| U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia | Nov 15, 1818
1st. The court will first consider the claim of Anne Barkley on the purchasers. It seems well settled, in modern practice, that the officer who executes an elegit does not put the creditor in actual possession of the land, but gives him only a legal possession, which he must enforce by ejectment. It seems, also, to be settled, that if the actual possession be withheld by the owner of the land, without the fault-of the tenant by elegit, he will have a right to hold over; but if, from the act of the creditor himself, or of a third person, the rents and profits of the extended lands be not received, the creditor cannot hold over, but his estate expires when his debt might have been satisfied. How do these principles apply to the facts of this case?
Prom August, 1800, when the inquest was taken, to some time in the year 1805, when the ejectment was brought, the creditor appears to have acquiesced entirely in the possession of Ronald’s heirs. There is no reason to suspect, that their possession was not with her full assent other than is furnished by the ejectment brought in 1805. It will not be denied, that an ejectment brought within a reasonable time may amount to prima facie evidence, that the possession, thus adver-sarily maintained, was originally adversary; but it cannot be admitted, that the creditor, after this long and quiet acquiescence, can be allowed to say, that she has been held out against her will. In this case, the creditor does not say it. She says, she was not bound to bring her ejectment. If, by this, her counsel intends to say, that she might, for an unlimited time, leave Ronald’s heirs in the reception of the profits, and keep her elegit in force, I answer, that I think the law is otherwise. It has been adjudged and settled, that the estate by elegit continues, not until the debt be actually satisfied, but until it might have been satisfied. This principle is entitled to peculiar respect, where third persons are interested. The creditors of Ronald had rights which could not be suspended or impaired by these arrangements. Nor can it avail Mrs. Barkley, as against the purchasers, that they received the possession from Ronald’s heirs, subject, as they held it, to the elegit. They received a right to the possession, whenever the elegit should, in law, expire, from the creditors at whose suit the lands were sold; and their taking immediate possession, could not alter or postpone the right, unless by special contract.
I think it, then, too clear for controversy, that the profits for the time between the inquest and the service of the ejectment, are to be deducted from the debt, so far as respects the purchasers, in like manner as if they had been actually received. The time between the service of the ejectment, and the deed of January, 1806, may admit of more doubt. The non-delivery of possession, when demanded by the tenant by elegit, does not appear to me to be a tort, for which the guardian is alone personally responsible. The possession being the possession of the infants, continued for them by their guardian, I rather incline to the opinion, that it is such a holding by the infants, as prolongs the term of the elegit. I have felt, and do feel, great doubts on this part of the case. But it must be decided, and I think the objections to this, less weighty than those to the contrary opinion. If the term might have been prolonged, this is the legal effect of the ejectment on the estate by elegit, and by that legal effect the purchasers are bound. 1 doubted, whether the purchasers could be required to take notice of an ejectment, which was dismissed; but, be this as it may, they are bound by the elegit, according to its legal extent, of which they must take notice.
I come next, to consider the claim of Mrs. Barkley, on the lands on the tract of 600 acres in Goochland, which is contained in the deed of January, 1806. This claim is rendered one of peculiar hardship, by the waste and havoc committed by this guardian, on the estate entrusted to his care. To determine, whether any part of the loss, and if any. what part, ought to fall on Mrs. Barkley, requires an attentive consideration of the transactions which have taken piace. 'When the judgment in question was obtained, and the writ of elegit was issued, the land on which it was served, was in possession of
The great objection, generally, to the exercise of the power of a guardian to purchase, is, that he changes thereby the nature of the estate, by converting personal into real estate. Even this- might be sometimes allowed, as would appear from the opinion of the chancellor, in the case of Inwood v. Twyne, 2 Amb. 417. But, in this case, there is no change in the nature of the estate. The whole operation is,' the taking in an encumbrance, in the nature of a lease for years.
If I was of opinion, that this was a case in which a previous application to a court was necessary, I should be much inclined to say, that a contract, which the court would certainly have directed, ought to be protected, as far as respects a third person. But I do not think an application was necessary. The general power of a guardian, in my opinion, extends to it; and. as an application to a court must be attended with expense, there is no reason why it should be made. Had the guardian honestly applied the profits of the term, this transaction could not have been shaken in any court; and for his misapplication of them, the creditor cannot be responsible. I am, therefore, of opinion, that the occupation of the extended lands by the infants, must, under the circumstances of this case, be considered as an occupation under an implied contract, which the guardian had a right to make for them, and that the perception of the profits by him, is, in this suit, to be considered as a perception by them.
If this principle be correct, not much difficulty remains in the case. The land conveyed in trust by Bently for the use of Barkley, was pm-chased by him in his own name,
The result of this opinion is, that the trust estate is bound to Barkley for the balance remaining unpaid, of the value of the extended lands, from the date of the inquest, until the institution of the ejectment, and from the 2Sth day of January, 1806, until August, ISO", when the extended lands were purchased under a decree of this court. That the purchasers under that decree, ought to pay the annual value of the lands by them severally purchased, as estimated in the inquest, until the debt of Anne Barkley might have been made, adding thereto, the time during which the ejectment, brought by Anne Barkley for those lands, was depending. If any loss has been sustained, by the rents of the extended lands, since they were rented out by the officer of the court; that loss must be borne by the owners, unless there be particular circumstances, which should place it elsewhere.
The result of the best consideration the court can give this subject, is, that upon receiving what remains due to Anne Barkley, according to the judgment of the court, and the inquest of the jury, for the time that the extended lands were held by the plaintiffs, with the acquiescence of the said Barkley, John Wickham, the surviving trustee in the deed of January, 1806, ought to convey to the plaintiffs, and that James Pleasants, the surviving commissioner, acting under the decree of that court, ought to be considered as a trustee for Anne Barkley, until so much of her debt as, according to this opinion, the plaintiffs ought to pay, be satisfied, and then to the use of the plaintiffs.
Decree: 1. That the tract of land, containing 600 acres, purchased by William Bently, in January, 1797, and afterwards conveyed by him to Edward Carrington, and John Wickham, was purchased, in trust for the plaintiffs, and ought to be conveyed to them. 2. That Anne Barkley has a lien on said land, for so much of her judgment, under which the lands of the plaintiffs, in Powhatan and Goochland, were extended, as remains unpaid, and is equal to the annual value of said lands, while they remained in possession of the plaintiffs, with the assent of Anne Barkley, amounting, by an estimate made by the parties, to $1.143.46. 3. That the purchasers of the extended lands, Pen-wick, Johnson, and M’Coull, pay to Anne
Our act of assembly authorizes the superior courts of chancery, upon the petition of any of the parties interested, by order of court, made after hearing the parties, to empower the guardian to make or take a surrender of a former lease, or to take or make a new lease as the case may require, and as it shall seem most to the advantage of the infant; out of whose estate any fine that may be advanced, and all other just expenses that may be incurred, in order to obtain a new lease to him. shall be reimbursed; and the new lease shall not only be chargeable with such fine and expenses, but shall remain subject to all encumbrances which the lease surrendered would have been subject to. 1 Rev. Code, 1819, p. 408, §§ 13. 14; Act 1785, from 29 Geo. II. c. 31. In Hedges v. Riker, 5 Johns. Ch. 163" court="None" date_filed="1821-02-14" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/hedges-v-riker-5550447?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="5550447">5 Johns. Ch. 163, the testatrix devised to her executors, in trust, for the sole use and benefit of hej daughter (the plaintiff), the whole income, rents, and profits of her estate, real and personal, subject to the payment of the legacies and dispositions afterwards mentioned: the said rents, &c. to be paid to the daughter during her natural life, for her proper use and benefit, and that of her children, if any, and after her death, to her child or children, in fee. The will empowered the executors, “to sell and dispose of so much of the real estate as should be necessary to fulfill the will.” Upon a bill filed by the daughter, (and her husband.) praying that the executors should be decreed to make leases of portions of the real property, on certain stipulated conditions for the term of twenty-one years, the principal defendants being infants. Chancellor Kent said; That he inclined to think that the words of the will, giving to the executors power “to sell and dispose of so much of the real estate as should be necessary to fulfil the will,” would authorize them to dispose of vacant lots by lease, according to the prayer of the bill, inasmuch as such a disposition was requisite to carry into effect the intentions of the will. That the greater power included the less, and would authorize, in case of necessity, a more confined and limited exercise of the power: That a lease for years was still a disposition of the estate, within the terms of the power; but that without resorting to the power, the general jurisdiction of the court over the property of infants, was adequate to confer the authority. The court stood, as Lord Nottingham observed, in loco parentis: and it was understood to be clearly settled (3 Johns. Ch. 370), that the court might change the estate of infants from real into personal, and from personal into real, whenever it deemed such a proceeding most beneficial to the infants. It was declared by the lords commissioners in Cecil v. Earl of Salisbury, 2 Vern. 224, that the court had often decreed building leases, for sixty years, of infants’ estates, when for their benefit. The prayer of the bill was granted accordingly.
Williamson v. Gordon’s Ex’rs. 5 Munf. 257" court="Va." date_filed="1816-11-28" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/williamson-v-gordons-executors-7384919?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7384919">5 Munf. 257. In that case, St. Clair executed a deed of trust to Clarke, for the benefit of certain creditors of St. Clair, and the deed was duly recorded. Subsequently, St. Clair, being indebted to Gordon by bond, on which suit was pending, agreed to confess judgment, and to secure the payment thereof by a deed of trust on the property conveyed in trust to Clarke. After the agreement was executed, St. Clair confessed the judgment, but did not execute the deed of trust. Some months after this agreement was entered into, Williamson purchased of St. Clair, with the assent of the trustee, the property conveyed to Clarke, without notice of the agreement between St. Clair and Gordon, and St. Clair conveyed the same to Williamson, by deed of bargain and sale. The deed to AVilliamson was not recorded, until five years after its execution; but possession was immediately delivered to him, and he. thereupon, undertook to pay, and actually paid, the debts, to secure which, the deed from St. Clair to Clarke was executed: but Clarke never made any release or conveyance to Williamson. Gordon filed his bill against St. Clair, (without making Williamson a party,) to carry St. Clair's agreement into effect, and the chancellor decreed a sale. The commissioner of the court advertised the property, and Williamson filed his bill of injunction, making St. Clair and Gordon’s executors, parties defendants, praying an injunction, to prevent the intended sale, and a decree quieting the complainant in his possession, or that the money advanced by him should first be reimbursed out of the proceeds of sale, and for general relief. The chancellor, on the hearing, dissolved the injunction, and the plaintiff appealed. The court of appeals said, that the decree of the chancellor was erroneous, inasmuch as Williamson had the preferable right to call for the legal estate of the promises in question, outstanding in the trustee, Clarke, and that he should, consequently, have been protected from the claim of Gordon’s executors: and tiie court decreed, that the injunction awarded to Williamson, be made perpetual, and that he be quieted in his possession. &c.