Tunstall v. Pollard's adm'r

11 Va. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Va. 1 (Tunstall v. Pollard'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
Tunstall v. Pollard's adm'r, 11 Va. 1 (Va. 1840).

Opinion

Tucker, P.

This cause has been argued with great ability, and some interesting questions have been presented, which require a fuller discussion than I could wish. I shall proceed to examine them as concisely as I can, without adverting to the facts farther than necessary for the proper understanding of the principles decided.

I shall dismiss the objection to the antiquity of the claim, with the remark that it was put in suit forty years ago, and has been in a course of prosecution ever since, with the exception of an interval of two years subsequent to the dismissal of the bills in the former suits as to Pollard’s administrator. That was not a dismissal on the merits: it was owing to the [25]*25hopeless insolvency of Pollard’s estate, and the expectation of making the debt due the plaintiffs out of the other defendants. Therefore, it did not operate as a bar; nor can it be regarded either as an abandonment of the claim, or as a blameable laches in the prosecution of it. The suit was renewed against Pollard’s administrator, as soon as the fortuitous recovery of the Spanish claim placed his intestate’s estate in a situation to pay, and it has ever since been pursued, with proper diligence. There is, then, no ground for the objection that the demand is stale, or that the dismissal of the former suits in 1820 is a bar to the further prosecution of the claim.

The next question which arises in the cause is, whether Benjamin Pollard the executor of Camrn G-arlick, is liable to the suit of the plaintiffs in Virginia, he having only proved the will and obtained letters testamentary from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury in England ? Under his authority as executor, he received assets in England to a large amount, which he brought to this country, and wasted; and the suit is brought, not by creditors of Camm Garlick, but by the legatees under his will, demanding a settlement of the executorial account, and a decree for the balance which may be found to be due them. The answer of the executor was filed in the former suits: he set up no pretence of the existence of debts in England, or of any danger to him in paying over the funds in his hands’, or of any conflict between the laws of England and those of Virginia, in relation to the disposition of the assets, nor did he object to the jurisdiction of the courts of Virginia, or to their authority and power to call him to account. The whole- of this matter seems to have been an afterthought of others; and it might, therefore, well be questioned, whether, if such a defence would ever have been a good one, it is now available. But as the [26]*26geueral question is deeply interesting, and has been argued before the court in this and a former case, Pugh’s ex’or v. Jones, 6 Leigh 299, I prefer to rest the judgment here upon it, rather than upon the particucircumstances appearing in this record.

I am of opinion, that an executor who has qualified and received assets in a foreign country, and has brought them into this jurisdiction, is liable to be sued and to be compelled to account here, although he never has qualified as executor in Virginia, and although he may have received no assets here. I am moreover of opinion) that if suable at all, he is not to be sued as executor de son tort, which he cannot be if he be appointed executor by the testator; the intimation given by me in Pugh’s ex’or v. Jones, of a contrary opinion on this point, I am now satisfied, is erroneous.

In the examination of this question, we shall best proceed by advancing towards the ultimate conclusion step by step. There are certain truths bearing a relation to the question, that cannot be controverted. Thus, it is well established in England, that an executor may be sued before probat, provided he has intermeddled with the assets. Toll. Law Ex’ors 49. Aud this doctrine is admitted to prevail in Virginia, even by those who regard the validity of the disposition of the assets as depending upon a qualification prior or subsequent to such disposition. Munroe v. James, 4 Munf. 199. In such case,- too, of intermeddling, as it is a rightful act, it is obvious, that the party is not suable as executor de son tort, which supposes a tortious intermeddling. If, therefore, Pollard had been appointed executor in Virginia, and received Virginia assets, he would have been liable to be sued, even though he had not qualified. It is also equally clear, I think, that though the will was made in England, yet an executor appointed in Virginia and re[27]*27ceiving Virginia assets, might he sued here before qualification. And so if the executor was appointed in England, and came to Virginia, without having qualified, and received assets in Virginia, he might be sued here. If Pollard, then, cannot be sued here, it must be either because the assets were foreign assets, or because by qualifying abroad he has bound himself to account there, and there only. It cannot be, that he is protected by the circumstance that the assets were foreign assets; for, having been brought here, they have become Virginia assets, and must be accounted for here, unless by a foreign qualification an exclusive control over them is vested in the foreign jurisdiction. It has been well settled, ever since Dow-dale’s case, 6 Co. 47, that an executor in England receiving assets from abroad, is liable to account for them in England; see Ram on Assets 235, 1 Crompt. & Jerv. 157, 370. And it has never been doubted, I think, that if an executor in Virginia receives from London the proceeds of a crop of tobacco sold there, he must account for them in the settlement of his accounts before our own tribunals. So that, upon the whole, it would seem the only question is, whether, by qualification in a foreign court, so exclusive a control over the foreign assets is vested in the foreign jurisdiction, that our own courts cannot compel a settlement of the account of such assets, and payment of the balance due, although both the executor and the assets are brought within our jurisdiction?

Let us look into this question, first upon the ground of reason and convenience, and then upon authority.

Eirst, as to the reason of the thing. The argument against our j urisdiction is, that the foreign assets received under a foreign administration; must be administered according to the foreign law: that the executor is bound so to administer them; and if he is held accountable here as well as there, there may be a conflict [28]*28between the two jurisdictions which would be mischievous to him. The premises do not justify the conelusion. Grant that the foreign assets, though brought here, are to be administered according to foreign law; this does not prove that our courts cannot take cognizance of the case. It only proves that in deciding it, •we must be governed by the law of the country where administration was granted. That we must be so governed, I have no question. Where the sovereignty having jurisdiction over person and property has exercised its powers and committed the goods of a decedent to the executor, and bound him to account for them according to its laws, every other sovereignty is, under the sacred obligations of justice, to respect that lawful exercise of authority. It is not true, in this sense, that “a grant of administration in a foreign court is not taken notice of in our courts of justice.” Toll. Law Ex’ors 108. That doctrine is to be understood, as merely affirming that our courts admit not the authority of a foreign administrator to recover the assets within our own jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Va. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tunstall-v-pollards-admr-va-1840.