Merchant's Administrator v. Shry

82 S.E. 106, 116 Va. 437, 1914 Va. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 106 (Merchant's Administrator v. Shry) 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
Merchant's Administrator v. Shry, 82 S.E. 106, 116 Va. 437, 1914 Va. LEXIS 49 (Va. 1914).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[438]*438Shry was indicted and found guilty of killing Leroy W. Merchant, and was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of years. After his trial and sentence, and while he was in the jail of the county of Loudoun awaiting removal to the penitentiary, Merchant’s administrator brought his action of trespass against him for having wrongfully caused the death of his decedent, and process to answer this suit was served upon Shry. Thereupon the defendant, by his counsel, appeared specially and moved the court to quash the process, which motion, after due consideration, the court granted, and the suit was dismissed; and thereupon a wait of error was awarded by this court.

There is no doubt that the plaintiff in the court below had a right of action under section 2902 of the Code against the defendant for having caused the death of his decedent, and the sole question now before us is whether or not process to answer that suit could be served upon the defendant; he being convicted of a felony at the time of service.

On behalf of the plaintiff in error it is contended that to maintain the judgment of the circuit court would be to deny to hipn a right plainly conferred by statute, as the law provides no other mode by which the right of action given him by section 2902 can be brought before the court; that at common law a felon’s rights were greatly circumscribed, and he could not be heard to come into court as a plaintiff, but that the liability to be sued continued; and (that at common law a felon was not in its complete sense civiliter mortuus, but sub modo and to a qualified extent only; that he was disqualified to be a witness and he could not bring an action or enforce a contract—in other words, (that his privileges w¡ere greatly curtailed in consequence of his conviction, but that his liability remained unchanged. This view of the law [439]*439is maintained in Flatner v. Sherwood, 6 Johns. Chy. 129, where Chancellor Kent states, that “The strict civil death s,eems to have been confined to the cases of persons professed, or abjured, or banished the realm, and I do not find that it was ever carried further by the common law. The consequences of the civil death are illustrated in the case of entry into religion. The executor and the administrator administered upon the personal estate, as in the case of natural death, and the land descended to the heir. ... A person attainted of felony, and adjudged to imprisonment for life, may have been regarded as dead in law, sub modo, but he certainly was not deemed and taken to be civilly dead, to all intents and purposes.”

In Guarantee Company v. National Bank, 95 Va. 480, 28 S. E. 909, it is said, that “At common law a person convicted of felony, though disabled from suing, did not possess immunity from suit. And so, a citizen of Virginia serving a term of penal servitude in the penitentiary of another State, under a judgment of a Federal court in this State, may be su|ed in the courts of this State.” Burk’s PI. and Pr. sec. 63, and notes.

Such being the common law, it is the law of Virginia, except in so far as it has been changed by statute; and this being the law, we think ¡the process served upon one convicted of felony to appear and ansVer a demand in court is, strictly speaking, due process of law under the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States and a similar provision found in the bill of rights of this State.

We come next to inquire whether or not the common law has been changed so as to 'affect the case 'before us.

By section 1115 of the Code it is provided; “When a person, other than a married woman having no separate estate, is sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary [440]*440for more than one year, his estate, both real and personal, if 'any he has, shall, on motion of any party interested, be committed by the county, circuit, or corporation court of the county or corporation in which his estate or some part thereof is, to a person selected by the court, who after giving bond before the said court, in such penalty as it may prescribe, shall have charge of said estate until the convict is discharged from confinement.”

Section 4116 provides, that ‘ ‘ Such committee may sue and be sued in respect to debts due to or by such convict, and any other of the convict’s estate, and shall have the same right of retaining for his own debt as an administrator would have.”

On behalf of the defendant in error it is contended that these sections supersede the common law, and that whatever right of action may have existed at common law against the felon must be pursued against his committee; while on behalf of the plaintiff in error it is conceded that this is true with respect to the debts due to or by such convict, but it is insisted that the statute law is silent with respect to his torts, and leaves the common law in full force and vigor as to them, and that the course pursued in this case must be maintained or he would be left remediless with respect to an undisputed right conferred upon him by section 2902.

To confine the operation of section 4116 to debts due to or by such convict leaves out of view and attributes no force or effect to the words “and any other of the convict’s estate,” while it is an established rule of construction that every word in a statute should be given its full force and meaning. It will be observed that by section 4115 a committee may be appointed on the motion of any party interested, who shall have charge of the whole estate, real and personal, of the convict uutil [441]*441he is discharged from confinement. Such committee may sue and he sued in respect to debts due to or by such convict, and he may sue and be sued in respect to any other of the convict’s estate. We do not think this language can be satisfied by applying it only to vindicate wrongs against1 the convict’s .estate—with respect to them the committee can certainly sue—but he can also be sued in respect to any other of the convict’s estate— that is his estate other than the debts due to him.

We can conceive of'-no force to be attributed to the wjords which permit the committee to be sued with respect to the convict’s estate other than the. debts due by him, except that it meant to confer upon every person in interest, at whose instance the committee might be appointed, the right to bring a suit to establish whatever claim might be asserted, to be satisfied not only out of the debts due to the convict but out of any other portion of his estate, real or personal, which passed by operation of law to his committee. As to a debt due the committee he is given the same right to retain as an administrator would have, and by section 4117 the committee is required to allow (subject to the claims of creditors) a sufficient maintenance out of the convict’s estate for his wife and family, if any.

The powers conferred upon the committee of a convict are strikingly similar to those given a committee of a lunatic. By section 1702 of the Code it is provided, that “The committee of an insane pelrson shall be entitled to the custody and control of his person . . ., shall take possession of his estate, and may sue and be sued in respect thereto for the recovery of debts due to or from the insane person. ’ ’

It will be observed that the order of the words used is different from that employed in section 4116.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 106, 116 Va. 437, 1914 Va. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-administrator-v-shry-va-1914.