Morris v. Westerman

92 S.E. 567, 79 W. Va. 502, 3 A.L.R. 1237, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 567 (Morris v. Westerman) 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
Morris v. Westerman, 92 S.E. 567, 79 W. Va. 502, 3 A.L.R. 1237, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE:

The principal complaint against the decree appealed from is its denial of the claim of title to the major portion of the subject matter of the main suit, Morris, Adm’r. v. Westerman et al., set up by Parmer, the administrator de bonis non of Beulah Westerman, the deceased wife of plaintiff’s decedent, on the ground that' it was a residuary legacy belonging to her, in the hands of said decedent, at the time of his death, as the executor of her father’s will. Parmer asserted this claim in a second capacity also; viz., administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of W. S. Wiley, deceased, the father of the deceased wife. The suit was brought against the heirs and creditors of Westerman, to subject his real estate to the payment of his debts, the personal property being insufficient to pay them, and to settle up his estate. Parmer, administrator, was admitted on his petition, as a defendant claiming the property to be unadministrated assets of the Wiley estate and of the estate of Westerman’s deceased wife. Por hearing and determination, three other suits involving property and relations in which Westerman had been interested were consolidated with the suit brought by Morris, administrator, the evidence taken once for all of them and one final decree entered. Two of the other suits were brought to settle the business of a partnership between Westerman and W. P. Simmons, and the third to obtain advice and instruction from the court, as to the distribution of a trust fund in which Westerman had held an interest.

[505]*505There is no controversy of any consequence, as to the facts. On Jan’y. 22, 1903, C. G-. "Westerman qualified as the executor of the will of W. S. Wiley, without bond, agreeably to a provision, of the will, naming him as the executor. Wiley had left a considerable estate all of which, except some specific devises and legacies, went to his daughter, Beulah Wiley, who was then the wife of C. G. Westerman or soon afterwards became his wife. He .made no inventory of the estate, caused no appraisement to he made, never made any settlement thereof, and never delivered or set over to his wife the property and bonds now in controversy. He resided in the home of Wiley, at the time of the death of the latter, and continued to reside there, until the time of his death. Of that property, he made no disposition. He caused to be transferred to his wife a portion of the hank stock her father owned. She died intestate, late in 1909, or early in 1910, and her husband qualified as her administrator, hut he did not charge himself with any of the property in controversy, as such. Property of hers, including the bank stock transferred to her, was appraised at $16,452.50, the bank stock being the principal item. He died intestate, Febr’y- 8, 1912, leaving five children ranging in age. from two to twelve years, and property was appraised, as belonging to his estate, at the sum of $49,085.94.

At the time of the death of Wiley, Westerman had no property. It has been shown, on a reference to a commissioner, that he received from the estate of Wiley, at various times, in addition to the bank stock he transferred to Mrs. Wester-man, amounts aggregating $51,383.65, and disbursed for repairs on the residence, satisfaction of small bequests made by the will, debts due from the estate, funeral expenses, taxes, insurance and medical and hospital bills of the "widow, sums amounting to $9,128.33, leaving $42,255.32. For a time, he kept two bank accounts, one executorial and the other individual, but in making his deposits, he did not regard the sources from which the money had been derived. In numerous instances, he divided funds of the estate between the two accounts and made deposits in both, and drew cheeks on them indiscriminately. He engaged extensively in oil and gas production, trading and speculation and other business, using for [506]*506such purposes, the estate that had come into his hands, as: executor of Wiley-’s will, for the benefit of his wife as residuary legatee. He created large indebtedness in these enterprises, occasioning the execution to hanks and individuals, of many notes, some of which the wife endorsed. She must have known he had not fully accounted to her for her interest in. the estate and that he was making use of the same as if it were his own, for he had commenced these operations without means of his own.

The commissioner to whom the cause was referred reported indebtedness of the estate of C. G. Westerman to the estate of Beulah Westerman,. in the sum of $28,433.40, two-thirds of the amount traced into his hands and undisbursed, the other third being deducted as having vested in him as a dis-tributee of his wife’s estate. Sustaining numerous exceptions: to this finding, filed by creditors and Morris, administrator,, the court held there was no such liability and decreed that the property in question belongs to the estate of C. G. West-erman and is liable for his debts. Farmer, administrator, also excepted to the allowance of a distributive share to the husband’s estate, on the ground that the wife never became legally possessed of the property'in her life time. Though this exception became unimportant, for the purposes of the decree, in consequence of the disposition • of the others, the court overruled it.

But for the statute making the legacy of Mrs. Westerman her sole and separate property and rendering it immune from the control of her husband and liability for his debts, Code, ch. 66, his acts and conduct respecting the same, after it came into his hands as executor, might have been sufficient to make it his own, by reduction thereof into possession, on common law principles. Lynn v. Patton, 10 W. Va. 187; Clark v. King, 34 W. Va. 631; Marcum v. Hudnall, 14 Gratt. 369 ; Yarby v. Lynch, 3 Gratt. 460; Blakey v. Newby, 6 Munf. 64; Wallace v. Taliaferro, 2 Call. 447. That statute, however, has cut up this old common law doctrine by the roots. It makes all real and personal property of any female, which she shall own at the time of her marriage, and all property she may, after marriage, acquire by inheritance, gift, grant, [507]*507devise or bequest, from any person other than her husband, as thoroughly immune and secure from her husband’s control and from liability for his debts as an equitable, separate estate, if not more so. Under it, her property cannot become the property of her husband, otherwise than by her voluntary sale, barter-or gift thereof to him. The equitable separate estate of a married woman, the creation and possession of which were permissible, before the passage of this statute, was a thing of substance, not of mere form. As to it, a married woman was regarded as a feme sole and had right to dispose of all her separate personal estate, and the rents, issues and profits of her real estate, in the same manner as if she had been a feme sole, unless the power of alienation was restrained by the instrument creating such estate. Radford v. Carwile, 13 W. Va. 572. One of the effects of the statute was enlargement of the rights and powers of married women so as to enable them to take separate legal estate in real and personal property. Radford v. Carwile, 13 W. Va. 572; Patten v. Bank, 12 W. Va. 587.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 567, 79 W. Va. 502, 3 A.L.R. 1237, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-westerman-wva-1917.