Tompkins v. Kyle

122 S.E. 150, 95 W. Va. 584, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 39
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 150 (Tompkins v. Kyle) 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
Tompkins v. Kyle, 122 S.E. 150, 95 W. Va. 584, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 39 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

James Baumgardner? died (the date not stated) seized of a house and lot on the southwest corner of the alley on the west side of Ninth street between Fifth and Sixth avenues in the city of Huntington, leaving three children, Fanny B., now the wife of G-. H. Tompkins, Mollie, now the wife of *586 Robert Kyle, and Harry Baumgardner, who are his heirs at law. His wife, Lucinda, survived him and is now living, and is in possession of the dwelling house on the lot, dower never having been assigned to her. Mollie Kyle lives with her in the mansion house, and she and her mother have resided there for many years. In his life time he executed a deed of trust upon the lot to secure a debt of $1500 to Mrs. C. C. Remele, making T. A. Wyatt (who has since died) trustee therein. No trustee has been substituted.

The bill, filed by Fanny Tompkins and her husband, is against her sister, brother and mother and against Mrs. Remele, and is for the purpose of assigning to the mother her dower interest in the lot and having a partition among the heirs. It is charged that there are no debts against the estate except the debt to Mrs. Remele. It is also charged that the lot is not susceptible of partition and that it would be to the best interest of all parties concerned to sell the same and partition the proceeds. Neither Lucinda Baumgardner, the widow, nor Mrs. Remele, the lien creditor, made appearance in the suit. Mrs. Kyle and her husband answered the bill admitting the material allegations thereof and setting up an agreement dated November 20, 1916, between the mother and the heirs by which they appointed Harry Baumgardner their agent to sell the lot in controversy at a price to be fixed and agreed upon by all the parties. She admits that there is a debt owing to Mrs. Remele as charged in the bill, but says the creditors having claims or demands against the estate are not demanding payment; but does not say that there are any creditors except Mrs. Remele. The substance of the answer is that Harry Baumgardner should sell the property under the terms of the agreement, instead of it being sold under decree of the court. She does not deny that the property is not susceptible of partition, nor does she deny that it would be to the best interests of all parties concerned to sell the property and divide the proceeds. She says her mother is now about eighty-six years old, but makes no allegation as to her dower interest in the property. Harry Baumgardner answered, admitting the material allegations of the bill, saying that the only debt against the estate was the Remele lien except *587 that the estate owed him and his sister Mollie Kyle for moneys expended for the benefit of the estate but that none of these debts were pressing. He says that until recently his mother desired to reside in the old homestead until such a time as she and the children might agree on a sale thereof; and he also sets up the agreement of agency to him relied upon by Mrs. Kyle, to defeat a sale by the court. He says he could sell the property for an advantageous price if it was not for the institution and pendency of this suit. He does not deny that the property is not susceptible of partition; nor does he deny that it would be for the best interests of all parties concerned to have a sale thereof; in fact, his answer is a practical admission of these facts; and he relies upon his contract or agreement of agency to sell, to defeat what the plaintiff is attempting to accomplish by this suit. The difference between the heirs seems to be concerning the method of sale and not that the property should not be sold.

Plaintiff filed a special replication to the answers denying that either Harry or Mollie had expended any money on the property, denies that they hg,ve paid taxes or rents; admits the execution of the agreement by which they all appointed Harry to sell the property for the best price obtainable, in accepting which price they should all agree; but says he has had ample opportunities to sell since the year 1916 but the heirs have never agreed upon the price, and although many offers have been made for it, to which she agreed, Harry persistently refused to accept any of them; and seeing* that the property would not be sold under this agreement and' that she was getting no benefit from her inheritance she, on the 15th day of June, 1922, revoked the power given to Harry in the agreement referred to and served notice thereof upon him in writing, a copy of which with the service thereof is made a part of her special replication. Upon the coming in of the answers and special replication and upon a demurrer to the bill by defendants Mollie Kyle and Harry Baumgardner, which was overruled, the court referred the cause to a special commissioner for the purpose of ascertaining what personal estate, if any, James Baumgardner had at the time of his death and what disposition had been made thereof; and if any personal *588 estate was now in existence for the payment of debts; whether an administrator had been appointed; what debts James Baumgardner owed at the time of his death, to whom payable, their nature and respective amounts and priorities; and to report what real estate was owned by James Baumgardner at the time of his death. The commissioner, after giving due notice, made a report that he was unable to find that decedent had any personal estate at the time of his death; that no administrator had ever been appointed; that at the time of his death he had executed a note to Mrs. Remele dated May 9, 1899, for $1500, due in twelve months from date, with 8% interest payable monthly, with the privilege of renewing the note for two years at its due date, and secured by a deed of trust on the property in question, describing it; and being unable to find that any payments had been made thereon he ascertained the amount to be $4,390, and reported it as a first and only lien against the property in controversy. He also reported that the taxes for 1922, amounting to $736.35, had not been paid. Due notice of the completion of this report was served on the attorneys together with a carbon copy of the report, and it was retained in the office of the commissioner for the statutory time for exceptions, and none were filed thereto. Upon the coming in of the report the court entered the decree complained of, confirming the report, finding that plaintiff Fanny Tompkins and defendants Mollie Kyle and Harry Baumgardner were the owners of the property in controversy, describing it, and adjudicating that Lucinda Baum-gardner, the widow, had a dower interest therein. The Remele debt is adjudicated as a first lien upon the property and the unpaid taxes as a second lien. The court found that the property was not susceptible of partition and that the interests of the owners would be promoted by a sale, and directed a sale.

Mollie Kyle and Harry Baumgardner have appealed.

Appellants insist that the demurrer should have been sustained : (1) because the bill does not allege that James Baum-gardner died intestate; (2) that the property was not sufficiently described; (3) that the bill does not pray that the interests of the owners be ascertained before sale was decreed.

*589 We think the bill was sufficient. Where a person is shown to be dead the presumption is that he died intestate. 21 Ann. Cas. 299, and cases there collated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 150, 95 W. Va. 584, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-kyle-wva-1924.