Kester v. Hill

34 S.E. 798, 46 W. Va. 744, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 100
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 11, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 798 (Kester v. Hill) 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
Kester v. Hill, 34 S.E. 798, 46 W. Va. 744, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 100 (W. Va. 1899).

Opinion

McWhorter, Judge.

Cecil M. Kester and others, by Ella Kester, their next friend, filed their bill in equity in the circuit court of Harrison County against W. E. Hill, their guardian, and J. B. Sandusky and Henry 0. Ross, his sureties, and others, for [745]*745the purpose of requiring his guardian, Hill, to make settlement of his accounts as such fiduciary, and to surcharge and falsify certain settlements theretofore made by such guardian before A. Werninger, commissioner of accounts. Answers were filed, and the cause was referred to Commissioner M. M. -Thompson for accounts and report. The commissioner made several reports. The cause was heard, a decree entered, and appeal taken therefrom to this Court. A decision therein is reported in 42 W. Va. 611, (26 S. E. 876), which opinion concludes as follows: “The decree complained of is therefore reversed so far as it holds the sureties of W. E. Hill as guardian in the bond given at the time of his appointment, as such, liable for the proceeds of the sale of the real estate in the bills mentioned, and said decree is affirmed so far as it holds that J. B. Sandusky was improperly appointed as guardian of plaintiffs without the removal of said W. E. Hill as such guardian; and, it appearing that a considerable sum of money belonging to plaintiffs went into the hands of J. B. Sandusky after he was so improperly appointed guardian of plaintiffs, this cause is remanded to the circuit court of Harrison County, in order that it may be properly ascertained from what source the money was derived which went into the hands of said J. B. Sandusky as the property of these plaintiffs, and that proper decrees may be entered as to its collection and investment for the benefit of plaintiffs, and for the settlement of the accounts of said W. E. Hill as guardian.” When the cause was returned to the circuit court, the plaintiffs, by permission of the court, filed exceptions to Commissioner Thompson’s reports settling the accounts of the guardian, W. E. Hill, overruling defendant’s objections thereto. The cause was heard on the 3rd day of February, 1897. The said exceptions were sustained, and a decree entered recommitting the cause to Commissioner M. M. Thompson, with directions to open up, and audit, and restate the accounts of Guardian W. E. Hill for each year of his guardianship from the time of his appointment, and with special directions to report upon certain items of credit allowed said guardian in his settlements made before A. Werninger, as shown by Exhibits Nos. 10 to 17, inclusive, which were especially surcharged and falsified in the bill: besides making the further report authorized by the decis[746]*746ion of this Court as to the funds of plaintiffs which went into the hands of J. B. Sandusky after he was improperly appointed guardian of plaintiffs, and from what source the money was derived which went into the hands of said San-dusky. Commissioner Thompson filed his report made under the decree of recommittal, to which report defendants filed the following exceptions: “(1) All of the defendants in this cause except to the master commissioner’s report because the order of reference is contrary to the opinion of the Supreme Court of Appeals rendered in this cause, said opinion not authorizing a restatement of the accounts of W. E. Hill as guardian, and relieving his sureties of all responsibility for the real estate sold by Hill. (2) The defendants W. E. Hill and J. B. Sandusky except to the said report because they were not given credit for the balance unpaid in the note of M. E. Kester, which balance appears from the evidence of J. B. Sandusky. (3) All the defendants except to so much of said report as charges defendants with the item of forty-nine dollars and sixty-six cents rent claimed to be unpaid by H. Kemble, as that matter has been previously reported on and adjudicated. (4) The defendant J. B. Sandusky excepts to said report because it does not properly ascertain the amount of the real estate sold by Hill and the amount obtained for the same. (5) The defendant J. B. Sandusky also excepts to so much of said report as charges him with three hundred and sixty-five dollars paid by him for the house and lot in Bridgeport to W.E. Hill, among other reasons been use rbat matter is settled by the Supreme Court of Appeals in its decision in this cause. (6) The defendant J. B. Sandusky excepts to so much of said report as seeks to correct the settlements made by W. E. Hill before Commissioner Werninger, and to all of said report seeking to make other charges against him, said Sandusky, as surety for said Hill, not included in the report before the Supreme Court of Appeals when it handed down its opinion' in this cause. (7) The defendant J. B. Sandusky excepts to so much of said report as reports that the M. E. Kester note was personal estate in the hands of J. B. Sandusky, and that he is chargeable with the same; and also, in that connection, to so much of said report as refuses to give him credit for the sum paid by him to Ella Kester for the support of the plaintiffs. (8) The defendant J. B. Sandusky [747]*747excepts to so much of said report as charges him with compound interest, as surety, as that matter was before the Supreme Court of Appeals, and it did not direct such interest to be charged. And the said Sandusky should not be charged with compound interest, if at all, after the defendant Hill had left the State, and this defendant had done all in his power to have him removed as guardian, and that with knowledge and consent of the plaintiffs. Neither should compound interest be charged for the year Hill made prompt settlements before Werninger. Defendant J. B. Sandusky also excepts to so much of said report as charges him with compound interest on the M. E. Kester note, because said note was not due until the-day of February, 1894, and a large part of it yet remains unpaid.” On the 28th of May the cause was heard upon the papers theretofore read, the former orders made in the cause, the said report of Commissioner M. M. Thompson, and the exceptions thereto, when the court overruled all of said defendants’ exceptions except the third, which referred to the forty-nine dollars and sixty-six cents rent, etc., which exception was sustained, and said item disallowed, and also except, further, that part of the seventh exception relating to the money paid by J. B. Sandusky to Ella Kester for the support of the plaintiffs, which item of rents of forty-nine dollars and sixty-six cents, and interest to May 11, 1897, and the money paid for support as aforesaid, aggregated on said May 11, 1897, the sum of four hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty-five cents, and that, after making said deduction of four hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty-five cents, there still remained due to plaintiffs, as follows, viz: to Cecil M. Kester eight hundred and six dollars and ten cents, to Sadie B. Kester eight hundred and five dollars and ninety-nine cents, to Hattie Kester eight huhdrc-d and seven dollars and forty-six cents, and to William II. Kester eight hundred and two dollars and ninety-nine cents, by the defendants, W. E. Hill, J. B. Sandusky, and Henry C. Ross; and the report of Commissioner Thompson, as modified and corrected by sustaining said exception 3 and said portion pf 7, was confirmed, and it was decreed that said several sums be recovered against said three defendants by said plaintiffs, respectively, with interest on said sums from the 11th day of May, 1897, until paid. The de[748]

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 798, 46 W. Va. 744, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kester-v-hill-wva-1899.