78 Va. 529 | Va. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case, so far as the facts are necessary to be stated, is as follows: In may, 1877, William J. Bragg and others instituted their suit in the circuit court of Dinwiddie county, setting up a claim to the estate of Upton E. Hardy, deceased, against the appellants, on account of the transactions of Robert Blackwell, deceased, as guardian of the said Upton E. Hardy, he having qualified as such in 1839, andas administrator of said Upton E. Hardy, he having qualified as such in 1850; alleging that the said Robert Blackwell had never properly accounted for the said estate, either as guardian or administrator, and seeking to hold his sureties in the guardian bond, and also his sureties in the administration bond, responsible.
Robert Blackwell died in 1860, but his administrator, the appellant, answered and denied the allegations of the bill and alleged that the said Robert Blackwell had fully accounted for the said estate, both as guardian and as administrator, and filed his regularly settled accounts in the county court of Lunenburg, where he resided, and the receipts of the ascertained balances of the parties in his life
The record shows that one of the sisters of the said Upton E. Hardy having married, her husband and herself instituted their suit in the county court of Lunenburg against the said Robert Blackwell and the other two sisters of Upton E. Hardy, alleging that the said Upton E. Hardy died possessed of slaves, &c., and praying for a division of the same in the hands of said administrator, Blackwell; and “ for all equitable relief in the premises,” as it is termed in the bill.
The said county court decreed a division or sale of the slaves, and a sale and distribution of the proceeds were had. ' It ordered the said administrator to settle his transactions as such before one of its commissioners, which was done, and the balance decreed to be paid to the said parties thereto entitled, which several amounts so ascertained were paid in full.
But Bragg and wife and Hatchett and wife seek in their suit to attack the proceedings in that suit and correct the errors therein on the ground that they were in fault when the decree was rendered; and because the county court in said suit did not have the said administration accounts before it properly, but under the pleadings could only divide the slaves, or sell the same for distribution of the proceeds; and that they were not bound by the said decree because their answers by guardian ad litem were not sworn to and not signed.
The plaintiff, Mrs. Bragg, married in 1858, and became of full age the same year. The plaintiff, Mrs. Hatchett, became of full age in 1860, and then married.
The said Bragg filed his bill, as trustee for his wife, but the record shows that he was not so appointed until 1875.
The first question in this case is, are the said plaintiffs, Bragg and wife, and Hatchett and wife, bound by the decree of the county court in a suit to which they were parties, or have they the right to set aside the same in a collateral proceeding ? The appellees, Mrs. Bragg and Mrs. Penn, were infants at the time the decree was entered in 1854. Mrs. Bragg married before she became of full age, and Mrs. Penn afterwards; the first became of age in 1858, the second in 1860. This suit was instituted in 1877. The circuit court, by the decree of October, 1881, in the cause, held that Mrs. Penn was barred because she became of full age before she married, but that Mrs. Bragg was not barred because she had been under disabilities continuously from the time the cause of action arose, by reason of the alleged erroneous payment, up to the time of the decree of the district court of the United States settling the right upon her as separate estate.
Under § 10, ch. 174 of the Code of Virginia, both had six months after they came to full age to show cause against the decree of 1854. The circuit court did not err in deciding that Mrs. Penn had lost her right to have the said decree enquired into, and to show cause against it.
• Did the fact that Mrs. Bragg voluntarily incurred the second disability of coverture before she was relieved of the first constitute a saving in her case ?
In the case of Harrison v. Gibson and Others, 23 Gratt. 223, this court said : “ It is urged that the female complainants were infants at the death of their mother; to which was superadded the disability of coverture. . . . It is true they were femes covert, and so continued to the institution of this suit. But the bill in this case, though in the
In the case of Caperton v. Gregory, 11 Gratt. 505, this court said: “ The counsel for the defendants here seek to exempt some of them by bringing them within the proviso in favor of femes covert and infants. ... In regard to an infant, it has been decided that the right of action exists continually, from its accrual until the end of the time allowed after the disability is removed. . . . However this may be as to such persons, a feme covert stands on a different ground. She and her husband are jointly seized in her right, but the husband has also certain interests in the property, and capacity to dispose of such interests without the concurrence of the wife and against her consent.” After reciting the powers of the husband in that case, this court said further: “ If the husband may do all this by direct conveyance, ... I perceive no reason why he may not allow his or her right of entry to pass away by operation of law..... I am of opinion that no recovery can be had in this action under the title of Call and wife, or that of Ballard and wife.”
In the case of Parsons v. McCracken, 9th Leigh, 501-2,
This doctrine was held in the case of Eager and Wife v. The Commonwealth, 4 Mass. R. 182; Demorest v. Wynkoop, 3 John. Ch. R. 129; Jackson v. Wheat, 18 Johns. R. 40; Bradstreet v. Clarke, 12 Wend. 602; Thompson and others, v. Smith, 7 Serg. & Rawle, 209; Lewis and others v. Barksdale, 2 Brock. R. 436; Fitzhugh v. Anderson, 2 Hen. & Mun. 289.
Judge Brockenbrough said in the case of Parsons v. McCracken, supra: “ If she (Rebecca Parsons) married after sh.e came of age (a fact not ascertained), her subsequent coverture was not a disability which would, obstruct the operation of the statute, and even if she married while yet an infant, we cannot mount one disability upon another SO'
In the same case Tucker, P., said: “ It is true that Rebecca was an infant, but she came of age in 1824, when her disability ceased; for, notwithstanding some loose opinions-to the contrary, she cannot tack the disability of marriage to that of infancy.” And all the other judges concurred. The statute does not run while any disability exists which existed at the time the right of action accrued. When all which existed at that time are removed, the statute begins-to run, and when the statute once begins to run it continues to run without being impeded by any subsequent event— Mooers v. White, 6 Johns Ch. R 372; Cook v. Wood, 1 McCord—and no subsequent disability will stop its running.
In the case of Ducket v. Crider, 11 B. Monroe, 191, the right of action which accrued to the female while an infant, and before she married, was lost by the failure to assert it within five years after her arrival at full age; notwithstanding that she married before attaining full age- and remained under coverture at the' time of the action brought. In the light of these authorities, it is clear that the circuit court did not err in dismissing the suit as to Hatchett and wife, Mrs. Hatchett having been married after the disability of infancy had ceased.
But it is equally clear therefrom that the said circuit, court did err in adopting a different rule as to Bragg and wife, because Mrs. ■ Bragg was married before she became of full age, before the disability of infancy had ceased.
Bragg and wife might have brought their suit as well in 1858 as in 1877, and their failure to do so until after the administrator had been dead many years, is not explained by the statement of confidence in the administrator. The deposition of Bragg shows that the relations between him
But it is strenuously insisted on the part of the appellees that the decree in the suit of Blackwell and wife v. Bo. Blackwell and Constance E. Penn (now Mrs. Bragg), and Lucy E. Penn (now Mrs. Hatchett), was not a suit to settle the transactions of the said Bo. Blackwell as the administrator of Upton E. Hardy, and that under the pleadings in that suit the county court had no authority to cause the settlement which was had of his said transactions, and to decree the payments made thereunder, and that their answers were defective, &c.
How, as we have seen, the bill was filed by their sister, Sally O., who had married William Thweatt Blackwell, and her said husband, against the said administrator, and themselves) alleging that Upton E. Hardy died possessed of slaves, &c., and that they desired partition of the said slaves, or sale and distribution of the proceeds; that they prayed for “all equitable relief in the premises,” &c.; that ■the slaves were sold, the proceeds brought into court and distributed, and the said administrator ordered to settle his transactions as administrator, which was done, the amount due to each of them respectively ascertained and decreed to them respectively, and paid accordingly. The Bounty court was a court of general jurisdiction; having .jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter upon which it acted, and it cannot be successfully contended that the said court did not have jurisdiction to compel the settlement of these accounts and to compel payment under its decrees; and having passed upon the identical subject sought to be reopened by this suit, to-wit: to ascertain the amount due from the said administrator, as administrator -of Upton E. Hardy, and to have a decree for payment of
In the case of Aurora City v. West, 7 Wall. 82, 103, Mr.
In the suit of Blackwell and Wife v. Upton E. Hardy’s Adm'r, all the errors now sought to be corrected in this suit were apparent on the face of the proceedings and the settled accounts. Why could they not have been corrected in that suit ?
In the case of Corbin v. Mills, 19 Gratt. 438, relied on by the appellees, Judge Joynes said: “ The executors might have objected to ..the overhauling of the transactions embraced in their settled accounts, except so far as they might have been open to objections apparent on their face, on the ground that there was no specification of error in the bill.”
These errors were apparent on the face of the accounts,, and any party to the suit might have objected to their confirmation by the court, if he so desired.
It is not necessary to the conclusiveness of the former judgment, says Mr. Freeman, that the issue should have been taken upon the precise point which it is proposed to controvert in the collateral action. It is sufficient, if that point was essential to the former judgment. Every point which has been specifically decided, or by necessary implication an issue which must have been decided, in order to support the judgment or decree, is concluded. Lee v. Kingsbury, 13 Tex. 68; Supervisors v. Mineral Point R. R. Co., 24 Wisc. 124.
The estoppel is not confined to the judgment, but extends to all facts involved in it as necessary steps, or the
In the case of Le Guen v. Gouverneur & Kemble, 1 Johns. Cases, 436, Judge Badcliffe said: “ The principle, however, extends farther. It is not only final as to matters actually determined, but as to every other matter which the parties might litigate in the cause, and which they might have had decided.” 3 Atk. 224; 2 H. Bl. 414; 7 T. R. 269; 1 Vernon, 176; 2 Cas. in Ch. 95; Ch. Rep. 243; 2 Burrow, 1009.
The appellees, the plaintiffs in the circuit court, are barred by the decree entered in the first suit in 1854, from correcting the erroneous payment in the year 1852, the question having been settled, in effect, in that suit.
The appellees, Bragg and wife, and Hatchett and wife, plaintiffs in the circuit court, not having appealed from so much of the decree of October term, 1881, as dismissed their bill as to the sureties of the guardian, who were defendants in the circuit court, and are appellees in this court, are not entitled, as against their co-appellees, to ask the correction of that part of the decree. Walker’s Ex’or v. Page, 21 Gratt. 636; Tate v. Liggat, 2 Leigh, 84; Buckholder v. Ludlam, 30 Gratt. 255.
The appellants, Mrs. Bragg and Mrs. Penn, are both barred by the decree in the first suit—and the fact that one married before coming of age and the other afterwards, does not appear to be a material distinction; and the circuit court erred in so deciding, and the said decree must be reversed and annulled, so far as the same is in conflict with
The decree was as follows :
This day came again the parties, by their counsel, and the court, having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the circuit court of Dinwiddie did not err in the decree therein rendered at the October term, 1881, appealed from, in deciding that the complainants,. Llewellen Hatchett and Lucy E., his wife, had lost their right against Robert Blackwell’s estate, by reason of the various errors in the settlement of his accounts, as set up in their original and amended bills filed in the cause, and in dismissing this suit as to them, and in deciding that there is no liability upon the estate of Robert Blackwell, deceased, on account of his transactions as guardian of Upton E. Hardy, deceased, and in dismissing the bills of the plaintiffs as to the defendants, J. "W. Ellis, sheriff of Lunenburg county, and as such administrator de bonis non of "William Wilkerson, deceased, and George Hardy, executor of Elisha Hardy, deceased, the. said "William Wilkerson and Elisha Hardy having been the sureties of the said. Robert Blackwell, as guardian of the said Upton E. Hardy.
But the court is of opinion that the said circuit court of Dinwiddie did err in the said decree, in deciding that the said William J. Bragg, trustee for his wife, Constance E. Bragg, and the said Constance E. Bragg are not barred of their right to proceed against the estate of the said Robert Blackwell, deceased, and in referring it to one of the commissioners of the court to restate and resettle the accounts of said Robert Blackwell, as administrator of Upton E. Hardy, deceased.
And this court, proceeding to render such decree as the circuit court ought to have rendered, doth decree and order that the bills of the plaintiffs be dismissed, and that the plaintiff, William J. Bragg, trustee, and Constance E. Bragg do pay to the defendants their costs by them in their defence expended in the said circuit court. Which is ordered to be certified to the said circuit court of Dinwiddie.
Decree reversed in part.