19 W. Va. 159 | W. Va. | 1881
announced the opinion of the Court:
In December, 1869, David Dick, Virginia Bragg, Isaac Cales and Bethene his wife, late Dick, filed their bill in the circuit court of Greenbrier county alleging, that in 1857 John Dick died intestate in the said county of Greenbrier leaving his children and heirs at law surviving him, John Dick, David Dick, Joseph Dick, Mary Sogers late Dick,Virginia Bragg late Dick, Bethene Cales, late Dick, who intermarried with Isaac Cales; that Joseph Dick in 1857 in thecounty court of Green-
The plaintiffs by leave of the court on the 6th day of September, 1878, were permitted to amend their bill by making Joseph W. Eox and Mary his wife parties defendant to the bill; and thereupon the said parties by J. W. Harris their attorney entered their appearance and took time to answer. On the 6th day of April, 1871, the court reciting, that the process having been executed and the defendants failing to answer, the cause was heard upon the bill taken for confessed and upon “the answer oí Joel McPherson, guardian ad litem, for the infant defendants, Mary Ann Dick, Elizabeth Dick, David Dick and Ellen Dick; and the cause was referred to a master-commissioner to settle the account of Joseph Dick, administrator
The commissioner filed his report and found the estate of Joseph Dick indebted to the estate of John Dick, principal and interest $1,464.00,
On the 25th of November, 1871, the court confirmed said report. In the same decree the court referred the cause to commissioner John A. Preston to convene the creditors of Joseph Dick and John Dick, ascertain the debts and priorities and report an account between the heirs of John Dick, &o., and to report the different parcels of lands of which Joseph Dick died seized. The said commissioner returned his report on the 4th day of April, 1872. He reports nothing against the estate of John Dick. Nothing further was found against the estate of Joseph Dick. He also reports, that of the indebtedness of Joseph Dick to the estate of John Dick, each dis-tributee is entitled, there being sis including the heirs of Joseph Dick, to recover $246.56. He ascertains that Joseph Dick owned four tracts of land, one of two hundred acres, one of one hundred and ten acres, one of twenty-seven acres .and one of fifty-eight acres. On the 19th day of April, 1872, there being no exception to said report the court by its decree confirmed the same and reciting the indebtedness of the estate of Joseph Dick to the estate of John Dick, and that there was no personal property to pay said indebtedness, appointed a commissioner to sell so much of the said lands as was necessary to pay said indebtedness to the five heirs of said John Dick, being five sixths of the whole indebtedness, the heirs of Joseph Dick being entitled to be credited with the other sixth.
The commissioner reported, that he had sold the tract of two hundred acres and that of twenty-seven acres to Isaac Cales, said Cales paying the portion in cash required and executing his bond with security for the remainder, and to
Austin Handly appeared and answered and opposed the reversal of the decrees. In his answer he says: “ By a decree entered in this cause more than five years ago the bill was dismissed as to him (see the decree) and is final; and that error (if error it be) can only be corrected by appeal
By a decree entered on the 25th of June, 1879, the court reversed the decrees in the cause pronounced in October, 1872, and prior thereto, and referred the cause to a commissioner for a new account, &c., and to settle among others the accounts of Austin Handly, administrator of the estate of Joseph Dick, deceased. The commissioner made the indebtedness of Joseph Dick, to the estate of John Dick, as of November 1, 1877, $828.33, and found Austin Handly indebted to the estate of Joseph Dick as of the same date, $606.91. On the 20th of November, 1877, with a slight correction, the report of the commissioner was confirmed; and the decree provides : “ And the court being of opinion, that the sale made to Isaac Cales by commissioner Davis under a decree pronounced in this cause at the April term, 1872, was null and void, there having been no prayer or facts in the bill filed to authorize any decree for the sale of the lands of Joseph Dick, deceased, but on the contrary the bill prayed for a partition of the lands of the estate of John Dick, deceased, who in fact appears to have had no lands,” and declares said decree a nullity as to the purchase of Isaac Cales, and recommits the report to Commissioner Withrow, to ascertain the rents and profits of the land, which is in the possession of Isaac Cales, and the value of any improvements he had put thereon, &c. On the 17th day of June, 1878, the report of commissioner Withrow was corrected and confirmed, and Isaac Cales was allowed $159.55 for taxes paid and improvements after deducting the rental value of the land, and it was ordered that the land be sold to pay the same, if not paid by the heirs of Joseph Dick. On the 14th day of November, 1878, the court rendered a final' decree in the cause, distributing the fund, &c. From the aforesaid decrees, rendered after October 8, 1872, the defendants, Handly and Cales appealed.
On the 6 th day of April, 1871, the plaintiffs’ bill as to Austin Handly was dismissed. A decree dismissing a bill as to a defendant is as to such defendant a final decree. Sec
The defendant Handly appeared to the notice and in his answer insisted on the statutory bar of five years thereto. The decree dismissing the bill as to Handly had been entered more than six years before the service of said notice. As a notice it was clearly barred. But it is contended by counsel for appellees, that if as a notice it is barred, the court will treat the notice as a bill of review to the said final decree. We cannot so treat it even under the liberal rules as to
chancery-pleadings laid down in Laidly v. Merrifield, 7 Leigh 346 ; Kendrick v. Whitney, 28 Gratt. 646 ; Dillard v. Thornton, 29 Gratt. 392, and Hill v. Bowyer, 18 Gratt. 364, cited by counsel for appellees. The notice does not even mention the decree of the 6th of April, 1871, and no reference whatever is made to it in the notice, except that it gives as ground of error ‘the dismissal of the bill as to Austin Handly/ This was perhaps sufficient as a notice. Handly appeared to it as such and insisted upon the bar of five years. As a bill of review or a petition for rehearing even, I think, it was entirely insufficient. I do not pretend to indicate, that the bill as to Handly was properly dismissed or the contrary. The decree confirming the sale made to Cales and others was rendered on the 8th day of October, 1872. He could not rely on the limitation pleaded by Handly but relied upon his purchase and the confirmation of the sale to him without any attempt having been made before the confirmation of the sale to review the decree under which it was made. A decree confirming a sale of real estate will not be reversed for an error in the decree ordering the sale, when no steps have been taken in the court
In the cause of Beard v. Arbuckle et als. the purchaser was a party to the suit and a creditor, but not the slightest evidence in the cause appears as to any improper conduct on ner part, or any advantage obtained by her by reason of the improper decree of sale. But it is insisted, that the decree of sale was void ; first, because there were infant defendants,' and the cause was heard without evidence. It certainly cannot be seriously contended, that although a decree was made without sufficient evidence, it was void, merely because some of the defendants were infants, or all even were infants. It would be a reason for setting aside the decree because of error; but it certainly could not be said, that such a decree was void. In the second place it is contended, that said decree was void, because.it was not warranted by the object and allegations of the bill, Without discussing the question, whether a decree would be in any case void because not warranted by the object and allegations, of the bill, it is a sufficient answer to the objection made here, that the object and allegations of the bill warranted a decree to sell the lands of Joseph Dick to pay his indebtedness to the estate of John Dick. The bill alleges, that Joseph Dick, one of the said heirs, administered upon the estate of John Dick and wasted the estate. The bill prayed, that his administration-accounts might be settled, so that'Joseph’s estate might be made to pay its liabilities to the estate of John Dick, and that there might be a partition of the lands of John Dick among his heirs, “and for all such other and further relief as to equity belongs,” &c. It seems to me, .that this warranted the sale of Joseph Dick’s real estate to pay the indebtedness to the estate of John Dick, if there were not sufficient personal assets to pay it. The sale made to the appellant Cales must therefore stand.
The decrees rendered in this cause on the the 25th day of June, 1877, on the 20th day of November, 1877, on the 17th day of June, 1878, and on the 14th day of' November, 1878,
Decrees Eeyersed IN Part.
Cause RemaNded.