Hescht v. Calvert

9 S.E. 87, 32 W. Va. 215, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 68
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 87 (Hescht v. Calvert) 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
Hescht v. Calvert, 9 S.E. 87, 32 W. Va. 215, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 68 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

ENGLISH, Judge:

On the 16th day of July, 1870, one A. G. Calvert was appointed guardian for Albert Marion Hescht and Gracilla Belle Hescht, infants and only children of Jacob Hescht and Mary Ellen, his wife, and entered into bond in the penalty of $600.00, with one Wilfred Moore as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance of all the duties of said office and trust, and to well and truly pay and deliver or cause to be paid and delivered unto said Albert Marion Hescht and Gracilla Belle Hescht, orphans of Jacob Hescht deceased, all such estate, as then was or thereafter should appear to be due said orphans; the said Jacob Hescht having enlisted in the service of the United States in 1862, and having been killed in said service during the year 1862, leaving said Mary Ellen, his widow, and the said Albert Marion and Gracilla Belle, his only children, surviving him. Some time in the year 1863 his said widow intermarried with [217]*217one Isaac Newton Hubbs, who was a widower with eight children, and in the course of time said Mary Ellen became the mother of eight children by her said second husband, Isaac N. Hubbs. The appellants, Albert M. Hescht and Graeilla B. Hescht, at the time of their mother’s marriage with said I. N. Hubbs, were respectively of the ages of four and two years. It appears, that they made their home for the first year after their father’s death with their mother, and in the next March they went and lived with their grandfather, until their mother intermarried with said Hubbs, in July, 1863, and then they went and lived with their step-father and mother as a family, sometimes working out from home, and sometimes working on the farm. On the 3d day of August, 1879, said Graeilla B. Hescht intermarried with one J. E. Hyder, and at once left the homo of her step-father, and went to live with her husband.

It seems from the deposition of Albert M. Hescht, filed in the cause hereinafter mentioned, that he and his hiother and step-fatlier and seven of the children lived together until he was twenty years of age, except that a part of the time, when ho was small, he lived with his grandfather, Cornelius Vorhees, in Wetzel county, W. Va., and part of the time with his uncle, Charles Smith, and part of the time with another uncle David Harland two or three different times. After this he went to live with his step-father and the family, who were farming, and -worked on the farm for Mr. Hubbs until he was about sixteen years of age. He then went to work in the Pittsburgh stave-factory and worked for about two years. While working at said factory he lived at home, and, what he could save after buying his clothes, gave to his mother and step-father for the support of the family, or bought supplies for the family and took them home. When he was eighteen his step-father had bought a farm on the waters of “Proctor,” and moved on to it, and he went with them and worked on the farm for one year. When he was nineteen years of age, he went to work at the carpenter’s trade with one David Windgrove and worked with him that fall and that winter • that when he was twenty years of age, he went to Jackson county, W. Va., where he remained with his cousin for about five months, when returning to Wetzel [218]*218county be lived with Henry Hubbs. In the month of November, .1875, when said Albert M. Hescht was not quite seventeen years of age, and his sister was about fifteen years of age, a pension was granted them by the United States government upon the application of their said guardian, A. G. Calvert; and according to the statement of said guardian he received for his wards, in December, 1875, the sum of $1,505.53.

On the 20th day of December, 1882, said A. G. Calvert seems to have gone before one W. S. Wiley, a commissioner of accounts, and made a settlement of his accounts as guardian for appellantsand said commissioner found, that said guardian had received altogether for .his said wards the sum of $1,715.53, and that he had paid out for their use and benefit $1,335.55, leaving a balance due them of $379.98 when they arrived at the age of twenty one years. Said commissioner however further reported, that in his opinion said guardian should be allowed for his commissions and services in attending to the interests of his said wards from the time of his appointment the sum of $115.00 and deducting that sum from the balance in said guardian’s hands at the time said Albert M. Hescht arrived at the age of twenty one years ($379.98) shows a balance due said wards of $264.98, and, deducting costs, $7.00, would leave a net balance due said wards at the time they arrived at twenty one years of age of $257.98'; that one half of that sum was due Albert M. Hescht, and one half due Gracilla B. Hescht, being $128.99 due each of them; and that after said Albert M. Hescht arrived at the age of twenty one years he had been paid by his said guardian $178.00, which would leave a balance due said guardian of $49.01; and that Gracilla B Hescht, after she arrived at the age of twenty one years, had been paid by her said guardian $175.00, leaving a balance due said guardian from her of $46.01.

To surcharge and satisfy this account settled as-aforesaid before Commissioner W. S. Wiley this suit was brought at February rules 1886, in the Circuit Court of Wetzel county, and plaintiffs allege that they at no time had any settlement with their said guardian ; that the accounts laid before said Commissioner Wiley are by no means correct, and they charge. [219]*219the same to be incorrect; that said account does not contain the true amount of money received by said Calvert as their guardian, or paid out by him; that he sought only to account for $1,715.53, instead of $1,741.46, with which he was properly chargeable; that the charges allowed said Calvert in said report are unjust and incorrect; that he has charged the plaintiffs with $1,056.00 paid by him to their mother as of December 4, 1875, when there was no such just charge against them, and none-such could have been properly made against them; that in support of said charge said guardian presented a pretended voucher, dated January 25, 1876, for said sum of $1,056.00, purporting to be an account in favor of Isaac Hubbs and Mary E. Hubbs for keeping, clothing and schooling plaintiffs for eleven years up to December 4, 1875, which purports to be receipted by said Isaac and Mary E. Hubbs as of 15th day of Jauuary, 1876. The plaintiffs charge, that said item is erroneous, in that the same or the greatest proportion thereof was barred by the statute of limitations at the time it was paid, if ever paid ; in that said Calvert had no right as such guardian to pay out for the support, keeping, clothing or schooling of the plaintiffs any thing more than the annual income of their estate, the rents, issues and profits thereof, without an express order from a court of competent jurisdiction, which they deny was ever obtained by. him, because there never had been any such indebtedness incurred by said guardian; that the same was without consideration moving from the mother or from said Hubbs, as they had more than paid for any and all expenses to which their mother and said Hubbs had ever been put to in such keeping etc.;

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 87, 32 W. Va. 215, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hescht-v-calvert-wva-1889.