Stamper's v. Garnett

31 Va. 550
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 Va. 550 (Stamper's v. Garnett) 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
Stamper's v. Garnett, 31 Va. 550 (Va. 1879).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the-court.

The bill represents that Anderson Crump died in 1852; that Kathaniel L. Savage qualified as his executor, and died on the 4th of January, 1853 ; that on the 14th of April, 1853, James Stamper qualified as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of the said Anderson Crump, who “ owned and possessed a very large and valuable estate, consisting of lands, slaves, debts due to him, household and kitchen furniture, crops of corn, &c., and a large and valuable stock of horses and mules, cattle and hogs, &c., all of which (the bill alleges), or the proceeds of the sales of all of which, and the hires of the slaves for many years, went into the hands and possession of the said James Stamper as administrator de bonis non as aforesaid.” [552]*552And. the bill charges that the said James Stamper, administrator de bonis non as aforesaid, collected many .large sums of money that were due to said Anderson Crump, deceased, in his lifetime, and that he collected large sums of money arising from the sales of the said perishable property and the hires of the slaves of 'the said Anderson Crump, deceased, and departed this life in 1857, without ever having settled any account of his transactions as the administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Anderson Crump, deceased, largely indebted to the estate of said Crump; that the plaintiffs are the legatees of said Crump, and entitled to a distribution of whatever is due from the estate of the said Stamper ; that Ilenry X>. Vaiden is the personal representative of the said James Stamper, deceased, who, together with the widow and children and heirs of James Stamper, deceased, are made defendants to the bill, and said Yaiden required to state, render and settle up an account of the administration de bonis non of James Stamper on the estate of Anderson Crump, deceased.

The record does not show the precise date of the death of R L. Savage ; but it must have been prior to the 14th of April, 1853, at which time letters of administration de bonis non with the will annexed of the estate of Anderson Crump were granted to James Stamper; and it shows that the said Stamper died about the 20th of September, 1856, instead of in 1857, as alleged by the bill. The record shows also what does not appear on the face of the bill, that E. A. Savage, the widow of R. L. Savage, qualified as his executrix, and that James Stamper acted as her agent in the administration of the estate of the said R. L. Savage, and after her death, which occurred prior to the 14th day of April, 1853, qualified as her executor. Ror does it show, as appears in the record, that after the death of [553]*553James Stamper Robert Howie administered on his estate, and John S. Lacy qualified as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Anderson Crump, and that both of them died long before the institution of this suit; that after his death Leonard C. Crump qualified as administrator de bonis non of James Stamper, deceased, and that some years after his qualification his letters of administration were revoked, and the estate of James Stamper, as the bill does allege, was committed to the administration of H. L>. Vaiden, sheriff of New Kent county, one of the defendants.

Hor does the bill show that the records of the courts of New Kent county, where the evidences of these various administrations, the transactions of H. L. Savage, the executor of Anderson Crump, of A. E. Savage, his executrix, through her agent, James Stamper, of James Stamper, as her executor, and as administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed • of Anderson Crump, deceased, of Robert Howie, his administrator or executor, and of John S. Lacy, who succeeded him as administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed of Anderson Crump, deceased, could have been found, were all destroyed by fire by the enemy during the late war. But these facts are fully set out in the answer of Mrs. Martha Stamper, the widow of James Stamper, deceased, and two of their children, and are established by the proofs in the record.

Erom this simple narrative of the facts, it is manifest that after this grpat lapse of time, and the destruction of the records, when the voices of the actors in all these transactions are silenced in the grave, and there are no witnesses who were cognizant of the transactions and capable of throwing light upon them, living to testify, it would be extremely difficult, if not [554]*554impossible, for any commissioner to state an account, which would do justice to all concerned. This suit was not brought until August, 1871, nineteen years after the death of Anderson Crump, and the qualification of his executor, eighteen years after the death of H". L. Savage, and the qualification of James Stamper as administrator de bonis non of Anderson Crump, fifteen years after his death, and nearly ten years after the death of Robert Howie, his executor or. administrator. The defendants demurred to the bill, and upon the facts set forth in their answer, resisted the right, of the plaintiffs to an' account. They say that “ the-papers of said Stamper have been so lost and otherwise made way with that it would be impossible at this late day to settle the transactions of said Stamper as the administrator of Anderson Crump; that'said Stamper was a good accountant, being a commissioner of the court, and. there is scarcely a doubt but that he regularly settled his accounts and returned them to-the court, but all the papers of that office have been destroyed; and the great lapse of time since the qualification of said Stamper renders it still more impossible to settle said accounts, without doing great, injustice to the estate of said Stamper; and inasmuch as this suit was not instituted for nearly twenty years, after the qualification of said Stamper, and sixteen years after the death of said Stamper, the court should, dismiss said bill; for if the claim be not barred by the statute of limitations (on which they relied as one of the grounds of demurrer) it is clearly lost by their laches.”

But the court directed an account, and the commissioner undertook to make it out, and reported an account charging the estate of James Stamper with a large balance, which the court sustained and decreed [555]*555in favor of the plaintiffs, the legatees of Anderson Crump; from which decree this appeal was allowed.

It appears that 'William P. Richardson was the per- . sonal representative of Robert Howie, who wras the executor of James Stamper, and that Yaiden, after the estate of Stamper was committed to him, found a parcel of loose papers which had been in the possession of Howie, as executor of Stamper, scattered over the floor of Richardson’s office and desk (probably by Federal soldiers who had possession, and committed great depredations), which he afterwards turned over to Commissioner Barham, who had been directed to take an account in this case. Among this rubbish, not destroyed by the enemy, were found the papers exhibited and designated M O H, and H O M, an old memorandum book, and the paper J D C. The two first are in the handwriting of James Stamper, and purport to be settlements of his administration account for the years 1858 and 1854, showing a balance due from him to the estate on the 1st of January, 1855, of $1,289.26. He is charged with the whole of the hires of the slaves for 1853, due in 1854, though he held the bonds of two of the legatees for hires, with which he ivas not credited.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Va. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stampers-v-garnett-va-1879.