41 W. Va. 503 | W. Va. | 1895
Leland Kittle, administrator of John M. Crouch, deceased, appeals from a decree of the Circuit Court of Randolph county entered of record the 14th day of May, 1892, in two chancery causes therein pending, of Peter Crickard, administrator, etc., v. Elihu C. Crouch’s administrator, etc., and Thomas B. Scott v. Z. T. Chenoweth, sheriff, etc., and assigns the following errors, to wit:
First. It was clear error for the court to maintain the bill, in the second cause of Thomas Scott, and not dismiss the same as being without equity. Second. It was error for the court to sustain said second amended bill in the original cause brought to surcharge and falsify the reports of Commissioner Kittle after adjudication had thereupon by the county court, under the exceptions made by the original plaintiff' herself. Third. The court erred in entering the order of reference to Commissioner Ward for the purpose of causing him to review the report of said Kit-tle. Fourth. It was error for the court, if the second cause was maintainable at all, to join it with the original cause, and through its instrumentality, and by hearing the two together, bring into the original controversy the settlement of two other entirely distinct estates. Fifth. It was error to decree any charge upon the real estate of petitioner’s decedent, John M. Crouch, until his heirs at law had been made parties to said original cause. Sixth. It was error to decree as against said heirs at law the judgment in favor of Thomas B. Scott without any proof of its validity, and charge it upon the real estate of said decedent. Seventh. It was error for the court to decree any sum of money to be paid to infants or to their guardians, without ascertaining who such guardians wore, and, if none had been appointed, without properly decreeing the preservation of such fund by directing the same to be paid to the general receiver of the court, until such guardians were appointed. Eighth. The court erred in overruling each of
On the 31st day of March, L879, Rebecca Scott filed her bill against John M. Crouch and Charles Crouch; administrators of Elihu C. Crouch, deceased, setting up that in the year 1875, Elihu C. Crouch died, intestate and unmarried, leaving Sarah Crouch, his mother, John M. Crouch, his brother, and Mary Crouch and plaintiff, his sisters, his heirs at law; that shortly afterwards Mary Crouch died, leaving Sarah Crouch, John M. Crouch, and plaintiff her heirs, as well as the heirs of Elihu C. Crouch; that the said defendants had qualified as administrators of Elihu C. Crouch’s estate, had taken possession thereof, badly managed the same, and had made no settlement of their accounts or distribution of the funds in their hands. She prayed a settlement and distribution.
The defendants filed their joint answer, denying any mismanagement, and claiming to have well and truly administered the estate in so far as it had readied their hands, and to have duly settled their accounts before Leland Kittle, a commissioner of the county court of said county, as required by law.
Plaintiff then filed her amended bill against the defendants, to which she also made her mother, Sarah Crouch, a defendant. She also set up that on the 26th day of August, 1879, she had obtained a judgment against said administiators on a note executed by Elihu C. Crouch in his lifetime, for the sum of fifty seven dollars and forty four cents, with interest and twelve
The admininstrators again answer, denying the charges of devastation and mismanagement, and claim to have faithfully performed their duties, and settled their accounts.
Plaintiff then, on the first Monday in December, 1891, filed a second amended bill, in which she surcharges and falsifies the settlements made by said administrators before Commissioner Kittle, setting out a large number of items with which they had not charged themselves, and numerous credits given to which they we>’e not entitled. She udmits that she appeared and excepted to the ex'parte settlements in the county court, but the court had not acted on such exceptions.
Charles Crouch had died in the meantime, and the second amended bill was filed against John M. Crouch alone, as surviving administrator, who had received all the property and transaded all the business.
John M. Crouch, as surviving administrator, filed his separate answer, denied all the allegations of the bill as to the devastation charged, and insisted that as the report of his settlements had been confirmed by the count)' court, and the plaintiff had appeared and filed exceptions thereto, although she afterwards withdrew, she was bound by the judgment of confirmation, and could not now surcharge and falsify such accounts.
On the 16th day of January, 1883, the cause was referred to Leland Kittle, commissioner, to correct the errors, if any, in said ex parte settlements.
On the 27th day of May, 1884, the death of John M. Crouch was suggested.
No further proceedings were had in the case until the
On the coming in of the report, the court entered the decree complained of, granting the full relief prayed in both bills, and also in a petition of C. II. Scott, administrator of Noah S. Parsons, deceased, filed on the 22d day of October, 1891, asking for a construction of the will of Sarah Crouch, deceased.
The bill of complaint of Thomas B. Scott in the second mentioned cause was filed on the 7th day of March, 1889. The appellant demurred to said bill for want of equity. The court did not finally dispose of the demurrer or pass on the sufficiency of the bill, except in the final decree, granting relief prayed, which is equivalent to virtually overruling the demurrer. Such has been the universal holding of this Court. Hinchman v. Ballard., 7 W. Va. 152.
The first question that presents itself is as to whether thisdemurrer should have been sustained. The bill appears to have been filed for the following purposes: (1) To compel a settlement of the accounts of Z. T. Chenoweth, administrator de bonis non of Elihu C. Ctouch, and, out of the personal funds in his hands, to compel payment of a judgment for costs amounting to fifteen dollars recovered by said plaintiff on the 19th day of September, 1887, against said administrator de bonis non. (2) To surcharge and falsify the accounts of John M. Crouch, as administrator of Elihu C. Crouch, deceased, and compel payment of
The mere statement of its objects shows that the bill is multifarious, and it ought not to have been entertained. The ostensible object was to recover the fifteen dollars judgment for costs against the administrator de bonis non oft’ of the estate of Elihu C. Crouch, deceased. This judgment bound no one but the administrator de bonis non and the personal estate in his hands. It was not and could never become a lien against the real estate in the hands of heirs. Costs were not recoverable at common-law, but are entire
Between the separate estates of John M. Crouch, Sarah Crouch, and Rebecca Scott there is no such privity as requires them all to be settled in one suit.
The fact that Sarah Crouch’s executor and Rebecca
The heirs of Sarah Crouch and Rebecca Scott have no legal right to sue the estate of John M. Crouch for separate demands due their respective ancestors. Their re-pective personal representatives are the proper persons to sue. 2 Tuck. Comm. 425. It is said: “The court will not permit a plaintiff to demand by one bill several matters of different natures against several defendants, for this would tend to load each defendant with an unnecessary burden of costs, by swelling the pleadings with the statement of the several claims of the other defendants with which he had no connection. A defendant may therefore, in such case, demur.” Stuart’s Heirs v. Coalter, 4 Rand. 85. In this cause the court undertakes to settle the three or four separate estates, and, when it comes to a final decree, ladens the whole burden of costs on the infant heirs of John M. Crouch, deceased.
Such a decree is unconscionable. The demurrer to the bill of Thomas B. Scott should be sustained, and the bill dismissed, at plaintiffs’ costs, including all unnecessary costs entailed on the other case by reason thereof. The petition of C. IT. Scott, administrator of Noah S. Parsons, against the executor and heirs of Sarah Crouch, deceased, seeking to have the will of said decedent construed, should also be dismissed, as foreign to the purposes of this suit. And the cause of Peter Crickard, administrator, etc., against John M. Crouch’s administrator, etc., should be remanded, with leave to the plaintiff to file an amended bill, convening the widow, heirs, and creditors of John M. Crouch, deceased, that his estate may be speedily and finally settled up.
The decree complained of will therefore be reversed, the bill of Thomas B. Scott and the petition of C. II. Scott, administrator of Noah Parsons, deceased, be dismissed, but without prejudice to any proper suit to enforce the judgment of Thomas B. Scott against Z. T. Chenoweth, administrator (I. b. n. of Elihu C. Crouch, deceased, or to settle the estate, and distribute the funds of Rebecca Scott, deceased, or to construe the will, settle the estate, and distribute the funds of Sarah Crouch, deceased. And the cause of Peter Crickard, administrator, against the appellant and others, is remanded for further proceedings. The appellees Peter Crickard, administrator of Rebecca Scott, deceased, and Thomas B. Scott, will pay the appellant his cost about his appeal in this behalf expended.