Lacy v. Stamper

27 Va. 42
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 20, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Va. 42 (Lacy v. Stamper) 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
Lacy v. Stamper, 27 Va. 42 (Va. 1876).

Opinion

Moncure, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

We will first consider the case of Lacy v. Stamper, &c. There are five assignments of error in the petition of appeal in that case, which we will notice in their order.

1. The first assignment of error is: “because the •securities of Howie, as the administrator of Stamper, are charged with a liability of more than $6,000, the amount of Christian’s and Talley’s bonds, although it was shown that those bonds were not lost by Howie’s neglect, but were good and available, not only at the death of Howie, but when they were subsequently turned over by his representative to Crump, the administrator de bonis non of Stamper.”

As a general rule, it is the duty of d personal representative to collect all debts due to the estate he represents, which can be collected, and to use due and reasonable diligence in making such collection; and if any such debt be lost by not being collected, he and his sureties are liable therefor, if he might have collected it by the use of due and reasonable diligence. This general rule has not been, and cannot be denied, and it is unnecessary to refer to authority to sustain it.

It is not pretended that the estate of Howie, or his sureties, as executor of Stamper, have been charged in this case with a single debt due to the said testator at his death, which was not then perfectly solvent, and [48]*48■which might not have been collected by the executor, Howie, by the use of due and reasonable diligence. If, therefore, the general rule before stated be applicable to the case, it follows that the estate and sureties of Howie are liable for all the debts' of said testator so charged to them.

But it is contended in their behalf, that while the debts referred to in the exception were solvent at the death of Stamper, and might have been collected by his executor, Howie, whose estate and sureties are therefore liable for them, yet they were also solvent when L. C. Crump became administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Stamper, and they came to-the hands of said Crump as such administrator, whose duty it was to collect them, and who might have collected them by the use of due and reasonable diligence; that said Crump is therefore also liable for them; and that his liability is prior and paramount to that of the liability of the estate and sureties of Howie.

It is no doubt true, as a legal proposition, that where there are several successive administrations upon the same estate, and debts due to the estate might have been collected by each of the personal representatives of said estate, by the use of due and reasonable diligence, but were collected by none of them, and were lost by the negligence of each and all of them; while all of them are liable for said debts, their relative liability is in the inverse order of their qualifications as such personal representatives.

It would follow, therefore, if the facts were as contended for in behalf of the estate and sureties of Howie; and the debts referred to in the exception might have been collected by the use. of due and reasonable diligence by Crump, as administrator de bonis [49]*49non with the will annexed of Stamper, he and his sureties would be liable for said debts prior to, and in exoneration of, the estate and sureties of Howie.

The question then is, whether the fact be as thus contended for.

The liability of Howie’s estate and sureties for these debts is very clear. If they were good and solvent debts when Crump qualified, they were certainly good and solvent debts when Howie qualified as personal representative of Stamper. And for four or five years after the qualification of Howie, there was profound peace throughout the land; the courts of the county were in full operation; there were no stay-laws in forc.e; and there was no obstruction of any kind to the administration of justice in the state. And yet no action was ever brought by Howie for the recovery of any of these debts.

To relieve Howie’s estate and sureties from this clear liability for said debts, by fixing a liability therefor on the subsequent personal representative Crump, the evidence on which the latter liability must depend, ought, certainly, to be very strong.

Crump was very prompt iu the institution of suits for the recovery of said debts. He certainly brought them in due time. Did he prosecute them with due diligence?

In ordinary time of peace he might, and no doubt would, have obtained judgments for the said debts much sooner than he did; and probably might, and would, have collected all or most of them. But he instituted the suits in the midst of the war, which was actively prosecuted for more than two years thereafter. During almost the whole of that period, the county of New Kent, in which the suits were brought, was in the hands of the public enemy, or daily liable to hos[50]*50tile raids; and sessions of courts in the county were prevented. The records of the courts were removed to Richmond for preservation, and were afterwards destroyed there by the great fire of the 3d of April 1865. After the war, there were still many, and great, difficulties attending the prosecution of suits and the recovery of debts, growing out of stay-laws and other obstructions thrown in the way of suitors.

We cannot therefore say, that according to the evidence afforded by the record, the said Crump did not use due and reasonable diligence to collect the said debts; and certainly we cannot say that the said evidence is sufficient to relieve Howie’s estate and sureties from the clear liability for said debts, by .fixing a liability therefor on Crump.

It seems to be supposed, however, by the counsel for the appellant, that the general rule before stated is not applicable to this case, and that it was not the duty of Howie to collect the said debts, but as the estate was not to be distributed at once among the legatees, but invested and held for the use of the widow and children during her life or widowhood, it was the duty of the executor, instead of collecting the debts and reinvesting the amount, to consider the said debts as investments already made by the testator for the purposes of his will, and to let them stand accordingly.

We do not mean to say that there may not be cases in which an executor, instead of collecting a debt and investing the amount for the purposes of the will, might not very properly let it stand as an investment already made for said purposes. As for example, if in this case a debt had been well secured on real estate, the executor might well have permitted it to stand as an investment already made of so much of the estate. And even if it had been secured by personal security [51]*51only, provided the security was undoubted, he might have been warranted in not collecting the debt by letting it stand as an investment already made.

But the debts due to the testator at the time of his death in this case were certainly none of them, except as will be hereinafter mentioned, such as might properly have been adopted and continued by the executor Howie, as investments already made for the purposes of his said testator’s will. They were none of them secured on real estate, and for very few of them was there even any personal security. Bor the far largest of the debts, that of John D.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Va. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacy-v-stamper-va-1876.