Triplett v. Woodward's Adm'r

35 S.E. 455, 98 Va. 187, 1900 Va. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 455 (Triplett v. Woodward's Adm'r) 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
Triplett v. Woodward's Adm'r, 35 S.E. 455, 98 Va. 187, 1900 Va. LEXIS 24 (Va. 1900).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants demurred to the bill on the ground that it was multifarious. Their demurrer was overruled, and that ruling of the Circuit Court is assigned as error.

The main object of the bill, which was filed by the adminis[189]*189trator with the will annexed of Mrs. E. A. Woodward, was the distribution of the estate of the testatrix according to the provisions of her will, after the payment of her debts. S. W. Triplett and Elixa A. Seaton, two of the appellants, were legatees under the will, and also claimed to be creditors of the testator, as is charged in the bill, and were, therefore, necessary parties, both as legatees and creditors. The bill alleges that both of them were debtors to the estate, and that Triplett had been for a number of years the agent of the testatrix to transact her business, and, at the time of her death, was in the possession of her papers and all the evidences of debts due and owing to her except such as were of record; that he had refused to furnish a complete and accurate account of his doings as agent, and to surrender certain bonds held by him as such agent, and payable to the testatrix, and asked that his accounts as agent should be settled in this case, and a decree be made against him, and also against Mrs. Seaton, for such sums as might be found to be due from them respectively.

One of the objects of the suit being to ascertain the indebtedness of the estate, and Mr. Triplett and Mrs? Seaton claiming to be creditors, it was not only proper but necessary to settle the accounts between each of them and the estate in order to ascertain what, if anything, was due to either, and if, upon such settlement, it was found that they, or either of them, were indebted to the estate, it would be proper to render a decree against such an one for that sum.

In Triplett’s account against the estate, which was an exhibit with the bill, the largest item was for services rendered as agent. Clearly, before anything should have been allowed him for services rendered as agent, he ought to have been required to settle his accounts and surrender the papers in his possession as agent belonging to the estate, and the bill very properly asked that this might be done.

Gr. L. Seaton, the other appellant, was the husband of Mrs. [190]*190Seaton, but took nothing under the will. He was not a creditor. The bill alleges that he was a debtor of the estate, but the bill and the exhibits filed with it, which are asked to be read as parts of the bill, do not state an equitable cause of action against him. Ho case for an account is made. He was not responsible for the annuity of $300 provided for in the conveyance of the testatrix to Samuel H. Halley, trustee of Eliza A. Seaton, dated December 31, 1874. That deed expressly provides that the annuity shall be paid by the trustee to whom the land, upon whiph the annuity is made a lien, was conveyed for the sole and exclusive use of Mrs. Seaton during her life, and to her children after her death. The case made by the bill and exhibits against Mr. Seaton was that of debtor to the estate merely. He had no interest in the estate. The fact that his wife was interested in it as legatee and creditor did not make him either a necessary or proper party, and his demurrer should have been sustained and the bill dismissed as to him.

Hpon the death of the testatrix, Triplett’s powers as agent ceased, and her personal representative, upon liis qualification as' such, was entitled to the possession of all the evidences of debt due her in the hands of the agent. Whether Mrs. Seaton and her children, or the estate of the testatrix, was entitled to the proceeds of the bond due from Mr. Seaton was a matter with which Triplett, the agent, had no concern. .It was his duty to deliver the bond to the personal representative of the testatrix, and it was the latter’s duty to collect it, unless the testatrix had given it to Mrs. Seaton and her children, as is claimed. In the latter event, he ought to have delivered it to the parties entitled to it. If he was in doubt as to whom it belonged, he had the right to have the question determined by the court in a proper case; but not in this case, to which the infants were not parties, and could not properly be made parties, for they had no interest or connection with her estate in any way whatever except in the Seaton bond. There was no more reason for litigating the rights [191]*191of the claimants to that bond in this case than there would have been for litigating the rights of any other persons who might have claimed other choses in action or property in the possession of the personal representative.

It appears from the report of the commissioner that S. "W. Triplett was indebted to the testatrix at the time of her death in the following sums, viz: $240.71 for moneys which had come into his hands as attorney in fact; $1,280.80, the amount of two bonds executed by him to her, and $3,118.57 on account of ah. annuity of $300 provided by her conveyance to him of December 30, 1874. The court’s action in rendering a decree against him for these sums, subject to a credit on the first item (for services rendered as attorney in fact), is assigned as error.

Triplett insists that he had been released from the payment of these several sums by the testatrix, and relies upon the following paper as evidence of that fact:

“ On account of faithful services rendered me by my nephew, S. W. Triplett, in attending to my business, I do hereby agree to release him at my death from all claims and obligations that may be due me in any manner whatever.
“ Witness my hand and seal this 25th day of September, 1891.
“ ELIZA A. WOODWAED. [seal.]”

The paper is broad enough to cover the indebtedness in question, and sufficient to release the debtor therefrom if executed under such circumstances as rendered it binding upon the testatrix. Triplett was the agent of the testatrix when the paper was executed, and therefore stood in a confidential relation to her. It is well established that an agent, trustee or other person standing in 'a confidential relation to another, cannot entitle himself to benefits which that other may have conferred upon him, unless it appears that there has been entire good faith, a full disclosure of all the facts and circumstances affecting the transac[192]*192tion, and the absence of all undue influence or imposition. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur., see. 315; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., sec. 959; Banner v. Rosser, 96 Va. 238; Nelson v. Bowman, 29 Gratt. 732, 737-740.

The agent, who 'was the nephew of the testatrixj was acting under a power of attorney dated in the year 1887. His duties seem to have been chiefly to look after the investment of the money of his principal, to collect interest, pay her taxes and personal expenses. Her estate was a small one at the time of her death, and was more at that time than it had been at any previous period of the agency. It consisted largely of debts due her. The amount covered by the release, if valid, is more than $4,600, nearly, if not altogether, half of her estate. The services of the agent could not have been worth one-fourth of that sum even if he had received nothing on that account, of which there is no evidence. The circumstances under which it was executed do not appear. Triplett, the agent, testifies as to them, but he was clearly an incompetent witness.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 455, 98 Va. 187, 1900 Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triplett-v-woodwards-admr-va-1900.