84 Va. 435 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The object of the litigation in this cause was the settlement of the estate of William M. Hume, deceased, late of Fauquier county, the ascertainment of his debts, their character, priorities, and liens, and for the distribution of the assets according to law.
It appears from the record, that, William M. Hume was sheriff of Fauquier county from 1st of July, 1852, to 25th of April, 1872, except during the period of the war, when there was no sheriff in office in the said county. W. M. Hume died, intestate, August 12th, 1872, and Joseph H. Uelson was appointed and qualified as his administrator on 4th December, 1872. Hume owned no real estate at his death. His estate, wholly personal, consisted of judgments owned by him, balances due to him by his deputies, notes and other choses in action.
The debts due by him at his death consisted of a large amount du'e to the State for taxes for which he was accountable and in default, fiduciary debts due by him as sheriff, administrator, &c., judgments against him on which executions of ji. fa. had issued and gone into the hands of the officers and thus had acquired “liens by deliveiy,” and judgments and general debts for which there was no lien.
One of these judgments was a judgment in the name of the President and Directors and Company of the Farmers Bank of Yirginia, plaintiffs, v. W. Flowewee, W. M. Hume, and John Strother, for the sum of $4,658 48, with interest from February 5th, 1856, and $21 58 costs; which judgment had been assigned to Luther P. Spilman, and by him had been assigned conditionally to John A. Spilman. To enforce payment of this judgment, L. P. Spilman had in Hume’s lifetime commenced a suit in chancery against Hume in his own right,
A. H. Payne, as receiver of Shackelford & Spilman, also filed a creditor’s bill for the same purpose. The court finally dismissed all the aforesaid suits, except that of Payne, receiver, v. Hume's administrator, as all the objects of the other suits could be adjusted in this.
It is claimed, though not proved, that a large part of the debts due to Hume by his deputies were for taxes which the said deputies had collected, and had not paid over, and for which Hume was in default to the commonwealth.
Nelson, administrator of Hume, was the only solvent surety on Hume’s official bond, for the years ’70-72, and was liable for any default in those years not made good out of the estate. Nelson made collections from these deputies and applied the money so collected to the payment of the amounts due the commonwealth for taxes, as being, in his opinion, the first class of liabilities under the statute of Virginia, and thereby exonerating his liability as the only solvent surety of the said sheriff, Hume.
There was an order of reference by a decree entered in the cause December 17th, 1877, directing the master commissioner to settle and report an account of the actings and doings of said Joseph H. Nelson, as administrator of W. M. Hume, deceased, to report all the assets of the said estate in the hands of the said administrator, and the debts outstanding, and their priorities. After a searching investigation, and numerous reports by various commissioners, a report was returned, which charged the administrator of Hume with all the collections which he had made from the deputies, and made them applicable to his debts generally.
Exceptions filed to this report by Hume’s administrator
This litigation is, in fact, a contest among creditors for priority in the disbursement- of an estate greatly inadequate to the payment of all its liabilities.
It is material, first, to ascertain the order of priorities in which the assets of Hume’s estate are to be disbursed by his administrator; and one of the main questions to be determined is, whether the statute (Code 1873, ch. 126, sec. 25,) gives the State any priority in the disbursement of an insolvent decedent’s estate, except for the taxes due from the insolvent himself, individually as a tax-payer, which have been assessed on his property; or whether the statute gives priority to the State as a creditor of a tax-collector for taxes collected and not paid over. The language of the twenty-fifth section of chapter 126 is, that in the settlement of the liabilities of an insolvent estate, there shall he first paid debts due the Hnited States; second, taxes and levies assessed upon the decedent
It is plain, from the language of this provision, that the State has a lien on Hume’s estate only for the tax due by Hume personally, and which had been assessed previous to his death; and has no lien on Ms estate, as a deceased defaulting sheriff for taxes collected and unaccounted for by him. Yet, while under the statute the State stands toward Hume’s estate only as a general unsecured creditor to receive its dividend with the other general creditors, we think that the doctrine of “ ear-marking ” does apply to the moneys in the hands of Hume’s deputies, collected by them on the tax-bills due to the State placed in their hands, and which they have acknowledged and jtaid as the State’s money to Hume’s personal representative to be paid, through him, into the treasury of the State.
These specific collections in the hands of the deputies, voluntarily paid by them, not as a part of Hume’s estate, but as the collections made by them of tax-bills due the State, are within the reason of the rule of “ ear-marking,” and we think, therefore, that the circuit court did not err in deciding that J. H. Nelson, administrator of W. M. Hume, deceased, had the legal right to apply the several sums of money collected by him from the deputies of Wm. M. Hume, sheriff, to the debt due by the said Hume, as sheriff, to the State of Virginia—to the exclusion of the other creditors of the said William M. Hume.
' It appeared, in the progress of the cause, that subsequent to the rendition of the judgment in the name of the Farmer’s Bank against Hume, assigned to Luther R. Spilman, and by him, to John A. Spilman, Hume had in 1862 a considerable sum of money to his credit as a depositor in the Alexandria Branch Bank—all of which was lost by the insolvency of the Farmers Bank of Virginia, caused by the war; and the administrator of Hume contends that this deposit in the Branch Bank should be allowed as an offset to, and discharge or extin
"We find no error in the decree complained of, and the same is affirmed.
Decree aeeirmed.