Merchants National Bank v. Good

21 W. Va. 455
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 21 W. Va. 455 (Merchants National Bank v. Good) 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
Merchants National Bank v. Good, 21 W. Va. 455 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

[461]*461The first error complained of, is that the circuit court improperly overruled the demurrer to plaintiffs bill. This objection seems to be founded on the averment of the bill, that the plaintiffs judgment against the administrator of B. S. Good is a lien on the real estate therein mentioned, and the prayer asking that said lien may be enforced. It is true the bill does so state, but it, also, avers that the said B. S. Good was long prior to the date of the deed conveying said real estate indebted to the plaintiff by note for one thousand four hundred dollars, which note by renewals from time to time continued said indebtedness until the said note of November 25, 1872, was given as the final renewal for said debt. And in addition to the prayer for specific relief, the bill contains a prayer for general relief. The plaintiff’s.judgment against the administrator was certainly not a lien on the said real estate, nor was it even prima facie evidence of any indebtedness against the grantee and beneficiaries in said deed. If, therefore, the bill had not contained other sufficient aver-ments and a prayer for general relief, the demurrer should have been sustained.. But, if the objectionable portions of the bill are excluded as surplusage, the remaining averments and prayer are still sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to relief, and the demurrer was therefore properly ovenmled. Beall v. Silvey, 2 Rand. 401; Cook v. Mancius, 5 Johns. Ch. 99.

The second and third assignments of error present the question, first, whether or not a judgment against an administrator is conclusive or even prima facie evidence against the devisee or heir of the real estate, the administrator against whom the judgment was recovered being also the heir or devisee; and, second, if not, then is the decree in this cause, which takes the amount of the judgment against the administrator as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim and gives interest thereon from the date of such jirdgment warranted by the law of this State ?

Freeman on Judgments § 163, after announcing the general rule that proceedings against the executor or administrator of an estate do not predude a defense on original grounds by the devisee or heir of such estate, states that cases in which the executor or administrator and the devisee or heir are the same person are exceptions to the rale. “For [462]*462though in this case,” says this author, “the party claims in two capacities, a judgment against him in one capacity is also conclusive against him in the other. He represents the interests of one and the same person; and has full opportunity, in a suit against himself as personal representative, to protect his rights as successor to the realty.” In support of this doctrine, two cases only are cited, the one from Pennsylvania, Stewart v. Montgomery, 23 Pa. St. 410, and the other from Alabama, Boykin v. Cook, 61 Ala. 473. Upon an examination of these cases I find that they grow out of the statute laws of those States and have no application where such statutes do not exist. The general doctrine, without qualification or exception is well settled in Virginia and in this State, that “there being no privity between the personal representative and the party to whom the real estate passes, a judgment against such personal representative is not even prima facie evidence against the heir or devisee.” Laidley v. Kline, 8 W. Va. 218; Custer v. Custer, 17 Id. 113; Mason v. Peters, 1 Munf. 437; Foster v. Crenshaw, 3 Munf. 520; Shields v. Anderson, 3 Leigh 736. In Brown v. Lawson, 76 Va. R., the questions here presented was not passed upon, hut the court in that case, after referring to the rule laid down by Freeman, says: “The inconvenience and apparent hardship of the rule, as it is understood in Virginia, may generally be obviated. In most cases, certainly in eases of liquidated demands and when there is a known deficiency of personal estate, the creditor need not proceed against the personal representative separately in the first instance, but may bring him and his heirs or devisees before the court in the same suit in equity, and thus avoid the hazard, delay and expense of a repeated litigation of the same matter.” This is the usual course in this State, and I see no reason or necessity for making the mere fact, often accidental, that the heir or devisee may, instead of a legatee or stranger, become the executor or administrator of an estate, the basis of changing the rule and making the judgment conclusive in the one case while it is not even prima facie evidence in the other. My conclusion, therefore, is that by the law and policy of this State a judgment against the personal representative of an estate is not even prima fade much less conclusive [463]*463evidence against the devisee or heir of such estate, and the fact the same person may be both personal representative and heir or devisee does not constitute an exception to the rule. The said judgment against ,T. Hanson Good as administrator being not even prima fane evidence against him as grantee of the real estate, it follows of necessity, that said judgment is not evidence of any debt for which the real estate in the bill can be charged. The plaintiff’s right to subject said real estate can arise alone out of the debt for which the note of November 25, 1872, was given. The said judgment in this suit must be entirely discarded. And said note, which the plaintiff1 concedes, represents the whole of said debt which remains unpaid, having became due on the 23d day day of February, 1873, the plaintiff could only recover, the amount of said note one thousand four hundred dollars with interest thereon from February 23, 1873, to May 23, 1881, the date of the decree. And according to our statute — sec. 16 ch. 131 of the Code — the decree should have been for the aggregate of principal and interest to the latter date, May 23, 1881, with interest thereon till paid. But instead of so ordering the court gave a decree for one thousand five hundred and eighty-nine dollars the amount of said judgment with interest thereon from May 29, 1874, till paid. This was manifest error, and this error being to the prejudice of the appellant in a sum exceeding one hundred dollars, it being according to an estimate made by me one hundred and sixty-one dollars and eighty cents, the said decree must be reversed therefor.

We come now to the material question in this cause raised by the fourth and last assignment of error. It is insisted by the appellant that, Benoni S. Good, being simply a surety, the pre-existing debt, of the plaintiff, as to him, was extinguished when the note of November 25,1872, was given, discounted by the plaintiff-and the precedent note surrendered to M. -C. Good; and that the said note of November 25, 1872, being, as to said B. S. Good, the creation of a new debt, contracted after the conveyance of October 14,1872, had been executed and recorded, the validity of said conveyance, although voluntary, cannot be questioned on account of said debt, so subsequently created.

[464]

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Bluebook (online)
21 W. Va. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-national-bank-v-good-wva-1883.