77 Va. 806 | Va. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court :
The contest here is as to the real or supposed conflict between the decree of 1874, as affirmed by this court in 1879, and the subsequent decree of December, 1880. The record in both cases is before us, and together must he looked to for a projmr determination of this case. It will be seen, therefore, that this case must turn mainly, if not exclusively, upon the question, “Is the said decree of 1880, in conflict with said former decree of 1874, as affirmed by this court by its decree aforesaid, pronounced in 1879?” Or, in other words, “Was said last named decree a final decree and as such affirmed by this court so as to preclude the appellees as to the matters decreed in their favor by said decree of 1880, from which this appeal is taken ?”
The suit of Lingle and others v. Cook’s adm’rs, &c., and others, was brought in 1866, by certain of the legatees and devisees of said Cook, against his administrators and others, for the purpose of having a settlement of the administration account of his estate, and a distribution of same among them. In the succeed
First. Who, and to what extent, among the several administrators and their respective sureties were chargeable with the assets of the testator’s estate.
Second. That as to the liability, sought to be charged upon the defendant, Robert S. Harnsberger, as purchaser of certain bonds from the estate, referred to in the cause, the said Harnsberger was not liable to account for same, his purchase having been in good faith, for valuable consideration, without any notice of any intended devastavit on the part of the administrators, if any was intended.
Third. Affirming the report of said commissioner, refusing to allow commissions to the administrators because they had failed to settle their accounts as required by law.
Fourth. Allowing, as reported by the commissioner, credit to the administrators for certain investments in Confederate bonds.
• Fifth. Allowing the claim of W. C. Kiblinger and others, special legatees under the will of the testator, their claim of $1,082.76, with interest from the 1st of April, 1873, as prayed for in their petition filed in said cause.
Sixth. Holding that inasmuch as it was conceded that George
Seventh. That the amounts going to the administrators, Robert .B. Cook and Joseph H. Conrad, in right of his wife, as legatees of said testator, being in their hands as administrators, as well as the amount going to George W. Miller, should not be included in the amount thereinafter decreed to be paid to the general receiver.
These seven distinct clauses constitute, in the language of the decreé itself, the principles thus far upon which the court below was proceeding, seem to comprehend a definite settlement of the questions therein considered. But said decree does not stop here; on the contrary, in the succeeding eighth clause thereof, the decree proceeds: “That it being suggested that there is some uncertainty as to whether all of the legatees or their representatives have been ascertained with entire accuracy, and there being no question that upon the principles of this decree, there is due to the legatees of John Cook, deceased, the aggregate sum of $44,520.14, according to the statement marked (R. H. T.) made by the court, and ordered to be made a part of the record, and which is based upon Master Commissioner Newman’s statement Ho. 3, showing the amount paid to the distributees, and
This contention finds complete refutation in the very language of the decree relied on as final. It does not even give costs. Its language, so far from importing finalty and leaving nothing to he settléd, in the broadest and most unmistakable terms, sends the cause back to the commissioner, with instructions to take, state and settle a further distribution account, and a further account of the fund to the credit of this cause, &c. And in the
The fundamental error which lies at the root of the appellants case is, in assuming, without warrant, and in the face of the plain terms of the decree, that it is a final decree, and the appellees are concluded thereby, when those terms indelibly stamp it as an interlocutory and not a final decree. Hence, from his standpoint, the counsel for the appellants lays down the proposition, which no one will deny, that the effect of the appeal from said decree of October 3d, 1814, was to bring up the whole proceedings in the cause prior to the appeal, and that the affirmance of said decree by this court is final and cannot in any way
In passing, it must be admitted that the language in said eighth clause in reference to statement “R. H. T.” made by the court, and ordered to be made a part of the record, “and which is based upon Master Commissioner Newman’s statement No. 3, showing the amount paid to the distributees ” and the amount yet due from the administrators, “which statement the court doth approve,” is, in view of the marked character, &c., general scope and purpose of this decree, in other respects, to say the least, unintelligible; but this so far from fixing the decree as final, should have the opposite effect.
Nothing further seems to have been done in the court below, until after the decree of affirmance here, when the commissioner returned his report under said decree of 1814, charging Confederate treasury notes paid to certain legatees dollar for dollar, and others who happened to be beyond the Federal lines, with their shares as paid by the administrators to the sequestrator, under compulsion; the details of which need not be here set forth. It is sufficient to say, that report was excepted to, the exceptions sustained, and the report recommitted with special instructions for alternate statements; in obedience to which instructions the account was restated and reported; and the circuit court of Rockingham adopted and confirmed the commissioner’s statement No. 3, which charged the legatees inside the Confederate lines with the scaled value of the Confederate treasury notes when paid to them, and the foreign legatees in the same way with the amount sequestered in their names; and in that way admitted both classes to share equally with others, and thus effectuating the testator’s intention; and the said
The fact has already been adverted to, that in the report of the commissioner made prior to the decree of October 3, 1874, the shares of the foreign legatees were treated as having been paid to the Confederate States sequestrator, and that certain other of the legatees were charged with the Confederate treasury notes paid them, at their nominal value. It is true that the court below in rendering the decree of October 3, 1874, allowed the administrators credit for the amounts (nominally) thus paid by him; and however averse this court might be now to go even to the extent it did go in affirming, to that extent, the court below, yet it is plain for many reasons that the credit thus allowed the administrators, under the peculiar circumstances, rests on other and much weightier considerations than the act of spoliation sought to be visited upon these foreign legatees, could stand upon. Newton v. Bushong, 22 Gratt. 629. The administrators making payments as it were at the point of the bayonet, could well be heard to excuse themselves for acts which would have amounted to a devastavit, but for 'the compulsion under which they acted. But on the other hand it would be harsh and manifestly unjust to deduce therefrom the right to exclude these foreign legatees from a just participation in the estate so far as not wasted; and equally unjust to the legatees who received Confederate States treasury notes to charge them with the nominal value in full, and thus practically exclude them from participation in the bounty intended for them as well as the others. However, the law as laid down by the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Williams v. George Bruffey’s adm’r, 6 Otto, 176, holds that the sequestration laws of the Confederate States were null and void, and did not forfeit money due to citizens of the United States residing outside of the Confederate States. What we have said does not conflict necessarily with anything settled by the former decree of this court affirming the said decree of October 3, 1874. Nothing of
As to the point made by counsel for the appellant, that the right asserted by the appellees in the court below could only have been brought forward by petition or bill of review, it is only necessary to say that the decree of October 8, 1874, being merely interlocutory and the court retaining the cause, and directing important inquiries essential to a final decree disposing of the whole cause, it was competent for the appellees to raise the questions as they did, by exceptions to the commissioner’s report at any time before final decree. Steptoe’s ex’or v. Steptoe and others, 1 Mun. 339 ; Mackey, ex’or of Fuqua v. Bell, &c., 2 Mun. 523 ; Smith v. Blackwell, 31 Gratt. 291. In every view the decree appealed from is right and the same must stand affirmed with costs to the appellees, which is ordered to be certified to the said circuit court of Eockingham county.
Decree aeeirmed.