Holt v. Holt

16 S.E. 675, 37 W. Va. 305, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 675 (Holt v. Holt) 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
Holt v. Holt, 16 S.E. 675, 37 W. Va. 305, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

English, Judge :

This was a suit in equity, brought by Thomas B. Hughes and Louisa, his wife, John Holt, Rebecca Holt, Margaret Holt, Mathew S. Holt, Bernard Doyle, and Laura, his wife, and Charles B. Holt (who was an infant and sued by his next friend, John Holt) against J. P. "VV. HoltJ late sheriff of Gilmer county, and as such administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Mathew Holt, deceased. The bill was filed at the August rules, 1873, in the Circuit Court of Gilmer county.

The plaintiffs alleged that they were the children of Mathew Holt, deceased; — that the estate of said Mathew Holt was committed to the said J. E. "VV. Holt, late sheriff of Gilmer county, with powers to administer all the rights, goods and chattels belonging to the said estate, and that he was so appointed by the said Circuit Court, and that as such administrator he received into his hands, to administer according to law, many claims and debts due to the decedent; — that they believed he had made many collections of money duo to the said estate, arising from a bond or bonds of the United States, and that he had collected other moneys belonging to said estate, to which they were entitled, as childi’en and heirs at law of the said Mathew Holt, deceased;' but how much of said moneys had "been collected, belonging to said heirs, was not known, and how [308]*308many of the claims remaiu unpaid, in part or in whole, said plaintiffs were unable to state.

They called upon said defendant for a full and specific exhibition of all moneys so collected, and of the debts and claims due the decedent in his lifetime, which came into his hands; also, to state distinctly the names of each and every debtor, the amount due from them, and the evidence of such debts and claims, specifying how much was for principal, how much for interest, and the name of the debtor or debtors, and that he make a full and complete settlement of all his administrator’s accounts.

They further charged that they learned that the said administrator and decedent were partners in merchandising for many years prior to the death of the decedent, and accumulated many debts and claims due the firm; that it was supposed many of these debts were collected by the defendant before he became administrator; and they called for .a full exhibit of such collections, and if necessary, in furtherance of this object, that the defendant be required to file a list of all claims which would and did come into his hands as survivor of said firm, itemizing the same, specifying those actually and fully paid and those partially paid; — that in course of said partnership transactions the firm acquired, by patent and by purchase, various tracts of land; — that some, at least, were held by title-bond and conveyed by the vendor, the said defendant, and subsequently sold by him, as the holder of the legal title, for the benefit of said firm, and the purchase-money arising therefrom came into the hands of the defendant, to be accounted for by him as administrator; and they called upon the defendant for a full exhibit of all the lands sold, the money acquired therefrom, and when received, and, to this end, that he furnish a list of all real estate acquired during the partnership and a statement of its disposition.

They also alleged that the defendant had not settled his administration accounts according to law, and they called upon him to do so.

On the 14th day of March, 1874, the defendant J. F. W. Holt, filed his answer to the plaintiffs’ bill, to which the plaintiffs replied generally, and the cause was referred to a [309]*309commissioner to take ami state the partnership accounts between the defendant and M. II. Holt, deceased, and to settle the administration accounts of the defendant on the estate of M. H. Holt, deceased. Said commissioner was directed to report such special matter as he might deem pertinent, or, being pertinent, that might he required by any of the parties, with leave to examine any of the parties on interrogatories.

The said defendant in his answer says that said Mathew Holt left a will, and that Thomas 13. Hughes and R. F. Fleming qualified as executors thereof; — that they collected and realized nearly, if not quite, all the solvent assets of said estate, except a certain debt due from James "Webb, below mentioned, and administered the same ; — that, after the solvent assets of said estate had been so realized by said executors, the estate was committed to defendant, then sheriff of Gilmer county, to be administered by him in the character of administrator de bonis non with the' will annexed ; — that the remnant of the estate which thus came to his hands consisted only of bad, uncollectible, insolvent debts, which were not capable of being collected, and which he had not collected, by reason of their insolvency; — -that to sue on said claims was simply to waste the estate in costs. He denied that moneys came into his hands as such administrator, except as therein stated, or that any bond of the United States ever came into his hands as such administrator. He admits that there was paid to him as sucli administrator, by James Webb, on account of money due from him for land sold to him by Mathew Holt in his lifetime, the sum of two hundred and fifty five dollars and thirty five cents; that being the amount due said estate, as decreed by the Circuit Court of Gilmer county in'the case of James Webb against said Mathew Holt’s representatives and others. And that he had no recollection of ever receiving any other'money in his character as such administrator.

He says he will file with his answer a list of the claims which came to his hands, as administrator, from the hands of said executors, Hughes and Fleming, none of which, to the best of his recollection, had ever been collected by him [310]*310by reason of tlieir insolvency; — that these claims were not the sole property of the estate of Mathew Holt, for reasons stated by defendant as follows : “On the 25th day of January, 1859, the firm of M. & J. F. W. Ilolt, which was composed of Mathew Holt and defendant, was dissolved, and a large amount of claims due the firm went into the hands of said Mathew Holt, which he collected, partly, in his lifetime; and the residue then went into the hands of his executors, by whom all that were solvent were collected, and the remnant, which were insolvent, were turned over by said executors, on their resignation as such, and came to defendant, on the said estate being committed to his hands. He further says that he paid out, on debts chargeable against said Mathew Holt’s estate, more than the sum so paid by Janies Webb ; the debts on which the same was paid being debts against said Mathew Holt individually, and against the firm of M. & J. F. W. Holt.

And so defendant says that, as such administrator of the estate of Mathew Ilolt, deceased, he owes nothing to said estate, but on the contrary, on settlement, the said estate would be found indebted to him ; — that the claims so coming into his hands as administrator were exclusively claims in favor of said firm, and in them defendant, as a partner, had an interest; — that, if there were any claims due to Mathew Holt individually, which came into hands of defendant as administrator, he did not remember them then; but if'any, he would specify them in the list which he would furnish.

As to the second branch of the bill, which seeks to charge him in the character of surviving partner in the firm of M. & J. F. W.

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

Related

Holt v. Holt
35 S.E. 19 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1899)
Kester v. Lyon
20 S.E. 933 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 675, 37 W. Va. 305, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-holt-wva-1892.