Hunter v. Kennedy

20 W. Va. 343, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 45
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 W. Va. 343 (Hunter v. Kennedy) 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
Hunter v. Kennedy, 20 W. Va. 343, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 45 (W. Va. 1882).

Opinion

Johnson, President,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The following bill was filed in the circuit court of Jefferson county: “Andrew Hunter special ■commissioner of the circuit court of Jefferson county filed his bill of complaint against John "W\ Kennedy, Andrew E. Kennedy, John Sel-den and Sarah B. Selden his'wife, Mary Cooke, Edward P. Kennedy, S. B. Kennedy and Mary S. his wife, Lizzie G. [345]*345Selden, Andrew. K. Selden and H. 0. Selden, defendants. Complainant respectfully represents that lie was duly appointed a special receiver of the circuit court of Jefferson county, in the chancery suit of Jno. I. Heñido, John W. Kennedy, :&c., and as such he obtained a decree in said court on the chancery side, against the defendant Jno. W. Kennedy; that execution duty issued and was returned, in effect by the sheriff that said Kennedy is an heir of Andrew Kennedy deceased who died in this county, leaving to valuable farms, which are both situated in this county, known as ‘Cassilis’ and the ‘Cave’ farm, and that said Jno. Mb Kennedy has an undivided interest amounting to one-sixth of said two farms. The complainant therefore prays, that this undivided interest may be subjected to the payment of his said decree, which as will appear by an authentic copy of the same herewith filed, as exhibit ‘A’ amounts to the sum of four hundred and fifty-seven dollars and eighty-nine cents ($457.89) with six per cent, interest thereon from May 3, 1872, till paid and two dollars and twenty cents costs of issuing execution;.that to this end sale may be made of such undivided interest, or if the court should think such course necessary that partition in kind may he made, and the portion-allotted, to said Jno. W. Kennedy may he subjected in the manner prescribed bylaw to the payment of complainant’s debt. Complainant prays further that Jno. Mb Kennedy, and the co-heirs named as defendants in the caption, may be made such by proper process, and required to answer, and that all such other, and further relief may be granted, as may be equitable.”

Exhibit “A” referred to in the bill is not a part of the record.

At Kovember term, 1876, a decree was entered reciting, that “this cause came on to be heard on the proper process executed or acknowledged by all the defendants, and the bill and exhibits, and the bill taken for confessed as to all the defendants” and referring the cause, to a commissioner to take proof of the claim set up in the bill and of the interest of the defendant, Jno. Mb MbKennedy,in the realty inherited from his father, together with the valué oi such interest, and whether the same could be sold to better advantage by partition before sale, &c. On the 24th of April, 1877, the court entered [346]*346another decree reciting the incoming of the report of the commissioner, and that it appeared by said report, that there had been by mutual agreement a partition of the “Cave farm,” in which the defendant, Jño. "W. Kennedy, had a sufficient interest to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, and referred to a plat of said land so partitioned, and further stated, that a certain portion thereof was to be assigned to said Jno. W. Kennedy. The decree further confirmed the commissioner’s rej>orf,ancI appointed two commissioners to sell the said portion to be assigned to said Kennedy to pay the claim of plaintiff; said sale to take place, “after the expiration of ninety days from the adjournment of this term,” &c. The decree concludes as follows : “So much of this decree as directs a sale of John W. Kennedy’s land, before his portion has been separately allotted to him, is consented to,” signed by counsel for plaintiff, and by counsel for defendant, Kennedy. On the 24th day of October, 1878, the following order was entered: “This ease coming on to be heard this 24th day of October, 1878, on the papers formerly read and filed, and on the petition of defendant, Jno. W. Kennedy, for leave to file a bill of review, was argued by counsel. And on consideration whereof the court doth refuse to permit said bill of review to be filed, and the special commissioners A. E. Kennedy and J). B. Lucas heretofore appointed arc directed to proceed to execute the order of sale heretofore entered.”

The said petition for a rehearing, or bill of review, whichever it may be called, represents, that at the February rales, 1870, a bill was exhibited against petitioner by John T. ITenkle, asking a decree against him for the sum of three hundred and twenty-five dollars, which he alleged was due to him by petitioner, as trustee of Gfeo. W. Sappington, and which petitioner received by virtue of a sale made by him on the 16th day of August, 1858, of certain property belonging to said Sappington. This bill petitioner answered on November'23, 1870, asking that certain other parties be made defendants thereto.

On the 13th of December, 1871, an amended bill wasfiled, the chief object of which was to make Andrew Hunter as special commissioner a party defendant. At March rules, 1872, an amendment to this bill was filed correcting certain [347]*347misstatements in the former bills. At tlie same rules Andrew Hunter answered said bills, and afterwards, as petitioner is informed, a decree was had against him. Hotliing further was done in the cause up to the time petitioner left Jeffer-sou county in 1873. In August, 1876, another bill was exhibited by said Hunter as special receiver of the circuit court of 1 etferson county against petitioner and others of the heirs of Andrew Kennedy, probably predicated on the decree in the other cause, which petitioner has not seen, but which was filed to subject the interest of petitioner, in the -‘Gave farm” to the payment of the debt mentioned. At the April term, 1877, a decree was rendered in this cause appointing commissioners to sell petitioner’s share of said farm. Petitioner further represents that he is aggrieved by said decree because he is advised it is erroneous upon its face, and for other reasons about, to be stated.

Petitioner further represents, that at the time he filed his answer to the bill of John T. IlenlGe, he was utterly at a loss to account for the non-payment by him to said Heukle or Hunter, special commissioner, of the money so claimed to he due, and after many careful searches among his papers and receipts could only find a receipt for the cash payment of sixty-three dollars, and Richard B. Washington’s receipt for his share of the purchase-money; petitioner then thought he might have paid the three deferred payments to Hunter, special commissioner. He enquired of Mr. Hunter, if he had done so, and asked him to inspect his books for that purpose, and was informed by him, that they had been destroyed at the burning of his house during the war, and that he had no recollection whatever' of his having received any of the money except the cash payment. In this state of the ease petitioner could make no'further answer to the Ilenkle hill, and none to the bill of Hunter, special receiver, hilt was obliged to let the decree be pronounced against him without answer. A few days before petitioner’s land was to be sold, as advertised, under the decree, intending to go to Jefferson county and be present at the sale, he made another search among the great mass of papers and receipts, which had accumulated since he came to the bar in 1847. He found two papers, which at once recalled matters, which [348]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 W. Va. 343, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-kennedy-wva-1882.