121 Va. 29 | Va. Ct. App. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit is nearly related to the case of Margaret Radcliffe Gooch v. Annie W. Suhor, in which an opinion affirming the order of the Circuit Court of Mecklenburg county has been handed down at the present term. The Old Dominion Trust Company, as curator of the estate of W. H. Gooch, deceased, filed its bill of conformity against the widow, Margaret Radcliffe Gooch, and Annie Wayne Suhor, the only child of decedent, and her husband George L. Suhor, praying the instruction and guidance of the court in the discharge of its duties as curator with respect to matters affecting the estate, to which special attention is directed and which plaintiff alleges cannot be safely disposed of except by the direction of the court.
The case was heard and determined on the bill and a supplemental petition setting up additional facts confronting plaintiff in the management of the estate, and on the answers of Mrs. Gooch both to the bill and petition and exhibits filed with the pleadings. From, a decree ¡taking jurisdiction of the case and granting the relief prayed for, this appeal was granted.
Though there was no demurrer to the bill or petition, yet the answers challenge the right of the plaintiff to maintain the suit and the jurisdiction of the court to grant the relief awarded by the decree, or, indeed, to grant any relief upon the case made by the pleadings.
The bill, among other things, alleges: (1) That plaintiff has collected $40,000 in cash from doubtful securities, and
As remarked, appellant controverts the prop'ostion that any or all of the matters alleged confer jurisdiction upon the court under the pleadings, and strenuously protests against mulcting her interest in the estate with any part of the expense or cost of the litigation. She also insists that the institution and prosecution of this suit violates the supersedeas order in the case now pending in this court. We shall briefly consider these two contentions in the order in which they occur.
1. We have nowhere found the rule with respect to the right of a trustee or other fiduciary to file a bill of conformity invoking the assistance of a court of equity in the administration of his trust, and the reason for the doctrine, more clearly stated than in Perry on Trusts and Trustees. The learned author at section 476-a observes: “As trustees hold the legal title fpr the benefit of third persons, and as the law forbids them from making any profit to themselves from their ¡management of, or dealings with the trust fund, so the law protects them from loss if they act according to law in good faith. And in all cases of doubt as to what the law is, and what their conduct ought to be under it, they
The doctrine of the text is in harmony with the rule of procedure in this State, and is sustained by the uniform course of decision in this court. Osborne v. Taylor, 12 Gratt. (53 Va.) 117, 122-123; Faulkner v. Davis, 18 Gratt. (59 Va.) 651, 677-8; 98 Am. Dec. 698; Leake’s Ex’or v. Leake, 75 Va. 792, 800; Christian v. Worsham, 78 Va. 100; Schroeder v. Woodward, 116 Va. 506, 527, 82 S. E. 192; Shepherd V. Darling, 120 Va. 586, 91 S. E. 737.
In the last named case, decided March 15, 1917, Kelly, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, at p. 453, says: “Although the contention is made by the appellants that Schmelz, as surviving executor, did not have the power to sell the property without an order of court, we are of opinion that, under the plain provisions of the will, he clearly did have this power, and that the same was not in any way affected or diminished by the previous proceedings in the above-mentioned suit of McMenamin’s Ex’or v. McMenamin, et al. But it is equally true that, as executor and trustee, he had the right, notwithstanding such power, to go into a court of eauitv for advice and instruction upon the proposition. Having taken that course in good faith, as we think the evidence shows he did. he is fully protected by the order of the court under which he acted. 2 Min. Inst. (4th ed.), p. 256; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., sec. 1064; 21 Cyc. 88.”
2. The remaining contention is founded upon misapprehension of the purpose of the suit. It in no wise contravenes the supersedeas order in the case of Margaret R. Gooch v. Annie W. Suhor, but its object is to preserve the property of the estate pending litigation, for whomsoever shall ultimately be adjudged the rightful owner. Such is the common practice with trial courts in this jurisdiction. Cralle v. Cralle, 81 Va. 773; Atkins v. Edwards, 83 Va. 316, 2 S. E. 439; Bristow v. Home Building Co., 91 Va. 18, 20 S. E. 946, 947.
The decree appealed from is without error and is affirmed.
Affirmed.