Pittinger v. Marshall
Pittinger v. Marshall
Opinion of the Court
Oliver S. Marshall complains of certain decrees rendered against him by the circuit court of Hancock County in a certain chancery suit therein pending wherein John E._Pittinger and P. A. Pugh, executors, were plaintiffs and Marshall and others were defendants.
The snit was instituted September rules, 1898, for the purpose of requiring Marshall as trustee in certain deeds of trust executed by Abraham Pittinger, securing certain debts, to render an account of the proceeds of the sale nnder said trusts and pay over the balance due to the' plaintiffs as executors of the last will and testament of said Abraham ■ Pittinger, deceased. On the 9th day of November, 1898, an order of reference was entered by default. The commissioner gave notice by publication that on the 26th day of January, 1899, he would proceed to execute such reference. He then proceeded to execute the reference and continued the same from time to time until the 16th day of March, 1899, when he completed the same. On the 8th day of April, 1899, the court heard the cause on the commissioner’s report and the exceptions thereto of the defendants O. S. Marshall and Ellen Pittinger, overruled the exceptions and entered a decree against Marshall for the sum of seven hundred and thirty-eight dollars and the costs of the suit. On the 22d day of May, 1899, Marshall after notice to the plaintiffs moved the court to
While the defendant Marshall filed no answer, but having appeared and filed exceptions to the commissioner’s report, the decree overruling such exceptions cannot be considered as on a bill taken for confessed, but is an adjudication between the parties that cannot be corrected otherwise than by appeal. Watson v. Wigginton, 28 W. Va. 533. Hence the court committed no error in overruling the motion to correct this decree, for it could 'not sit in review of its own conclusions. The question then presents itself as to whether the court erred in overruling the exceptions to the commissioner’s report.
The second of these exceptions is the most important, and should be first considered. If sustained the decree must be reversed. The other exceptions relating to the evidence and findings of the commissioner will thereby be rendered unimportant, as the commissioner’s report will have to be wholly vacated and annulled.
The exception is as follows: “Because at the time advertised for taking testimony it was impossible for him (Marshall)' to be present, and that he had no notice of any adjournment. Owing to his public duties as a member of the legislature, it was impossible to give any private business attention from the 10th day of January to the beginning of the term of this court.” The session of the legislature began on the 10th day of January, 1899, and lasted until the last of February, forty-five days. The sittings of the commissioner began on the 26th day of January, and he closed his report on the 16th day of March. So that during almost the whole session of the legislature the commissioner was engaged in taking testimony and making up his report. No notice was served on Marshall, but the matter was carried on in his absence by publication. Mr. Marshall was a senator, and as the court judicially knows, was president of the senate engaged in discharging his public duties at the capitol of the State. If there was no law on the subject comity between the different branches of the State government should have been sufficient to have prevented adverse personal action against him while engaged in the discharge of his public duties. Section 5, chapter
In the case of McPherson v. Nesmith and wife, 3 Grat. 237, the court of appeals of Virginia under a statute similar in substance set aside an office judgment against a member of the legislature.
In the present case the commissioner without personal service of notice and in his absence during the session of the legislature when it was impossible for him to be present without wholly neglecting the discharge of his public duties proceeds to hear evidence, settle his accounts, finds a large balance due from him as a trustee and reports the same to court without affording him the opportunity of a hearing. At the next term of court he excepts to the commissioner’s report for this reason and the court overrules the exception and decrees against him according to such finding. The finding of the commissioner is just as much within the purview and intention of the statute as any other trial. It is therefore irregular and illegal, and should have been set aside by the court.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Pittinger and Pugh, Executors v. Marshall
- Status
- Published