Mong v. Roush

11 S.E. 906, 29 W. Va. 119, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 7
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 906 (Mong v. Roush) 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
Mong v. Roush, 11 S.E. 906, 29 W. Va. 119, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 7 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Johnson, Peesident :

On the 20th day of October, 1854, Jacob Seibert made bis last will, which in April, 1855, was admitted to probate in Berkeley county, where he resided at the time of his death. By the fourth clause of this will he gave to his -wife, Catha-rine, all of his personal property except one dun colt. By the eighth clause he said: “I will and direct, that two thousand five hundred dollars shall be put to interest on landed security by my executor out of the money arising from the collection of my outstanding money, and the interest paid annually to the trustees and their successors of the Lutheran Church in Martinsburg, Berkeley county, Virginia, for the use and benefit of said church.” By the fourteenth clause of the will “the balance of the money arising out of his outstanding debts” was bequeathed to his wife Catharine. W. H. Mong was appointed executor of the will. Catharine Seibert made her will on the 30th of March, 1867, by which she declared, that “after having made sale of all my effects and collected all money due me or my estate from all sources whatsoever I will and desire, that my executor shall distribute equally share in share all moneys belonging thereto to the six persons hereafter named, whom I constitute and hereby declare my heirs and legatees, viz.: My sisters, Margaret Gladden, Mary Siebert, Sarah Small, Susan Stewart, my sister-in-law, Eliza Mong, and my brother, William H. Mong, all of whom reside in the county of Berkeley and State of West Virginia, except Mary Siebert, who resides in the State of Ohio.”

By the third clause of her will she provided, that, if any of said legatees should die before her, then the share of such person or persons should be equally divided among those living at the time of her death. She appointed W. H. Mong executor of her will.

On the 15th day of September, 1876, she made a codicil to her will, in which she referred to the tender care, which her [121]*121nephew, Wendell Mong, and his wife had taken of her in her •old age, and desired, that they should have an equal share with those named in the will, provided they or either of them outlived her.

This will was admitted to probate on the 12th of January, 1877.

The plaintiffs, Eliza Mong, Margaret Gladden and Mary iSeibert, filed their bill at rules in the Circuit Court of Berkeley county in April, 1880, to eonstrue the will of Jacob Siebert. 'They setforththe making of said will and also the will of Cath-arine Siebert, and alleged, that they were legatees of Catha-rine Seibert under her will; that the three plaintiffs and the defendant, Wendell Mong, and his wife, Eliza Y., were the only legatees named in the will of Catharine Siebert, who survived her, and those five should receive all of her estate. The bill charges, that the bequest of $2,500.00 to the trustees of the Lutheran Church at Martinsburg is void, and that the same went to° Catharine Seibert under the will of her husband and should now be distributed among her legatees. The bill further charges, that said $2,500.00 passed into the hands of William H. Mong, executor of the will of Jacob Siebert, deceased, “ who held it during his life in money and uninvested subject to the order of said Catharine Siebert during her life, she having from time to time in accordance with her own charitable wishes directed him to pay over to the trustees of said Lutheran Church the accruing interest of said fund. The said William H. Mong having departed this life in the year 1876 and but a short time before the death of said Catharine, upon the qualification of the said George S. Roush as executor of the said William H. Mong on the — day of-r-, 187 — , as appears by Exhibit a B ” filed, &c., the said fund came into his hands, where it now remains. The bill prays, that Roush, the executor of Mong, shall be required to pay to plaintiff's or to the executor of Catharine Siebert the said $2,500.00, &c. The trustees of the Lutheran Church, D. A. Cline, William Wilen, Philip Diefenderfer, IT. N. Beatrick, and George P. Walters, Wendell Mong in his own right and Eliza Y. Mong, his wife,-and Wendell Mong, executor of Catharine Siebert, and as administrator, &c., of Jacob Siebert were made defendants.

[122]*122William Wilen, one of-said trustees, answered the bill denying, that said bequest to the trustees of the church was. void, and that William H. Mong held the said $2,500.00 subject to the order of Catharine Siebert during her lifetime, or that she directed the interest to be paid to the said trustees from time to time either in accordance with her own charitable wishes or from any other reason. He avers, that Mong, the executor of Jacob Siebert, promptly proceeded to-collect the funds of his decedent and with the consent of Catharine Siebert invested the same as directed by the will for the benefit of said trustees on the 1st day of April, 1856, and, so far as- that bequest in the will was concerned, the will was then and there fully executed, and the same has remained so invested up to the present time; that the said Mong promptly proceeded to settle, his executorial account, and on the — day of May, 1856, S. Garard, one of the then commissioners of the court, settled his accounts as executor, which settlement was at the July term, 1856, of the County Court of said county duly approved by said court and admitted to record. A copy of the settlement is exhibited with the answer. He further avers, that by that settlement said executor was credited as of April 1st, 1856, with $2,500.00 “put out on interest for the benefit of the Lutheran congregation of Martinsburgthat "said settlement has never in any way been disturbed or shown to be erroneous; that said executor' made a subsequent settlement on October 30th, 1865, in which no reference was-made to the $2,500.00 or to the interest, which Mong annually paid to the trustees during his lifetime; that none of these payments of interest yrere credited to him in the statements of his accounts; that the said Catharine Siebert knew of this investment and of these payments, at the time they were respectively made,' and consented to and approved the same not as a matter of grace or charity,, but as a matter of right and from a strong-desire, that the will of Jacob Siebert should be executed, as he intended it should be. Defendants denied the right of plaintiffs to disturb said transaction and investment, which had been closed for about twenty-four years, and the benefit pf which the said trustees have been in exclusive enjoyment of for the benefit of said congregation since the l§t day of [123]*123April, 1856. He denied the right of the plaintiffs now to disturb a transaction made with the concurrence and approbation of the said Catharine Siebert twenty years before her death ; and he relies on the statute of limitations as fully, as if the same were more particularly pleaded, and the great lapse of time, the death of parties and the staleness of plaintiffs’ demand, &c.

The settlements showed all claimed for them by the answer ; and the second settlement omits any reference to said $2,500.00 or the interest thereon.

Philip - Dif'enderfer, another of the trustees, answers and adopts the answer of Wilen as his own and further avers, that the said $2,500.00 was a gift from Catharine Siebert in her lifetime to said trustees. He then states, that the governing body of the Lutheran Church is a council composed of members selected for that purpose; that at the time of his death Jacob Siebert was a member of said council; that •almost immediately after said Siebert’s death W. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 906, 29 W. Va. 119, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mong-v-roush-wva-1886.