Turk v. Ritchie

52 S.E. 339, 104 Va. 587, 1905 Va. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 23, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 339 (Turk v. Ritchie) 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
Turk v. Ritchie, 52 S.E. 339, 104 Va. 587, 1905 Va. LEXIS 137 (Va. 1905).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1890, Rudolph Turk died testate, appointing W. A. find R. S, Turk his executors. By his will, he directed that all his just debts and funeral expenses be paid as soon after his death as practicable, and, after making two .specific bequests, and directing how the residue of his estate was to be divided among his two sons then living and the widow and daughter of a deceased son, empowered his said executors to sell all of his [589]*589real and personal estate, or so much thereof as they might deem best in order to carry out the terms of his will, conferring upon them full power to make conveyances of any and all- real estate which they might sell, etc.

In September, 1891, W. A. Turk and R. S. Turk, in their own right and as executors, as aforesaid, instituted this suit of “Turk’s Ex’ors v. Turk’s Creditors," the scope and object of which was to convene all the creditors, known and unknown, of the said testator and to settle and distribute his estate under the direction of the court.

At the time of Rudolph Turk’s death the appellee, Mary E. Ritchie, nee Shifflett, a daughter of Q-ivens Shifflett, now also deceased, held a bond dated November 20, I860-, for the penal sum of $5,183.60, conditioned for the payment to David Eultz, her trustee, one day after the death-of said Givens Shifflett, the sum of $2,591.80, in which Givens Shifflett was principal and the said Rudolph Turk and one D. Bashaw were sureties, which bond was secured by a deed of trust executed by Givens Shifflett to David Eultz, trustee, on a certain parcel of land owned by Shifflett, situated in Augusta county. Givens Shifflett died on January 14, 1894, whereby the said bond became due and payable on the following day, January 15,1894; and in May, 1894, Mary E. Ritchie filed her hill in equity in the Circuit Court of Augusta county, in which her husband united for conformity, under the short style of Ritchie and wife v. Shifflett’s Admr, et als, to enforce payment of said bond, and to that end to have the deed of trust securing the same enforced. The parties made defendant to this bill were the administrator, widow and heirs at law of Givens Shifflett, deceased, R. S. Turk and W. A. Turk, the executors of Rudolph Turk, deceased, D'arwin Bashaw, and the executor of David Fultz, deceased, who was trustee for Mary E. Ritchie, and as such held the naked legal title to the land conveyed in the deed of trust.

That cause was referred to a master commissioner, who filed his report, to which there was no exception, showing that Givens [590]*590Shifflett had. no personal assets, and that the land (123 acres) covered by the deed of trust securing the bond of Mary E. Ritchie was all of his estate, and that the sum due her was $2,591.80, with interest from January 15, 1894. This report of the master was duly confirmed and commissioners appointed by decree of May 20, 1895, to sell the land; and these commissioners subsequently reported a sale of the land to R. S. and W. A. Turk for the sum of $530:.00, which was confirmed. The net proceeds of sale, after payment of costs, was $405.30, which being credited on the debt of Mary E. Ritchie left due thereon, .as of the day of sale, the sum of $2,472.42, to be paid by the sureties, the estate of the principal debtor having been exhausted; and by a final decree entered in the cause December 10, 1895, after setting forth the proceedings aforesaid and ascertaining that the sum of $2,472.42, was still due to Mary E. Ritchie, it was adjudged, ordered, and decreed that, “N. C. Watts, sheriff of Augusta county, and as such administrator of Givens Shifflett, deceased, out of assets in his hands for administration, W. A. Turk and R. S. Turk, executors of R. Turk, deceased, de bonis testatoris, and Darwin Bashaw, de bonis propriss, pay .to the plaintiff, Mary E. Ritchie, the sum of two thousand four hundred and seventy-two dollars and forty-two cents, with interest thereon from the 16th day of November, 1895, till payment.” In the chancery causes heard together of Brown v. Bashaw, Ritchie and wife v. Bashaw, and Bashaw v. Bashaw, the estate of Darwin Bashaw, the co-surety with Rudolph Turk on Mary E. Ritchie’s bond, was administered, his real estate sold, and the proceeds in part applied to the payment of this debt. The sum realized from Bashaw’s estate was $1,217.29, which left, as the liability against Rudolph Turk’s estate, the sum of $2;302.22>, with interest on $2,279.43' from November 1, 1902.

Dfiring all this time the suit of "Turk’s Ex’ors v. Turk’s Creditors,” was pending and undetermined, in which there had been several decrees of reference to a master commissioner to ascertain and report the debts outstanding against the estate of [591]*591Rudolph Turk, deceased, and of the assets of tlie estate, none of wliicb had been fully executed, though there was a report of the master filed January 4, 1895, making a tentative statement of the assets, the unpaid debts outstanding, as far as ascertained, and an estimated balance of assets for distribution among Turk’s residuary legatees, of which R. S. Turk and W. A. Turk were each entitled to one-tliird. This report was acted on in a decree entered May 16, 1895, in which the court, without confirming the report, adopted certain specific portions of it, directed payment of certain specified debts, and a partial distribution of the assets of Turk’s estate among his residuary legatees, requiring refunding bonds to be given, and recommitted the cause to a master, “to take a further account of the transactions of the executors, and, if possible, to make an accurate distribution between the residuary legatees;” but upon subsequent developments so much of the said decree as invested R. S. and W. A. Turk Avith title to certain lands of the estate they had purchased Avas set aside and annulled, and they Avcre directed to pay on account of their purchase money bonds for said lands a sum sufficient to make up the deficiency in assets necessary to discharge the unpaid debts of the estate. No report Avas made on this last mentioned decree of reference till December 15, 1900, and in the mean time a decree Avas entered — December 9, 1895— requiring a commissioner to Avhom the cause already stood committed, to report particularly as to the liability asserted against the estate by one P. D;. Byerley. Commissioner Waddell having failed to execute the references called for in the decree theretofore entered, a decree Avas entered December 13, 1898, referring the cause to Commissioner Nelson to take the accounts required by those decrees, and on July 15,1899, while the cause was before Commissioner Nelson under the unexecuted orders of reference, Mary E. Ritchie came into it by petition, setting up her debt against the estate of Rudolph Turk, deceased, by [592]*592virtue of the Shifflett bond and the decree in the case of Ritchie and wife v. Shiffltt et als, to which demand Turk’s executors interposed the plea of the statute of limitations, and the plea of laches.

On November 24, 1899, a decree was entered bringing the cause on for hearing on said petition and directing Commissioner Nelson, to whom the cause then stood referred, to report on the matters set up in said petition in addition to the matters called for in the previous decree, and in response to that decree Commissioner Nelson filed his report December 15, 1900.

Flora this report it appeared, inter alia, that R. S. and W. A.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 339, 104 Va. 587, 1905 Va. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turk-v-ritchie-va-1905.