McDevitt v. Frantz

8 S.E. 642, 85 Va. 740, 1889 Va. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 8, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 S.E. 642 (McDevitt v. Frantz) 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
McDevitt v. Frantz, 8 S.E. 642, 85 Va. 740, 1889 Va. LEXIS 87 (Va. 1889).

Opinion

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The leading facts of the case, as presented by the record, are as follows, viz: James M. Sewell, of Cecil county, Maryland, about the year 1840, married Anna M. Pinckney, of the city of Baltimore. He was seized and possessed of a farm called “Holly Hall,” located in the said county of Cecil, and she was possessed of certain separate estate not liable for her husband’s debts. The said James M. Sewell, by the year 1855, had become heavily involved in debt; and, on the 14th day of March, 1855, the said James M. Sewell and wife (in which deed the mother of said James M. Sewell united) conveyed to Richard Grrayson, trustee, the said tract of land, “ Holly Hall,” upon the following trusts: to the use of the said James M. Sewell for and during the term of his natural life, and, after the death of the said James M. Sewell, to the use of the said Anna M. Sewell, wife of the said James M. Sewell, and, after the death of the said Anna M. Sewell, then to and for the use of such children of the said James M. Sewell and Anna M., his wife, as may then be living, to them and their heirs forever.”

[742]*742In a certain suit instituted in the circuit court of Cecil county, Maryland, by Thomas Thackery for himself and other creditors of the said James M. Sewell, assailing the said trust deed to Grayson, trustee, as fraudulent, the said circuit court, by its decree of the 17th day of October,- 1856, adjudged, ordered, and decreed, “that the deed of trust executed by James M. Sewell and Anna M. Sewell, his wife, and Anna M. Sewell to Richard Grayson, on the 14th day of March, 1855, be and is hereby declared fraudulent and void as to the creditors of the said James M. Sewell, who were creditors at the time of the execution thereof.” And the said court, by the same decree, ordered that the real estate mentioned in the said deed be sold for the payment of the debts of the said James M. Sewell1, and appointed Hiram McCullough trustee or commissioner to :make the sale. The sale was made in February, 1857; and after the payment of the said debts, the costs of suit and expenses of sale, there remained a surplus in the hands of the court of'$6,390.05, subject to the aforesaid trust. •

In 1857 the said James M. Sewell and wife, with their children, came to the county of Elizabeth City, Virginia, to reside. By deed dated August 11th, 1857, Zachariah' Craver and Anna, his wife, in consideration of the sum of “$2,000 in hand paid, and the further consideration of $7,300 to be hereafter paid to Zachariah Craver by said James M. Sewell, and the payment of which is to be secured by deed of trust on the real estate hereinafter granted, conveyed to Anna M. Sewell- (the wife of said James M. Sewell) that certain plantation in the county of Elizabeth City, Virginia, and the woodland used therewith, known as ‘Melrose/ containing one hundred and twenty-one and one-fifth acres and one hundred and twenty-nine perches, to have and to hold the same to her, the said Anna M. Sewell, her heirs and assigns forever.” This said deed was duly recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of Elizabeth City county, Virginia, September 5th, 1857. On the 29th day of January, 1858, the said James M. Sewell and Anna M. Sewell, his wife, Anna [743]*743P. Sewell, Florence Sewell, Louisa Sewell, and Lelia Sewell, children of the said James M. Sewell and wife, infants, hy James M. Sewell their next friend, filed their petition in the said cause of Thomas Thackery against James M. Sewell and others, then pending in the circuit court of Cecil county, Maryland, representing “that after the payment of all the debts of James M. Sewell, exhibited and filed under the decree in this cause, as well as all the costs and expenses of this suit, there will, as appears by the report of the auditor of this court herein filed and confirmed, remain in the hands of the trustee the sum of §6,390.05, to be invested under the order of this court agreeably to the terms and provisions of the deed of trust in the proceedings mentioned. And your petitioners, James M. Sewell and Anna M. Sewell, further show that they have lately purchased, as a home for themselves and children, the property described in the deed herewith exhibited, marked exhibit £J. M. S.’ (the Oraver deed), and they pray the court to order and direct the trustee in this cause to invest the surplus in his hands above-named in the property described in said deed, upon the terms prescribed in the said deed of trust, and in such manner as the court may deem right and proper.” On the 30th day of January, 1858, the said circuit court of Cecil county made this order: “Upon the within petition it is ordered this 30th day of January, 1858, that Hiram McCullough, trustee appointed hy the decree in this cause, invest upon bond and mortgage or deed of trust upon the property described in the deed accompanying the within petition, the surplus remaining in his hands agreeably to the report of the auditor in this cause, provided that the same be applied to the extinguishment of the liens on said property, so as to make it the first lien thereof, to such uses and upon such trusts as are prescribed and directed in the deed of trust in these proceedings mentioned, and that he report the fact and manner of such investment, when made, to this court.”

The said James M. Sewell and Anna M. Sewell, during their joint lives, and the said Anna M. Sewell after the death of her [744]*744husband, sold, at different times, to various parties, in small lots, some fifty acres of this “ Melrose ” or “ Bay View ” tract of land; and the said Anna M. Sewell, by deed dated the 19th day of October, 1882, for a valuable consideration) sold and conveyed a part of the remaining tract of land to her daughter, Mrs. Louisa Frantz; and by ber certain other deed, dated October 22d, 1883, by deed of gift,' conveyed to the said Louisa Frantz the last remnant of the said Melrose (or “Bay View”) tract of land. The said Anna M. Sewell had, previous to the execution of the last said deed of October 22d, 1883, made her last will and testament, which bears date the 30th day of December, 1882, by which she devised this last remaining portion of this Melrose property, with the exception of a small part thereof, to the said Louisa Frantz for her life—remainder to her children. The appellants, Martin McDévitt and Florence, his wife, William F. Stewart and Lelia, his wife, bring this suit in the circuit court of the county of Elizabeth City, alleging in their bill that the said tract pf land, known as “Melrose,” was purchased by the said James M. Sewell, in trust for the use and benefit of himself and the said Anna M., his wife, during their joint lives, and the life of the survivor of them; with the remainder in fee to such of the children of the said James M. Sewell and Anna:M.) his wife, as might be living at the death of the said survivor; and that the said Anna M. Sewell held the legal title thereto upon the said trusts and for the said purposes. James M. Sewell died in 1881, and the said Anna M. Sewell died in July, 18$4, leaving surviving her the following children, viz: Florence McDevitt, Louisa Frantz, and Lelia Stewart, and her grandchild, Clyde Cassells, the infant son of her deceased daughter, Anna Sewell. The bill alleges that the said sum of $6,390.05, the surplus in the hands of the trustee, Hiram McCullough, was, by the said trustee, invested in pursuance of the aforesaid decree of the circuit court of Cecil county, Maryland, in the aforesaid tract of land known as “ Melrose,” and that the same hath always so [745]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.E. 642, 85 Va. 740, 1889 Va. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdevitt-v-frantz-va-1889.