22 W. Va. 303 | W. Va. | 1883
John W. McCreery, executor of the last will and testament of J. B. Underwood in April, 1881, filed his bill in the circuit court of- Raleigh county alleging, that the personal estate of his testator was insufficient to pay the debts of the estate, and praying, that the accounts of said executor be settled, that the creditors of the estate be convened, and that after the incoming of the report of a commissioner a sufficient amount of the real estate to pay the debts be sold, if the personal
The proper notice was given, the account was taken, and report was made, to which there were no exceptions, and the same was by the decree of October 31, 1881, confirmed. The decree ordered, that the land be sold to pay the debts, and that the undivided one half of a tract of one thousand four hundred and fifteen acres be sold subject to the widow’s dower, and that she was entitled to dower in the proceeds of th,e sale oí a tract of one hundred and one and one half acres after paying the balance of purchase-money due thereon. The lands were sold, and report was made' and exceptions wére entered by the defendants, the widow, Mary J. Underwood, and M. M. Cole and Lina Cole, his wife, the latter being an heir at law of J. B. Underwood, deceased. The exceptions were, first, that the lands were sold at a ruinous sacrifice; second, that the court erred in decreeing the sale before .definitely ascertaining the amount of the personal assets in the hands of the executor, and requiring them to be applied to the payment of the debts of decedent; and that in any event only so much of the real estate should have been sold as was necessary to pay such deficiency; third, that the sale was decreed before the dower of Mary J. Underwood was assigned; fourth, that commissioner gave no notice of the time and place of taking his accounts.
On the 28th of April, 1882, another decree was entered in the cause. This decree recites ■ that the cause was further heard on the former papers, the report of sale, exceptions thereto, affidavits and counter affidavits, upon the petition for rehearing the two former decrees, the answer thereto, the answer of the said three defendants, and general replication thereto, and, the court refused to disturb the said two former decrees, but by consent of the executor the settlement of his accounts was recommitted to the commissioner to be retaken. The court did not determine the question, whether it would confirm the sale of the one moiety of the one thousand four hundred and fifteen 'acres, but overruled the exceptions as to the sale of the one hundred and one and one half acres of land, and provided that the amount, to which the widow' would be entitled in the surplus of the proceeds of said one hundred and one and one half acre tract, should be ascertained.
From the said three decrees, the said three defendants appealed. s
It is assigned as error in the decree of the 28th of June, 1881, that the suit'was prematurely brought by the executor, who had undertaken the trust under the will. This act was in direct conflict with the provisions of said will, which provided that the debts due the testator from all sources -whatever should be collected by his executor, and be applied to the payment of all decedent’s indebtedness, as directed in the second clause of the will. No creditor was then seeking sale
“"When the personal estate of a deceased person is insufficient for the payment of his debts, his executor or administrator may commence and prosecute a suit in equity, to subject his real estate to the payment thereof, as provided in this chapter. The widow, heirs and devisees, if any, and all the known creditors of the decedent shall be made defendants in such suit. If such suit be not brought within six months after the qualification of such executor or administrator, any creditor of such deceased person, whether he has obtained a judgment at law for his claims or not, may institute and prosecute such suit on behalf of himself and the other creditors of such deceased person, &c.’'
Section 7 of chapter 86 of the Code confers upon the personal representative of a decedent the right to bring a suit in equity either before or after the expiration of six months from his qualification, but he cannot bring such suit after six months, if any creditor has, before such representative brings his suit, filed a creditor’s bill as provided for in said section. Reinhardt v. Reinhardt, 21. W. Va. 76,
If the plaintiff here had not brought his suit before the six months, he could not have done so after that time, if a creditor had. filed his bill first. Of course the executor knows more about the condition of the estate, than any creditor or other person, and he is perfectly justifiable in bringing the suit, before a creditor could do so, if the personal property would not pay the debts, and not leave it for the creditors to institute the suit and perhaps put the executor to greater trouble and expense. If the personal estate were insufficient to pay the debts, of course the directions of the testator in the will could have no controlling influence over the executor in the matter.
The second error assigned in the said decree is, that the bill does not show, who were the children, heirs and devisees of said J. B. Underwood.
The statute particularly requires, that the widow, heirs,
The bill for the reasons aforesaid is fatally defective, and the demurrer thereto ought to have been sustained, and the plaintiff given leave to amend his bill. It follows, that the decrees will have to be reversed.
The sale of the two tracts of land will fall with the decrees., The purchasers can get no title, until the parties having an
The several decrees entered in this cause must be reversed with cost to the appellants to be paid out of the estate of J. B. Underwood, deceased; the sale of the two tracts of land must 'be set aside, the demurrer to the bill sustained with leave to the plaintiff to amend; and the cause must be remanded for further proceedings to be had.
Decrees Reversed. Cause RemaNded.