65 W. Va. 461 | W. Va. | 1909
A mercantile firm, doing business in Parkersburg, under the style of G. W. Niswander & Co., became indebted to Mary J. Plumb in the sum of $1400, for money borrowed. The firm was composed of G. W. Niswander and W. C. Plumb. The- latter was the son-in-law of the former and the son of Mary J. Plumb. Several months before the maturit]'- of the note given her by the firm for the money, Mary J. Plumb died. She was survived by D. S. Plumb, her husband, and W. C. Plumb, her only child and heir at law. She left a will, devising, in general terms, practically all of her property to her son. No provision whatever was made therein for her husband. This will, known to both father and son, was not probated. No administration of the estate was sought by them. On the day of the maturity of'the note, Niswander, together with his son-in-law and partner, and the father of the latter, adjusted the payment of the note by the following writing:
“A statement showing the monies in my hands, the amounts which I have paid out, and the statement of account between M. J. Plumb, deceased, and W. C. Plumb.
By amount received as belonging to M. J. Plumb $1484.00
To amount paid Bently and Gerwig for funeral expenses ..'. $65.00
To Yarley Bros, for carriages, funeral exp. 16.00
To digging grave. 7.00
To C. A. Smith, legal services... 12.00
To McCluer & McCluer; legal services, preparing statement of account . 5.00
$119.50 $1484.00
Leaving a balance in my hands of said fund of.$1364.50 one-third of which amount, to-wit, $454.83 D. S. Plumb will be entitled to, less the amount due from him to the store of $26.11. This will leave the amount net due D. S. Plumb out of the amount aforesaid of $428.72 which is the net amount, which the said D. S. Plumb is entitled to receive out'of the above fund as his interest.
“And whereas, by an agreement between G. W. Niswander and D. S. Plumb, on account of said G. W. Niswander becom his security on an appeal bond and decision rendered against him by E. F. Wilson, Justice of the Peace, in favor of the Star Grocery .Co., to the • Circuit Court of Wood County, it was agreed between him, and the said D. S. Plumb, that he should retain $100 to indemnify him, the said G. W. Niswander until it should be ascertained whether the said justice of the peace should be reversed, and whether the said D. S. Plumb should have the costs to pay or not, and in event the said G. W. Nis-wander does not have the costs to pay, then the said D. S. Plumb is to receive this $100, which the said G. W. Niswander was permitted to retain out of the fund aforesaid, which would leave the amount now which the said D. S. Plumb would be entitled to receive the sum of $328.72, leaving the $100 for the determination of the suit in the Circuit Court of Wood County.
“And it is further agreed on the part of the said D. S. Plumb that the receipt of the $328.72, which he hereby acknowledges is in full of al] claims against the said W. C. Plumb on account of the fund aforesaid, and the $100 will be left in the hands of the said G. W. Niswander for the determination of the suit in the said court.
“And it is further understood and agreed between the said W. C. Plumb and D. S. Plumb that the said W. C. Plumb is entitled to the sum of $909.66, which the said W. C. Plumb agrees is in full of all his claim for the above fund.
“Witness the following signatures and seals this the 1 day of Jan’y, 1903. „
W. C. Plumb, (Seal.)
D. S. PluMB, (Seal.)”
Two copies of this writing were made;, one copy being retained by each.party thereto. By the firm’s checks, Niswander made distribution of the amount of the note, as expressed in the writing recited above. The check to his partner was endorsed back to the firm, for that partner’s credit therein. It will be observed that this distribution was directly according to the statute of descent and distribution.
Soon after this transaction, D. S. Plumb called upon the officers of the Traders Building Association, to which Mary J. Plumb was indebted at the time of her death, and told them of the note and what had been done in the premises. He suggested to them that there was an opportunity to make the money due the association; that his deceased wife had left the amount of the note and that it had not gone into a proper administration of her estate. Later he exhibited to the officers of the association his copy of the writing. Thereupon, the estate of Mary J. Plumb was committed for administration to the sheriff of Wood county. .As such administrator, he instituted this suit in equity against the firm of G. W. Niswander & Co., its individual partners, and D. S. Plumb, alleging that they had combined together to defraud the estate of Mary J. Plumb and cred'-itors thereof, by agreeing to make and by making the division of the proceeds of the note, as above set forth, without the intervention of an administrator. The bill avers that some one without authority delivered the note into the possession of Niswander or into the possession of the firm. It further avers that these parties, “though acknowledging that they had such note, declined to deliver the same to complainant, and declined and refused to permit plaintiff to have a copy thereof or to see and inspect the same, or to give him any memorandum thereof; and complainant says that he has been unable to get any description of said
Defendants, -in resistance, maintain that the note, for valuable consideration, had been assigned by Mary J. Plumb, in her lifetime, to her husband; that the proceeds of the note actually belonged to him; that the note being a negotiable one and properly endorsed, the firm owing the same is acquitted of the indebtedness by a payment of the obligation to one having possession; and that the amount paid to W. C. Plumb therefrom was merely in settlement of what his father owed him. D. S. Plumb'answered and testified that he gave the information to the officers of the building association, and surrendered to them a copy of the writing, because he was drinking and had become angnr with his son and wanted to give him trouble, but that he was a Iona fide owner of the “note by purchase from his wife before her death.
Sufficient has been said for an understanding of the controversy. It is useless to detail more. A decree has been made substantially as sought by plaintiff.. From that decree comes this appeal. We shall briefly consider the assignments against the correctness of the decree. »
It was not error to overrule the objections to the filing of plaintiff’s amended and supplemental 'bill, and to' the petition of the creditor, the Traders Building Association. The-court has sound discretion in permitting amendment or supplement'to fit the developments of a suit in equity, and such- discretion as to the propriety of the time of filing the same.' Hogg’s Eq. Pro., § § 172 et seq321 et se.q. The rule demands that'the identity of the cause of suit be preserved. It was preserved'in this instance. And it was quite proper to allow a creditor to intervene by petition. A fund was sought to be recovered by an admin
Demurrers to the amended and supplemental bill and to the petition were not well taken. What we have said as to the filing of these papers applies here. It may be true that an administrator cannot set aside the act of his decedent on the ground of that decedent’s fraud. But the averments in the amended and supplemental bill that if an assignment of the note to D. S. Plumb was actually made by Mary J. Plumb in her lifetime, it was in fraud of creditors, does not destroy that pleading in its correct particulars. The demurrer to the amended and supplemental bill was to the whole thereof, a part of which bill was good; therefore, it was properly overruled, even if part of the bill was bad. Barton’s Ch. Pr., § 110. At any rate, the allegation complained of is wholly immaterial, since the decree is sustained by the reasonable purport of the evidence and the correct inferences therefrom that no assignment of the note ever took place. But the similar allegation in the petition of the creditor was not out of place. A creditor could assert such fraud. For are these pleadings multifarious as joining several distinct actions in one and asking relief against separate and distinct defendants. They simply tend to one end — the relief sought by the original bill.
The assignment that the final decree is not sustained hy the evidence must also be denied. ■ That decree finds that the note in question belonged to Mary J. Plumb at the time of her death; that Fiswander and W. C. Plumb had notice of such fact at the time of their pretended payment thereof; and that the distribution of the proceeds thereof, as is represented in the writing exhibited, was illegal and void' and constituted no payment of
The reference of the cause to a commissioner -was appropriate.
We affirm the decree, remanding the. cause for the execution of the reference and such further proceedings as may be proper or as to equity may appertain.
Affirmed.