Reherd v. Long

77 Va. 839, 1883 Va. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 18, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Va. 839 (Reherd v. Long) 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
Reherd v. Long, 77 Va. 839, 1883 Va. LEXIS 118 (Va. 1883).

Opinion

Hinton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this cause shows that John Long died in 1862, having first made and published his last will and testament, which was duly admitted to record by the county court of Bockingham county. This will was made and executed many years before the testator’s death, possibly as early as 1852. By his will he devised a tract of 104 acres, one rood and twenty-four poles to his son Samuel A. Long, at the price of $3,600, of which sum $1,500 was to be considered an advancement, and he was required to pay the balance in twelve annual payments in unequal amounts. He also devised a tract of land of 103 acres and a few poles to his son B. E. Long, at the price of $3,800, for said land, $2,550 of which was to be paid in thirteen unequal payments, the residue of said sum of $3,800, to be his advancement to make him equal with the other children of the testator. . How, although this will was made, as we have said, possibly as early as 1852, the testator evidently regarded it as taking effect at once, and so he placed these two sons, Benjamin E. Long and Samuel A. Long, in possession of their respective tracts of land soon after the will was made. And in 1855, Samuel A. Long, with the knowledge and consent of his father, sold and conveyed to his brother, B. E. Long, his tract of 104 acres, one rood and twenty-four poles, who immediately took possession of it. The second clause of the will directs that his “wife is to have the sum of one hundred dollars per year, to be paid to her yearly [842]*842out of the money which will he payable by my three sons on their land.”

In the seventh clause he says, “I have previously conveyed a tract of land by deed to my son John, and in the price of the land and other ways, as charged in my book, he has received an advancement of $1,500, and I hold his bonds for the remainder that he owes on the land, which places him on an equal footing with the others.”

By the eighth clause the testator directs that after the advancement of $1,500 to each of his five children, “ and the allowances to my wife, the remainder of the estate, including back payments on the land devised and deeded, and the proceeds of personal property remaining, is to he equally divided share and share alike among my five children.”

Upon the death of John Long, Sr., Samuel A. Long, who was appointed executor, and qualified as such, giving a bond in the penalty of $1,500, with David Bowman and Solomon Garber as sureties, and he forthwith proceeded to collect and disburse the assets of the estate, including the back payments on the land due by B. E. Long and John B. Long.

In 1869, Adam Showalter, who married one of the daughters of John Long, Sr., brought a suit in the circuit court of Rockingham county for a construction of the will and a settlement of the estate of the testator, John Long, Sr. To that suit all of the heirs and distributees of John Long, Sr., as well as the sureties of Sam’l A. Long, were made parties, and the executor was called on to render a “full account of his actings and doings as such as executor,” and a decree was rendered construing the will, and a second decree was also entered directing the executor to retain in his hands or loan out the sum of $1,666.66, during the lifetime of the widow, in order to raise the sum of $100, annually, to be paid her under the provisions of the will. The 'court in that suit ratified and confirmed the action of the executor in receiving the payments on the real estate as well as [843]*843the personalty and no appeal has ever been taken ■ from either of said decrees.

Subsequently, and after the death of the widow of John Long, Sr., to-wit, in the year 1877, Samuel A. Long, as executor, brought suit to recover from B. E. Long and from the appellants, George and James E. Reherd, who had purchased both tracts, viz: the tract of one hundred and three acres and the tract of one hundred and four acres one rood and twenty-four poles fromB. E. Long, in August, 1871, the balance of back payments thereon. He claimed that there was due on tract of one hundred and three acres the sum of $1,155.61, with interest from the 18th of February, 1876, but did not claim anything as due on the other tract, although it too was mentioned in the bill. The cause was referred to a commissioner who reported that the balance due from B. E. Long and the appellants, the Reherds, was $887.89, with interest on $754.37 from 1st February, 187S. And for that amount the court rendered a decree against the appellants, who subsequently paid it. And also decreed against Samuel A. Long, executor of John Long, Sr., and his sureties, Daniel Bowman and Solomon Garber for $1,033.81, with interest on $878.85 part thereof from 1st February, 1879.' That cause was however reheard, when the court set aside so much of the last mentioned decree as declared the sureties, Bowman and Garber, liable for the residue of the fund which was set apart during the lifetime of the widow of the testator, Long, to yield her annuity.

Whereupon the present suit was instituted by Perry Long and others, the appellees here, against the appellants, to recover the amount which the executor, Samuel A. Long, was in default to the distributees. On the 3rd of March, 1882, the court rendered a decree releasing the sureties, Bowman and Garber, and holding that the amount due on the one hundred and four acres of land “devised to Samuel A. Long by the will of his father, John Long, after deducting the distributive share of the said Samuel [844]*844A. Long therein, is the sum of $893.93¿, with interest on $658.163-, part thereof, from 1st February, 1882, and that the same is a charge, under the will of John Long, deceased, on the said land.” From this decree the appellants, George W. Re-herd and James E. Reherd, have been allowed an appeal by one of the judges of this court. And from the foregoing statement it must be patent that the only real contention here is between the sureties of Samuel A. Long on his executorial bond and the appellants, George W. and James E. Reherd, the alienees of the land.

Now, without undertaking to go into a detailed statement of the evidence, we think we may safely say that the acknowledgment in the deed from S. A. Long to B. E. Long, that all of the purchase money had been paid, and the sworn statement of B. E. Long to the same effect, taken in connection with the failure of S. A. Long,'the executor, to assert this claim against B. E. Long for so many years, satisfactorily establishes that the whole of the sum of $1,666.66, save and except so much only as was paid by the appellants under the decree in Long’s Ex’or v. B. E. Long, must have gone into the hands of the said executor. And this view is borne out by what will otherwise be an inexplicable circumstance—that is, his permitting a decree to go against him in the suit of Adam Showalter v. Samuel A. Long, &c., for the whole of the $1,666.66, whilst he only claims in the suit of Long’s Ex’or v. B. E. Long the sum of $1,155.61, and only succeeds in proving as due the sum of $881.89. But even if we should he mistaken in supposing that the facts above stated fastened upon the executor a liability for this money, still the fact remains that this question has been passed upon by a court of competent jurisdiction, with all of the parties before it, and that decision has never been appealed from. Under these circumstances it must be regarded, for the purposes of this case, as res judicata.

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77 Va. 839, 1883 Va. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reherd-v-long-va-1883.