Mapp v. Byrd

194 S.E. 724, 169 Va. 519, 1938 Va. LEXIS 229
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 724 (Mapp v. Byrd) 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
Mapp v. Byrd, 194 S.E. 724, 169 Va. 519, 1938 Va. LEXIS 229 (Va. 1938).

Opinion

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The two controversies presented by this appeal are: (1) The allowance of commissions to John Abbott Byrd and Aaron S. Byrd, committees of Margaret E. S. Byrd; and (2) the amount of rents that the committees received or should have received from the real estate owned by the incompetent.

The litigation is between relatives and personal representatives of deceased members of the same family. It involves transactions extending through a period of years, and directly or indirectly the settlement of the following estates: (1) The estate of Mary Virginia Byrd, the mother of four sons, Charles W., John Abbott, William W., and Aaron S. Byrd; (2) the estate of Charles L. Byrd, the husband of Mary Virginia Byrd, and the father of the four sons named; (3) the estates of three of the sons, to-wit: William W. Byrd, Charles W. Byrd, and John Abbott Byrd; and (4) the estate of Margaret E. S. Byrd and the transactions of her committees from April, 1925, to the day of her death, December 31, 1933.

Mary Virginia Byrd died in 1912, leaving considerable personal property and real estate. John Abbott Byrd quali[522]*522fied as administrator. He filed no inventory and made no settlement of his account before the commissioner. Each of the four sons received his part of the personal property, amounting to $4,000. This distribution was not made in strict accord with the statute, but it was satisfactory to all parties concerned.

Charles L. Byrd, the father of these four sons, died in 1925. His children settled his estate between them without the qualification of any administrator. Mr. Byrd owned a house and lot in the town of Parksley, and at the timé of his death, he owed the Accomack Banking Company a note for $5,000. The house and lot were sold by the sons for $2,750, which amount was applied on the debt due by their father to the bank. This left an unpaid balance of $2,250. The note showing this balance due was assigned by the Accomack Banking Company to Aaron S. Byrd and the indebtedness of Charles L. Byrd assumed by him. Charles W. Byrd and John Abbott Byrd agreed to pay their part, or one-third each.

William W. Byrd was an invalid. It seems that he did not assume any part of this debt. He died in 1927, unmarried and without issue. At the time of his death, the Accomack Banking Company held his note for $919. Charles W. Byrd, John Abbott Byrd and Aaron S. Byrd, without requiring anyone to qualify as administrator, handled this indebtedness in the same way that they had handled their father’s estate. Aaron S. Byrd assumed the debt, and each brother agreed to pay him one-third of the obligation, as each heir was entitled to one-third of the estate, real and personal, of which William W. Byrd died seized and possessed. The money on deposit in the bank to the credit of this decedent, with the consent of the bank, was used by the three brothers in payment of his open accounts, including doctors’ bills, burial expenses, etc. Charles W. Byrd seems to have been indebted to William W. Byrd in the sum of $2,000, evidenced by two bonds of $1,000 each, one bearing date October 7, 1914, subject to sundry small credits, and the other bearing date January 1, 1918.

[523]*523By the will of Margaret E. S. Byrd, bearing date November 24, 1914, the four Byrd brothers were bequeathed and devised the bulk of her property. Minor changes were made in a codicil dated December 1, 1914. Sometime after this will was executed, testatrix became non compos mentis, and her husband E. P. Byrd qualified as committee. He resigned in April, 1925, and soon thereafter died. At this time Mrs. Byrd was confined at Relay Sanitorium, in Maryland, where the charge for her support and maintenance was $150 per month. It was agreed by the Byrd brothers that John Abbott and Aaron S. Byrd should act as committees for their aunt. These committees received $2,301.25 in cash and assumed the management of several farms, the only source of income of the estate.

According to the testimony of Aaron S. Byrd, the brothers agreed that he should take charge of the farms and pay the estate the sum of $1,600 per year rent. Later, by agreement of the brothers, the amount of the rent was raised to $1,800 per year. The committees continued to pay the sanitarium $1,800 per year for the support and maintenance of the incompetent until October, 1931.

Charles W. Byrd was a practicing physician in New York. He kept in close touch with the situation in Accomac by visiting the brothers several times each year. At his suggestion, Mrs. Byrd, in October, 1931, was brought to her home in Accomac, where she remained under the care and supervision of Aaron S. Byrd until her death in December, 1933. For the support and maintenance of Mrs. Byrd, during the last two years of her life, the brothers agreed that Aaron S. Byrd should be paid a certain stipulated sum which was duly allowed by the trial court.

In September, 1933, Dr. Charles W. Byrd died intestate, leaving a widow, Sally J. Byrd, and one child, Jacqueline C. Byrd, an infant, who became of age before the final hearing of this cause. These parties, upon investigation, found that John Abbott Byrd and Aaron S. Byrd, as committees, had made no settlement of their accounts, and that there had been no qualification on the estate of William W. Byrd. On [524]*524March 17, 1934, G. Walter Mapp qualified as administrator on the estate of William W. Byrd. Later John Abbott Byrd filed an account of the committees of Margaret E. S. Byrd. This account showed that the estate was $3,481.33 in debt to the committees for money advanced. Exceptions were filed to this report by the administrator of William W. Byrd and Sally J. Byrd, the administratrix of Charles W. Byrd, in her own right, and as next friend of her daughter Jacqueline C. Byrd.

On February 6, 1936, John Abbott Byrd died intestate. B. T. Gunter qualified as administrator on this estate. Shortly thereafter, Aaron S. Byrd and his wife instituted this suit in which the settlements of the estates above named were thrown into equity, the past transactions of the parties were set forth with the prayer that all matters in controversy between the parties be settled in one suit. Answers and cross-bills were filed, various charges and countercharges were made. Evidence was taken ore terms before the trial judge, who entered a ten page decree disposing of the various issues.

The administrator of William W. Byrd, Sally J. Byrd, administratrix, and in her own right, and Jacqueline C. Byrd, now contend that the trial court erred in allowing Aaron S. Byrd and the estate of John Abbott Byrd commissions as committees on the estate of Margaret E. S. Byrd. This contention is based on the provisions of Code, section 5409, reading: “If any such fiduciary wholly fail to lay before such commissioner a statement of receipts for any year, within six months after its expiration, and though a statement be laid before the commissioner, yet if such fiduciary be found chargeable for that year with any money, not embraced in the said statement, he shall have no compensation for his services during said year, nor commission on such money, unless allowed by the court. This section shall not apply to a case in which, within six months after the end of any year, such fiduciary shall have given to the parties entitled to the money received in such year, a state[525]*525ment of the said money, and actually settled therefor with them; * *

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 724, 169 Va. 519, 1938 Va. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mapp-v-byrd-va-1938.