109 Va. 302 | Va. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
T. Samuel McCue was convicted on the 9th of Hovember, 1904, of the murder of his wife, and the question presented by this appeal is whether his estate is liable for the costs incurred and paid by the Commonwealth in his prosecution for that offense.
That the accused, in every criminal case, is liable for the costs of his conviction plainly appears from the statute, which is as follows: "In every criminal case, the clerk of-the court in which the accused is convicted, or, if the conviction be before a justice, the clerk to which the justice certifies as aforesaid, shall, as soon as may be, make up a stateihent of all the expenses incident to the prosecution, including such as are certified under the preceding section, and execution for the amount of such expenses shall be issued and proceeded ivith; and chapter thirty-one shall apply thereto in like manner a,s if, on the day of completing said statement, there was a judgment in such court in favor of the Commonwealth against the accused for the said amount as a fine.” Code, 1904, sec. 4087.
Por some reason, not shown by the record, the clerk of the court did not make up the statement of the costs incident to the prosecution, as contemplated by section 4081 of the Code, until May, 1905, about three months after the accused had been executed, and no execution was issued thereon until the 10th day of March, 1906. In the meantime, this chancery suit had been instituted in the Corporation Court of the city of Charlottesville by McCue’s executors to settle up his estate, in which it was asked that the creditors of the testator should be required to prove their debts. It thus appears that at the time the execution was issued for the costs incident to the prosecution and conviction of the accused, the Corporation Court of
In the mean time, a report of debts had been filed in this cause, finding adversely to the claim of the Commonwealth, which report had been, without exception, confirmed. Thereupon, the Commonwealth of Virginia, suing by Morton Marye, auditor of public accounts, filed her petition in this cause, asserting the claim for costs here involved, and asking that so much of the. decree of May 29, 1906, as passed upon and rejected her claim be reheard and set aside, and that such claim be ascertained and decreed to be paid out of the assets of the estate of I. S. McCue. A demurrer to this petition by the executors and heirs of J. S. McCue was sustained, and the petition dismissed upon the ground that there was no error of law apparent upon the face of the decree complained of. From this decree the Commonwealth of Virginia has appealed.
It is contended on behalf of the appellees that the petition filed by the Commonwealth in this cause must be considered and classified as a bill of review; and that, under the rules of pleading, it was not permissible for the Commonwealth, in this way, to get a rehearing of the decree by which the Corporation Court of Charlottesville had already adversely adjudicated her right to recover.
This contention is based upon the fallacious assumption that
It is plain from an examination of the law that the auditor of public accounts was the only officer empowered to institute proceedings for the collection of the indebtedness in favor of the Commonwealth which is here asserted; and it is equally clear that the Commonwealth could not be impleaded without her consent. Ho power was devolved upon the Commonwealth’s attorney of the city of Charlottesville to prove tb' debt in question before the commissioner who was auditing the claims against McCue’s estate in this case, or to institute any other proceeding for its collection; and the finding of the mastc r commissioner adversely to the claim, and the decree of court confirming that finding ivere without any binding force or effect, so far as the claim now' asserted by the Commonwealth i; concerned.
This claim for costs was asserted in this cause for the. first time in any legal form, or by any competent authority, when the petition of the Commonwealth of Virginia, suing by her auditor of public accounts, was filed herein on the 17th day of Tune, 1907. Until this petition was filed the Commonwealth was not a party to this suit, and the only officer who had the right to consent that she should be made a party had refused to give such consent. The State could not, over her protest, be made constructively a party, and be bound by an adjudication of her rights, under such circumstances.
It is contended, on behalf of the appellees, that the Commonwealth is estopped from asserting this claim for costs by the judgment of the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond.
The Commonwealth had a right, at any time before McCue’s estate had been finally administered in this suit, to come in and assert her claim, and aslc that provision be made for its payment; and the petition which was filed was a proper and sufficient pleading for that purpose. That it is the right of a creditor to assert his claim against the decedent in a suit where the estate of such decedent is being administered, at any time before the assets of the estate have been disbursed, is the established practice of courts of equity in this State. Wooding’s Executrix v. Bradley’s Ex’or, 76 Va. 614.
We are of opinion that the demurrer to the petition filed by the Commonwealth should have been overruled, the amount of her claim for costs ascertained, if disputed, and a decree entered for its payment out of the assets of the estate of T. Samuel McCue in the hands of his executors to be administered.
The decrees complained of must, therefore, be reversed and set aside, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed.