graham and the exceptions thereto; and the defendants withdrawing all exceptions to said report, admit here in court that the defendant, Davis, as administrator of E. H. Harman, H. B. Harman and R. C. Fudge, his securities in his administration bond, are responsible to the complainants, the *widow and distributees of E. H. Harman, for the sum of $5,000. the amount with which the said Davis and his sureties admit themselves to be chargeable for distribution among the said widow and said children, with interest from the 1st of February, 1873, and the complainants, the widow and heirs-at-law of said E. H. Harman, being willing and consenting here in court to accept the said $5,000 and interest as aforesaid, in full satisfaction and discharge of their claim against the said administrator and his sureties,” the court proceeded to decree, by and with the consent and agreement of all the parties, that the said complainant. Nancy Harman, recover of said defendants $1,-666.6654 with legal interest thereon from February 1st, 1873, till paid, and that Charles W. Harman and Davis K. Harman, infant children of E. H. Harman, suing by Nancy Harman, their next friend, recover of said defendants $3,333.33, with interest from February 1st, 1873, till paid. And the defendants, by like agreement of all said parties, were allowed to make payment in three equal installments, in ten, twenty and thirty-six months from the date of the decree, and if punctually paid no execution to, issue; and it was decreed that the complainants recover their costs. And it was agreed that all the unpaid claims due the estate of E._ -H. Harman were the property of said Davis.

[161]*161The first installments falling due and being unpaid, the plaintiffs caused executions of fi. fa. to be issued therefor, and thereupon the defendants brought their bill in the circuit court of Tazewell county against them, praying an injunction to said executions, which was granted, and upon the coming in of the answer of Nancy Harman, was, by a decree of the court of the 18th of May, 1875, dissolved. And on the 10th day of September, 1875, the said J. M. Davis, administrator of E. H. Harman, deceased, H. B. Harman and Reuben C. Fudge, sureties of said Davis as administrator as aforesaid, *by leave of the court, filed their bill of review and obtained an injunction to restrain the plaintiffs, Nancy Harman and others, from all further proceedings under the decree rendered in the case of Nancy Harman and others against J. Mosby Davis and others in the bill of review mentioned, to which bill the defendants filed their answers — the infant defendants by guardian ad litem; and the cause coming on to be heard on the 18th of November, 1875, the court was of opinion that there was error apparent on the face of the decree complained of, in that it was a decree by consent, and some of the complainants being infants could not be bound thereby, and because refunding bonds were not required to be executed by the complainants before payment by the administrator. And for these reasons and causes of error decreed that the decree of the 2d of July, 1873, be reversed and annulled, from which decree the defendants to the said bill of review appealed to this court, which is the case now to be decided.

The court is of opinion that it was not error to decree in that cause in favor of the plaintiffs because some of them were infants. The defendants were adults, and admitted that they were chargeable for distribution to the widow and children of F H. Harman, deceased, with the sum of $5,000, and interest thereon from the first day of February, 1873, till paid, for which the defendant, Davis, as administrator of E. H. Harman, and his securities in his administration bond, are responsible to the complainants, the widow and distributees of the said E. H. Harman, deceased. And the courl says the complainants, the widow and heirs aforesaid, being willing and consenting here in court to accept the same in full satisfaction and discharge of their claim against the said administrator and his sureties, “it is therefore adjudged, ordered and decreed, by and with the consent *and agreement of all the parties,” as hereinbefore set out, a decree for the distribution of that sum admitted to be due for distribution, by the administrator and his sureties in full satisfaction and discharge of all that is due them from the administrator and his sureties.

There is no claim made by the widow and distributees for more, nor dissatisfaction expressed by them with the amount decreed in their favor, but the complaint comes from the administrator and his sureties, that they admitted their liability for more than they ought, and they seek to be released fro.m this acknowledgment on the ground that some of the parties to whom they acknowledged it to be due were infants. It is very clear that they being under no disability, their acknowledgment could not be impaired or affected by the fact that those to whom they acknowledge themselves indebted were infants. But they contend that their acknowledgment ought to be binding upon them because it was made as a concession to the complainants upon the consideration that it would be received in full satisfaction and discharge of all they owed them; that the complainants did agree to receive it as such, but that some of them are infants, and are not bound by that agreement, and may, after they attain majority, refuse to be bound by it and compel them to pay more.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Langston v. Bassette
51 S.E. 218 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1905)
Caperton v. Gregory
11 Gratt. 505 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1854)
Evans v. Spurgin
11 Gratt. 615 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1854)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Gratt. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harman-v-davis-va-1878.