46 W. Va. 480 | W. Va. | 1899
In 1875, James W. Trahern and John F. Trahern ex-écuted a bond, as administrators of James Trahern, deceased in which John England and William Nestor were sureties. In a chancery suit brought in 1876, in the circuit court of Barbour County, by Francis White, executor, etc., against said administrators and the heirs of James Tra-hern, to administer his estate for payment of his debts, a decree was pronounced, in 1880, finding the administrators in arrear in a certain sum for assets in their hands, and directing the payment out of the same of two debts, — one to Bradford of five hundred and thirty-one dollars and fifty cents, and one to Brown of seventy-seven dollars and forty-three cents,' — which debts were later assigned to Joseph N. B. Crim. Jojm England died leaving land, part óf which he devised to his sons, Jasper and James England, and part he directed to be sold, and its proceeds divided among certain of his heirs. William Nestor died leaving land, which descended to his heirs. In February, Í886, Crim brought the chancery suit'now in hand for several purposes, particularly to subject to his debts the land devised to Jasper and James England by their father, John, and the land left by Wlliiam Nestor in the hands of his heirs, and to subject some purchase money in the hands of Lawless, a party who purchased land devised by England to be sold, and to make the England legatees, who got money from such land, refund the same for the payment of his debts. Jasper England defended, but James England and the Nestor heirs did not. The court dismissed the bill, and Crim appealed.
The first defense made by Jasper England presents the question of the effect of the decree in the White suit in favor of Bradford and Brown for their debts, now owned by Crim, and declaring that they were chargeable upon the personal assets of James Trahern, deceased, and. finding in the hands of his administrators a sum sufficient to pay those debts, and decreeing that out of that fund his administrators should pay those debts as primary charges upon that fond. John England, the surety in the bond, not being a party to that suit, but the administrators being parties, what was the force of that decree upon England, as a surety in the bond, to show that sufficient assets were in the hands of the administrators to pay those debts, and to show that those debts were valid debts binding those assets, and therefore should have been paid by the administrators? Does that decree bind England? If it does, his lands are chargeable with, the debts. The general law is that a judgment against an administrator or executor for a debt, or a decree for a balance in his hands, is conclusive iipon the sureties in his bond, though they are not parties. The Supreme Court held that “sureties in an administration bond are bound by a decree against their administrator finding assets in his hands, and nonpayment of them- over, to the same extent to which the administrator himself is bound. They cannot attack collaterally a decree against him on such a subject.” Stovall v. Banks, 10 Wall. 583. See 2 Brandt, Sur. section 580; 2 Black, Judgm. section 589; 1 Freem, Judgm. section 180. But in the Virginias it is not conclusive, but onlyfrlrna facie. State v. Nutter, 44
Counsel for England say that John England was dead! when the debts arose, meaning when the administrators gave their notes therefor. I see no force in this fact. When-he signed the bond, he undertook for the administration-, of the assets by his principals, whether he was dead or-alive, during the administration; and, if Bradford and Brown became entitled to payment out of the assets during the progress of administration, how can it matter whether-
I come now to the question whether the land claimed by Jasper England is liable to these debts. I confess that, up to this point in this opinion, I have written under the impression that it was liable, but a re-examination has changed that impression. My trouble was uncertainty as to the land claimed by Jasper to have been given him by his father; for, both as to sales and to gifts, there must be legal certainty in the contract of sale or gift, both with reference to the terms of sale and the description of the property. Mathews v. Jarrett, 20 W. Va. 415; Gallagher v. Gallagher, 31 W. Va. 9, (5 S. E. 297). In the former case the court held as too uncertain in description for enforcement a sale of “ten acres of land on the west side of the -branch on the ICeeny place, where Mathews now resides.” In Westfall v. Cottrills, 24 W. Va. 763, a sale of “40 acres off the Spring Fork and of my tract of 147 acres on Beech Fork” was held too indefinite. These two- cases hold that “-where neither the contract nor" proof identifies the tract or boundaries of the land, nor refers to anything by which it may be identified with reasonable certainty,” it will not be executed in equity. In the present case, John England, owning a tract of land said to- contain two hundred and one acres, in 1866 gave Jasper, as he
Having gotten rid of the question of certainty a.s to the •description of the land, the next question is, has Jasper England shown a right to the land which would enforce
Next, as to the land devised by John England to James England. I cannot see how the bill was dismissed .as to this land. James England did not answer. His case is different from Jasper’s. He was not put in possession, but continued living with his father in the house on the land given him by the will, until his father’s death. He made no improvements. Hence, if a gift were made to him, his possession was a mere continuance to dwell with his father a,s before, not a possession referable alone to the gift. His land is liable to Orim’s debts. The land left by William Nestor, a surety in the bond, in the hands of his heirs, is liable to Orim’s debts. So is any balance in the hands of James Lawless, the purchaser of the land sold under the will of John England, and proceeds -of its sale in the hands of John England’s executor. So are the legatees of John England liable for what they derived from the sale of his land.
I wrote up the case as to Samuel Moats, as he answered, and Orim’s counsel discussed the case as to him, when 'I discovered that Moats is not a party to the suit, and the bill contains no mat
Reversed.