Hickerson's adm'r v. Helm

2 Va. 628
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 628 (Hickerson's adm'r v. Helm) 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
Hickerson's adm'r v. Helm, 2 Va. 628 (Va. 1844).

Opinions

Baldwin, J.

The merits of this cause turn upon the question whether the interest of mrs. Hickerson in the personal estate of her husband Joseph Hickerson deceased (with the credit to which she is entitled for her property sold under execution) is sufficient, and properly applicable, to extinguish the debt contracted by her for purchases at the sale made by Marshall Hickerson his executor. This involves an enquiry into the principles upon which the accounts have been settled by the master commissioner, under the order of the circuit court. The basis of the settlement is a report made by the same master commissioner, in another suit of Shumate &c. v. Hickerson &c. then depending in the same court, of several accounts directed by interlocutory decrees in that suit; to wit, an account of the administration of Marshall Hickerson upon the estate of Joseph Hickerson deceased; another, of the administration de bonis non of Hosea Hickerson upon the estate of [648]*648Joseph Hickerson deceased; and a third, of the admin¡gtraI¡on Qf Hosea Hickerson upon the estate of Marshall Hickerson deceased. The result of that report is a balance against Marshall Hickerson as executor of Joseph Hickerson; a balance in favour of Hosea Hickerson as administrator de bonis non of Joseph Hickerson; and a balance against him as administrator of Marshall Hickerson. It was upon the basis of the accounts thus reported, that the master commissioner proceeded in the present cause to ascertain the aforesaid interest of mrs. Hickerson, who was a party in the case of Shumate Sfc. v. Hickerson &fc. but not in the present suit. Mrs. Hickerson being entitled absolutely to a distributive share of one third in the residue of her husband’s personal estate exclusive of the slaves, after payment of his debts, and to one third of the slaves as her dower for life only, the commissioner restated the accounts, so as to shew in the first place a balance against Marshall Hickerson executor of Joseph Hickerson, exclusive of the slaves, of 254 dollars 93 cents, after deducting the balance due to Hosea Hickerson as administrator de bonis non of Joseph Hickerson; the one third of which balance, to wit, 84 dollars 98 cents, he reported in favour of mrs. Hickerson. He then went on to ascertain what she was further entitled to, on account of her interest in the slaves. None of these were forthcoming. It appears from the appraisement that there were seven. Two of them were sold under execution: two were specifically bequeathed by the testator, and the presumption is were delivered over to the legatees : two others were sold by the executor Marshall Hickerson, but when, or for what prices, does not appear: the record furnishes no information of the disposition made of the seventh, and the probability is that he was old and of little or no value. The widow, for whom no provision was made by the will, claimed that made for her by law. Her dower in the slaves being one third for life, and she [649]*649having been deprived thereof by the conduct of the executor, compensation could be made to her therefor in but one of two modes; to wit, by allowing her the annual interest during her life on one third of the %'alue of the slaves, or by allowing one third of the annual estimated hires. The commissioner made statements in both ways, debiting the widow with the judgment against her for purchases at the sale, and crediting her, in the first, with one third annually of the interest on the value of the slaves, and in the second, with one third annually of the estimated hires; and in both, with her distributive share of the other personal estate, and with the actual value of the slave King (acquired from her father’s estate and sold under the first execution upon said judgment) minus the sheriff’s commission upon the sale. The result of the first statement was a balance against the widow, of 261 dollars 88 cents with interest from the 1st of January 1839; and of the second a balance in her favour, of 163 dollars 15 cents with interest on 158 dollars 13 cents thereof from the same dale. This last statement was adopted by the circuit court, and the decree rendered against the defendant Hosea Hiclcerson individually; doubtless because there were ample assets in his hands as administrator of Marshall Hickerson's estate, for payment of the amount thus ascertained to be due to the widow and chargeable against that estate, after the extinguishment of the judgment by the application of her credits.

If this adjustment of the accounts between Elizabeth Hiclcerson and the estate of her deceased husband be correct, it relieves us from the necessity of considering the questions so elaborately discussed at the bar, arising out of the allegation of the defendant that the conveyance to the plaintiff Helm, by Elizabeth Hiclcerson, of her interest in her father’s estate, was voluntary and fraudulent as regards, her creditors; inasmuch as.it [650]*650will thus appear that the defendant has no right in a court °f equity to occupy that relation towards her.. And this brings us to the consideration of the objections to that adjustment urged on the part of the apPeIiant*

In the first place, it is contended that the whole adjustment is wrong, on the ground that a court of equity ought not to interpose by way of injunction, to ascertain and set off a distributive interest in an estate, against a debt contracted by the distributee for purchases from the executor of property belonging to the estate. This is certainly correct as a general proposition, and is well established by the authorities cited for the appellant. Such a practice would occasion much confusion and injustice, by obstructing and perplexing the executor in the administration of the assets, exposing him to the danger of devastavits, and subjecting creditors of the estate to injurious delays. The rule however is not free from exception, and the reasons upon which it is founded are inapplicable to the case before us. All the difficulties which have occurred in the administration and distribution of this estate are attributable to the misconduct of Marshall Hickerson the executor, and the defendant Hosea Hickerson, his administrator and successor. There has been the most unreasonable delay in the settlement of the administration accounts. No step towards it was taken during the six years which elapsed from the time of the executor’s qualification in 1815 until his death in 1S21. In August 1821, the defendant Hosea Hickerson qualified as administrator of Marshall Hickerson, and as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Joseph Hickerson; but instead of settling up the administration accounts of himself and his predecessor in a reasonable lime, he failed to do so for a period of nearly twelve years prior to the institution of this suit in July 1333. Nor could he be brought to such settle[651]*651ment, in the suit instituted against him for that purpose in 1827, by Shumate and other distributees of Joseph Hickerson, until coerced by attachments for his contempt in disobeying orders of the court in that suit, •Thus a period of eighteen years prior to the institution of this suit was suffered by the personal representatives of the estate in question to elapse without a settlement of their administration accounts.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickersons-admr-v-helm-va-1844.