Yates v. Salle

2 Va. Ch. Dec. 163
CourtVirginia Chancery Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1792
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. Ch. Dec. 163 (Yates v. Salle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Chancery Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. Salle, 2 Va. Ch. Dec. 163 (Va. Super. Ct. 1792).

Opinion

BENJAMIN HARRIS, father of the plaintiff Sarah, of five other daug'hters, and of the defendents Benjamin Harris and William Wager Harris, seized of valuable lands, possessed of a number, between fifty and sixty, of slaves, and intitled to credits, amounting to about one thousand pounds, by his testament, in april, of the year one thousand seven hundred and seventy six— after devising and bequeathing part of his estate to his wife, to be holden during her life, in satisfaction of her dower; after devising and bequeathing to his sons his most profitable lands, and his slaves and personal estate, except the parts thereof given to his wife and daughters; and after bequeathing to his daughters Mary Spencer and Hinson Wager Moseley, who is supposed to be the wife of the defendent Edward Mosely, each, one hundred pounds, current money, to be raised out of the profits of his estate, and four ymung negroes, and to Mary Spencer a bed and furniture, or ten pounds, current money, — bequeathed to his daughters, Phoebe, Edith, the plaintiff Sarah, and Nancy Hinson Wager, each, one hundred pounds, current money, to be paid within twelve months after they should respectively attain their ages of eighteen years, or marry, also two hundred pounds more, of like money, when they could be conveniently raised from the profits of his estate, to be paid at the discretion of his executors, also four young negroes, and a bed and furniture, or ten pounds; declared his will to be, that his son Benjamin pay to his son William Wager three hundred pounds, current money, in regard the estate given to the former was more valuable than that given to the latter; *devised three lots of land in Manchester to his sons, and ten thousand acres of land in [175]*175Transylvania to his eight children ; directed all his estate to be kept together for paying off the money legacies, for maintenance of his family, and for education of his children, until his son Benjamin, or, in case of his death, until his other son should attain the age of twenty one years; and appointed the defendants Abraham Salle, Edward Moseley, and Bernard Markham, with Samuel Nivins, of whom the ¡ast is supposed to be dead, because, after proving the testament, nothing more appeareth to have been done by him, executors.

Before depretiation was perceptible the testator died; for in September, 1776, a certificate for obtaining the probate of his testament was granted.

A few months afterwards, the plaintiff Sarah chose the defendent Abraham Salle her guardian, and in august 1777, attained the age of eighteen years.

The defendents Edward Mosely and Barnard Markham voluntarily tendered to the guardian of the plaintiff Sarah, on the 12 day of September, 1778, one hundred pounds, and on the 31 day of august, 1779, two hundred pounds more, both in depreti-ated money, and required him to receive them in discharge of the money legacies of his ward, the defendent Edward Moseley proposed to tender Nancy Harris’s legacy to her guardian Thomas Harris, who refused to receive it in paper money; and it was afterwards paid in specie.

The guardian of the plaintiff Sarah was unwilling to receive the paper money, and wished to have declined it, but thought himself compelled, by the laws of the country, to take it, when payment was offered; and received it accordingly, so soon as the money was paid to him, he lent out two hundred pounds upon interest, and was compelled, as he says, to receive them again, much against his inclination, and could not lend out the money afterwards, he offered the whole three hundred pounds to the plaintiff Sarah, when she attained full age, which she refused to accept, and then he funded the paper money.

No other legatary, besides the plaintiff Sarah, sustained, considerable, if any, loss, from depretiation.

The plaintiffs brought their bill for the wifes legacy, to be paid by the executors of her father, or by the sons, whose estates were chargeable with it.

The executors, in their answer, admit the facts before stated and the two, who tendered the paper money, say, ‘they thought themselves bound by their duty, and in obedience to the will of their testator, to tender the legacy so soon as the estate was in circumstances to pay the same that the plaintiff; Sarah, before *they paid her legacy, informed them she wished to receive it, that she might draw interest upon it; and that the defendent Bernard Markham advised her not to take it. and they admit that they have bond, belonging to the estate of their testator, still in their possession, to the amount of little, more than two hundred pounds, and that they have given up to the other defend-ents a large personal estate.

And those other defendents, the sons, in their answer, clame the benefit of the payments to the guardian, conceiving the clame i to be just, because the estates, received from , their father, had been injured, as they allege, by payments in paper money to the executors about the time of discharging the legacy.

By accounts, to which the executors refer, the testators credits, by bond and a note of hand, at the time of his death, amounted to seven hundred and seventy seven pounds five shillings and seven pence, supposed to be principal money, of these credits; the executors received from Hannah Easley, on the 5 day of march, 1777, two pounds, from John Short, on the 8 day of may 1779, sixty one pounds and fifteen shillings, from James Harris, on the 25 day of June, 1780, one hundred and fifty pounds ten shillings and seven pence, and from John Scott, on the 8 day of december, 1785, sixteen pounds and ten shillings, so that of the credits five hundred and forty seven pounds had not been received by the executors, and, according to their answer, the securities for payment of that remainder, with many years interest, the first of them being dated in 1768, and the last of them on the 2 day of august, 1776, were retained by the executors, or ‘given up’ to their friends the sons. — and the other credits, by payments of which in paper money the sons pr'etended the estates given them by their father to have been reduced, arose from sales by his executors after his death; so that the estate, in the hands of such thrifty managers, probably gained as much as it lost by depretiation. two months before the tender of the two hundred pounds to the plaintiff Sarahs guardian, the executors received four hundred pounds for one horse, sold to John Harris, supposed to be the horse valued by a witness at thirty-five pounds in specie, and one month after that tender, received two hundred pounds for less than nine hundred and sixty pounds of tobacco sold to Francis Locket, but if the payments in paper money were detrimental to the estate, the contrivance of executors, entrusted for the benefit of all the children, to burthen one of them with nearly the whole loss, was as nefarious, as the retention of the iniquitious gain by her brothers was rigorous.

The cause was heard on the first day of june, in the year *1792, when the opinion of the court was declared to be, that the plaintiffs were bound by the receipt of the guardian of the plaintiff Sarah of one hundred pounds, part of the three hundred pounds bequeathed to her; but that the plaintiffs were intitled to the residue of that legacy, with interest, and the court decreed the executors to pay to the plaintiffs two hundred pounds, with interest thereupon from the first day of january, one thousand seven hundred and eighty two, and costs.

The distinction in the decree between the [176]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. Ch. Dec. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-salle-vachanct-1792.