Peale v. Hickle

9 Gratt. 437
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Gratt. 437 (Peale v. Hickle) 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
Peale v. Hickle, 9 Gratt. 437 (Va. 1852).

Opinion

LEE, J.

The first and sixth errors which are assigned in this case, are that the suit was brought against Catharine Peale in her character of widow and relict of Bernard Peale, and not as administratrix, and that the decree of the court is several against the appellant, whereas it should have been against him and the said Catharine, jointly. The bill it is true, in naming the parties prayed to be made defendants in the cause, does not specially designate her as administratrix, and in that capacity as well as in that of widow, ask that she -be made a party; but it does allege that she and the appellant qualified as administratrix and administrator. The whole assets of the estate came to the hands of the appellant, and he exercised exclusive control over them and disposed of them without interference on the part of the administratrix. It is not pretended that the latter received any part, or that she is liable as for any received and disbursed by her. It is true that having united in the administration bond *with the appellant, she would under the decisions of this court in the cases of Morrow’s adm’r v. Peyton’s adm’r, 8 Leigh 54, and Boyd’s ex’ors v. Boyd’s heirs, 3 Gratt. 113, be liable as security for the said appellant for any assets received and disposed of by him; yet if the distributees were content to take a decree against him alone for the amounts respectively due them and for which he was liable primarily as principal, surely it is not for him to complain that the decree was surrendered. If Mrs. Peale had been dead, it would not have been necessary to make her representative a party; Wills’ adm’r v. Dunn’s adm’r, 5 Gratt. 384; nor does it seem to be error to omit her as such, though living, under the circumstances of this case.

Another objection taken by the appellant is, that the decree was rendered without regard to the payments proved to have been made by him to the appellees at different times, and which are thus disallowed by the court. The evidence in relation to such supposed payments is extremely vague and uncertain. Small amounts appear to have been occasionally advanced by the appellant to his sisters or some of them, but they would appear to have been in the-nature of gratuities, or it may be were intended as an acknowledgment of and compensation for sewing and other services, which appear to have been cheerfully rendered by them to their brother and his family. It can scarcely be considered that they were intended by the appellant at the times they were made, as payments on account of the distributive shares due them of their father’s estate. He produced no account of any such payments before the commissioner, and it is to be presumed that he kept none, evident^ not regarding them himself as matters to be remembered or set up when he came to pay over to his sisters their shares of the estate. The amounts proved are inconsiderable and tvery imperfectly ascertained, and the appellant took no exceptio'n to the commissioner’s report in which the amount for which he was liable according to his mode of stating the account was determined, without allowing him credit for any such payments. Upon the whole, I think that the court was right in disregarding them, and that they were properly disallowed.

An ex parte settlement made by an administrator of his account as such with the court by which he was appointed, though not final or conclusive, is yet prima facie evidence of its correctness till the contrary is shown. It forms no barrier to a bill in equity specifying errors, whether of law or of fact, and impugning the settlement upon that ground. The parties interested may surcharge such a settled account by specifying items for which credit should be given, but which are omitted, or may falsify by pointing out charges improperly made. It is impossible for the administrator, under general charges not specifying errors, to defend himself properly, if the plaintiff may come at the hearing with proof of those errors of which the defendant has before heard nothing. And not only the duty of specifying errors, but also the onus probandi, devolves on the party complaining. The court will take it as a stated account and establish it, unless errors be alleged and'proven. 1 Madd. Ch. 103; Stoughton v. Lynch, 2 John. Ch. R. 209; Nimmo’s ex’ors v. Commonwealth, 4 Hen. & Munf. 57; Atwell’s adm’r v. Milton, Id. 253; Newton v. Poole, 12 Leigh 112. And if no evidence be exhibited to surcharge or falsify the account, and nothing improper in it is disclosed by the answer, the court will not refer the case, but the bill will be dismissed. Wyllie v. Venable’s ex’or, 4 Munf. 369. And it would seem that where specific charges are made, the enquiry will not be opened beyond the special matter charged, though the bill may contain a general charge and a prayer for a *full account. Consequa v. Fanning, 3 John. Ch. R. 587; S. C., 17 John. R. 511. In this case the bill called for the production of the sale bills and vouchers on which the settlement was made, and asked leave to surcharge and falsify, if errors should appear upon their production; but the only items complained of in the account as it appeared, and which were specified, are the allowance of a commission of five per centum to the appellant, upon the ground, as alleged, that not having made the settlement within the time prescribed by law, he was not entitled to any compensation; and the payments made on account of the liability of the decedent as security for one Ragan, a deputy sheriff; the bill alleging that the complainants had been informed, perhaps, incorrectly, that the bond on which said liability was founded was not binding upon the estate, and calling upon the appellant to furnish information upon the subject. With regard to the complaint that the commission had been improperly allowed, there seems to have been no foundation for it whatever. The act of the 16th of Eebruary 1825 (Supp. Rev.- Code [221]*2211819, p. 215), provided (1 8, p. 217), that it should be the duty of every executor or administrator theretofore appointed to apply to the court to appoint commissioners for the purpose of stating and settling his accounts within two years from the commencement of the act, and also to cause his accounts to be so settled within six months after such order should be procured, on pain of forfeiting all right to commission or compensation for administering so much of the estate as should not have been settled agreeably to the provisions of that act. By the 12th section, the act of the 19th of February 1823 was repealed, and the law declared thenceforth to be as if that act had never passed. It appears that Bernard Peale died and the administrators qualified in 1818, and the settlement was returned to the court and ordered *to be recorded at the April term 1827; so that it was made within the time prescribed by the act.

With regard to the other supposed error in the account, the allowance of the payments made on account of the liability of the estate for Ragan, the deputy sheriff, it was not directly charged as such, and the bill alleged that the information on which it was suggested might be incorrect, and called on the appellant to give the proper information in regard to it. He did so in his answer, stated that he made the proper defence, but the court had decided against the estate, and what he had paid he was compelled to pay under the adjudication of the court; and there was no evidence upon which to question the correctness of his answer upon this subject.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Gratt. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peale-v-hickle-va-1852.