Citation Numbers: 74 Va. 548
Judges: Ardersor
Filed Date: 10/2/1880
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/23/2022
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs in the original bill, had obtained a decree against El etcher H. Mays in the suit of Kyle, guardian, v. Kyle’s heirs, in the circuit court of Botetourt county, for certain sums of money due them severally, payable out of the proceeds of certain real estate, which said Mays, as special commissioner, had sold, and-the proceeds of sale collected, under a decree of the court in said cause, which he had failed to pay over to them; for the payment of which Daniel P. Ewing was bound as his surety, in the bond which he gave as such special commissioner; and they filed their bill m chancery, in the county court of Botetourt, against the said Mays, and his.assignee in bankruptcy (alleging that he was a bankrupt), and the heirs and representatives of Daniel P. Ewing, who .was dead, and others, seeking the recovery of their several judgments, and. that the real .estate of which the said
This court is of opinion that this suit, and the suit aforesaid of Kyle, guardian, v. Kyle’s heirs, were for different and distinct objects, and that the plaintiffs were not restricted, in seeking their relief, to the latter; if they could, have proceeded in that suit. And having brought their suit in the county court for that purpose, which had jurisdiction of the case, the court is further of opinion, that it was competent for other creditors of Ewing, to come in by petition, and ask to be made parties plaintiff in said cause, on the usual terms, and to be allowed to participate in the results thereof; and that proper enquiry be made for all outstanding, unsatisfied debts of decedent’s estate, and of the real and personal assets, and that their debts may be satisfied out of the same.
The court accordingly allowed Ellett & Drewry, and H. & I. G-uggenheimer, to file their several petitions for that purpose, which were filed on the 12th of May, 1873. On the 15th day of July following, H. O. Douthat, the administrator de bonis non of Daniel P. Ewing, deceased, filed his demurrer and answer to the hill of plaintiffs, and on the same day B. M. Allen was appointed guardian ad litem for Cora Bell Ewing, and Anna Janies Ewing, infant heirs of D. P. Ewing, deceased; and the cause was referred to the master to take an account of all liens on the real estate of Daniel P. Ewing, deceased; also the yearly rental value of said estate, and of any other matters deemed pertinent by himself, or required by either party; and to report to the next term of the court. And the cause was removed to the circuit court of said county. The term “ all liens,” in the said
Lucy Ferguson, one of the plaintiffs, 'having died since the filing of the bill, the cause was revived in the name of ~W. B. Simmons her administrator.
On ^be 24th of March, 1874, the cause was heard by the circuit court, on'the demurrer to the bill, which the court sustained; and gave the plaintiffs leave to amend. And at the May rules, 1874, an amended bill was filed in the names of Ellett & Drewry, partners, and H. & I. Guggenheimer, partners, ~W. B. Simmons, administrator of Lucy Ferguson, deceased, and Isabella Rowland.
It is contended by appellants that the paper purporting to be an amended hill is not an amended bill, because it is a departure from the original bill, and makes a new case, both in respect of parties, and in the relief sought. And that the court erred when it sustained the demurrer, in giving leave to amend, instead of dismissing the plaintiffs’ bill; and that the amended bill should have been struck from the file, on motion. This we think comprises in substance the position of the appellees.
The court is of opinion, that although the original bill was not filed as a creditor’s bill, the county court did not err in the order of 12th of May, 1873, allowing Ellett & Drewry, and H. & I. Guggenheimer, on their motion, to file their petitions, and to be made co-plaintiffs with the complainants: and on the 15th of July following, in the reference to a master, to take an account of all liens on the real estate of Daniel P. Ewing, deceased. In Stephenson v. Taverners, 9 Gratt. 398, “A creditor (it was held), has a right to bring a suit for his claim; but he ought to bring it for himself and all other creditors.” The plaintiffs, upon that authority had a right to bring the suit for their claims,
From the time the decree for an account was rendered in this case, it was no longer a separate creditor’s suit, but was a general creditor’s suit; and the petitioners, even from the date of the order of the court making them co-complainants with the plaintiffs, were as essentially plaintiffs as if their names had been
But this court does not perceive any good grounds for the demurrer, in the reasons or causes assigned by the demurrant. To all of them which have not been already sufficiently answered except the plea of the statute of limitations, we think the statute is an answer. It is found in ch. 175, p. 1126 of the Code, § 2, and is as follows : “A creditor before obtaining a judgment or decree for his claim, may institute any suit to avoid a gift, conveyance, assignment or transfer of, or charge upon, the estate of his debtor, which he might institute after obtaining such judgment or decree; and he may in such suit have all the relief in respect to said estate which he would be entitled to after obtaining a judgment or decree for the claim which he'may be entitled to recover.”
And now as to the bar by the statute of limitations. The right of action could not have accrued against Ewing before the date of his bond; which is the 26th of May, 1858. And if the filing of the amended bill, which was at the May rules, 1874, could be regarded as the commencement of the suit, the estate of D. P. Ewing would not be protected by the statute. But by the express authority of Harvey’s adm’r v. Steptoe’s adm’r, supra 805, the statute of limitation ceased to
"We think it is by no means clear, that the plaintiffs, including the petitioners, could not have maintained their case upon the original bill; but waiving that, we do not think that the amended bill is a departure from the original bill, and makes a new case in respect of parties, which has already been sufficiently shown as to adding parties, and we think it did not make a new case by dropping two of the plaintiffs. If they had been paid as was suggested at the bar, or if they had concluded to ivithdraw from the suit for any cause, they had a right to do so, with the assent or acquiescence of their co-plaintiffs. And it does not appear that the defendants were prejudiced thereby; and there was no such connection between their claims and the remaining plaintiffs as was incompatible with their severence. But by withdrawing their claims from the administration of, the fund by the court, they were excluded thereafter from a participation in it; which could not prejudice the personal representative or heirs of Daniel Ewing.
The court is also of opinion, that whilst the amended bill amplifies the statement of the case, and presents it with greater precision and fullness, and with more directness, and with some averments, which were not expressed in the original hill, it does not make a new case from that which was made by the original hill and the petitions. The conclusion is, that the court did not err, in overruling the defendants’ motion to-strike it from the file.
The claim of Ellett & Drewry was not barred by the lapse of five years after the 1st of January, 1869. The institution of their proceeding if not to be regarded as of the date of the filing of their petitions, would date,
The claim of Ellett & Ere wry, though “a mere legal demand, and never asserted and established by a judgment in a court of law,” we have shown was cognizable in a court of equity, to prevent a transfer or charge upon his debtor’s estate, and to obtain all the relief he would be entitled to, after obtaining a judgment or decree.
The court is further of opinion, that, receiving the testimony of Biddlebarger, the evidence falls short of proving that H. & I. Gkigginheimer’s claim has been satisfied.
But we have more doubt about the third assignment of error in the petition of appellants, that infants were not properly represented before the court by guardian ad litem, when the decree was made for the sale of their land. It appears from the record that Charles Bayne, their statutory guardian, was in that capacity before the court, and his joint answer with others to the original bill, in his own right, and as guardian of Cora Bell Ewing, and Anna J. Ewing, infant heirs of Daniel P. Ewing, deceased, was filed by leave of the court on the 12th of May, 1873, the same day that the petitions of the creditors before mentioned, were filed. His answer was sworn to four days before—i. e., the 8th of May—and consequently before their claims were asserted; and it does not appear, that he had ever heard of them at the time his answer was prepared.
The joint answer of Charles Bayne and Mollie his wife to the amended bill is filed, but not in his character as guardian of the infant heirs. A guardian ■ad litem was appointed, as we have seen, for the infant heirs in the original bill, on the 15th of July, 1873. It does not appear from the printed record, that they
The court has deemed it proper under the circumstances, to look into said paper, but there is nothing upon its face or in the record as exhibited to show that it was ever regularly filed, further then merely to put it with the papers; and when that was done, does not appear, except by the supposition of the clerk. It does not appear that it was ever brought to the notice of the court, and not being referred to by any of the decrees, it does not appear that it was considered by the court, or that either of the infant heirs was before it, by her guardian ad litem, either upon the original, or amended bills. They were the parties most largely interested in the decision, and though their answering by guardian ad litem, may be a mere matter of form, the uniform practice in courts of chancery has strictly required it. An infant cannot appear by attorney. When the statutory guardian of the infant is before the court and has answered, and the record shows that his rights have been carefully investigated and maintained, there might be some relaxation of the rule.
The decree was as follows:
This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decrees aforesaid and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the circuit court erred in proceeding to decree against the infant heirs of Daniel P. Ewing, deceased, without requiring an answer from the guardian ad litem, of said infants, it not appearing by the record that any such answer was in fact filed. The said circuit court ought also to have caused an enquiry to be made by one of its commissioners, whether any and what real estate of E. H. Mays was and is subject to the lien of judgments recovered against him by the parties to this suit, or either of them, and especially whether the tract of
And the cause is remanded to the said circuit court, with instructions to have a proper answer filed in behalf of said heirs, if they have not attained their majority, or to require them to answer if they have attained their maj ority, and also to have proper enquiries made with respect to any real estate owned by said Mays, liable to the lien of the judgments aforesaid, and to take further proceedings in conformity with this decree and the opinion of this court.
All of which, on motion of the appellees by their counsel, is ordered to be forthwith certified to the said circuit court of Botetourt county.
Decree reversed.