Hart v. Hart

8 S.E. 562, 31 W. Va. 688, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 76
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 S.E. 562 (Hart v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. Hart, 8 S.E. 562, 31 W. Va. 688, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 76 (W. Va. 1888).

Opinion

Woods, Judge :

Salatliiel Hart died intestate on the 26th of October, 3883, leaving surviving him four infant children, viz.: Mary Ellen, David, Thomas and Virginia Hart, and his widow, Catherine Hart, and she and her husband’s brother, John F. Hart, were appointed and duly qualified as his administrator and admin-istratrix, the latter taking but little part in the administration of the estate, alleged to be of the value of $453.00, including the undivided interest in a threshing-machine, which said John F. Hart and decedent for two years before and at the time of his death owned and used for profit, no settlement of which partnership transactions had ever been made.

The administrator sold all the personal property, which came into his possession except the interest of decedent in said machine and the other partnership assets, and one half interest in a jack ; both of which were offered for sale, but the price offered being deemed too low, they were not sold, and the machine was retained and used by the surviving partner, and the jack was left with and continued to remain in the custody of said administratrix, who also has received other small amounts of the personal estate for which she has never accounted. The highest bid offered for the decedent’s interest in the machine was $110.00 made by John F. Hart himself, and the appraised value of the aforesaid jack was $50.00. The proceeds of the sale of the personal estate of decedent made by said administrator was $243.97, and he received from other sources the further sum of $5.00 and no more.

On the 25th July, 1882, the decedent confessed a judgment in favor of Gallaher & Son for $280.82 with interest from that date until paid and $1.75 costs. On the 3d of April, 1883, decedent and his wife, said Catherine Hart, by deed of that date, conveyed to Silas A. Gallaher, as trustee, so much of a certain boundary of land therein particularly desci’ibed as “ they had not already conveyed to other parties by deed,” in trust to secure said Gallaher & Son the payment of a cer[691]*691tain judgment obtained by them against Salathiel Hart for the sum of $280.82 with interest from the 25th of July, 1882, and $1.75 costs with the usual power to sell in accordance with the laws of West Virginia governing trust-sales, in case Salathiel Hart failed to satisfy the same on or before the 1st of April, 1884. This deed was duly recorded, but in recording the same the amount of the judgment thereby secured was stated to be $180.82 with interest and costs as aforesaid.

On the 12th October, 1883, Salathiel Hart and his wife, Catherine Hart, executed a second deed of trust upon the same land, describing the interest conveyed in the same terms to John Watson, trustee, to secure to said Gallaher & Son the further sum of $82.55 with interest from the 12th October, 1883, with a similar power to sell in case the debt was not paid on or before the 1st of April, 1884. This deed of trust also was recorded soon after its date and during the lifetime of Salathiel Hart. The trustee advertised the land conveyed to him in trust by the deed of April 3,1883, to be sold on the 20th November, 1885.

On the first Monday in December, 1885, the said Catherine Hart filed her bill in the Circuit Court of Pleasants county against said administrator, John F. Hart, Silas Gallaher, trustee, and Silas Gallaher, surviving partner of the firm of S. Gallaher & Son, setting up substantially the foregoing facts, and alleging that said John F. Hart, as such administrator, was chargeable with all of her said husband’s personal estate, including the values of said jack, appraised at $50.00 and said half interest in the machine, appraised at $200.00, amounting in all to $453.50; and also with other large sums of money arising out of said partnership-transaction remaining in his hands, which moneys were more than sufficient to pay all of her husband’s debts, including all that was justly due upon the debts secured by said deeds of trust.

She further alleged that the trust-deed of $280.82 was in fact only $180.82 with said interest and costs, and that when the deed was recorded the record thereof showed that it was only $180.82, which had been since changed to $280.82, but she does not pretend to dispute the fact, that the judgment confessed by her husband to S. Gallaher & Son, recited in the deed of trust, was in fact for $280.82. She further alleges [692]*692that the deed of trust dated October 12,1883, to secure the debt of $82.55, was obtained without consideration by said Gallaher & Son, when her husband was too feeble to resist their importunities, and is therefore void. She subsequently filed an amended and supplemental bill against the same defendants, and also against S. A. Gallaher and James Steally, as executors of Silas Gallaher, deceased, and against said infant children, Mary Ellen, David, Thomas and Virginia Hart; substantially repeating, but with more particularity, the allegations of her original bill.

She prays that the accounts of the partnership between her husband and the defendant, John E. Hart, as well as his accounts as administrator of Salathiel Hart, may be settled, and that he may be compelled to account for the appraised value of her husband’s personal estate, including the appraised value of his interest in said machine at $200.00; that all debts and liabilities against the estate of said decedent, including the judgment secured by said trust-deed, may be ascertained; and that the amount of money belonging to said estate applicable to the payment of said debts, as well as the amount of real estate conveyed by said deed of trust, may be ascertained ; and that the said trustee from making sale of said land be enjoined until the further order of the court. The preliminary injunction prayed for was allowed, and became effectual by the execution of the required bond. No guardian ad litem was appointed for said infant defendants, nor any answer of such guardian filed.

The defendants, Silas A. Gallaher, trustee, and as executor of Silas Gallaher, surviving partner of S. Gallaher & Son, jointly with his co-executor, James Steally, answered the bills, but no replication thereto seems to have been filed. The defendant, John E. Hart, also answered the bills and to his answer a general replication was filed.

The answer of John E. Hart admitted that, as administrator of Salathiel Hart, he realized from the sale of his personal property $243.97, and that he had collected from other sources $5.00, and denies that he received any other amounts in his character as administrator. He admits the existence of the partnership mentioned in the bill, but denies that the half interest in the machine was worth $200.00 or that he ever [693]*693promised to give that price for it. He sets out in detail all the transactions of the partnership, files a statement of all its earnings, from whom received, and the person who collected the same, and how, to whom, and for what purpose the same were disbursed; whereby it appears, and he accordingly claims, that there is a large debt due to him from his late partner on account of said partnership dealings. He files as part of his answer a detailed statement of all his disbursements as such administrator, whereby it appears, that there is remaining in his hands belonging to the estate of his decedent the sum of $212.54 including interest to the 1st of March, 1886, excluding the half interest of his intestate in the jack, and in the threshing-machine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.E. 562, 31 W. Va. 688, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-hart-wva-1888.