26 S.C. 358 | S.C. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On or about July 6, 1883, W. C. Forsythe, late of the city of Charleston, South Carolina, departed this life, leaving a will, of which the defendant, Augustine T. Smythe, duly qualified as executor on August 8, 1883. By his will the testator gave to his wife, Rosetta S. Forsythe, all of his real estate for life, with remainder to his daughter, Matilda, now the wife of the defendant, James Cosgrove, jr., and he also gave to his said wife alsolutely all his household furniture, silverware, &c. To his son, Samuel W. Forsythe, he gave his mercantile business, including his stock in trade, bills, books, and notes connected therewith. To his son, James Adger Forsythe, a resident and citizen of the State of North Carolina, he gave a pecuniary legacy of five thousand dollars, and to his brother, Alexander W. Forsythe, and his sister, Ellen Jane Forsythe, both of whom reside in Ireland, he gave pecuniary legacies of one thousand dollars each.
Soon after the will was made the testator took his son, Samuel W., into partnership with him, and the mercantile business was thereafter carried on under the name of W. O. Forsythe & Son. At the time of his death the testator appears to have had on deposit, to .his individual credit, on the books of the firm of W. C. Forsythe & Son the sum of seven thousand dollars, and this seems to have been the only fund available for the payment of the pecuniary legacies, all the other personal assets, except the
The negotiations with the legatees residing in Ireland having proved unsuccessful, the executor demanded of Samuel W. Forsythe the payment of the sum of two thousand dollars, necessary to satisfy these legacies, together with the interest on the same, and the amount was accordingly paid to the executor on February 14, 1885, who thereupon promptly informed the Irish legatees that the money was in his hands ready to be paid over to them upon the execution of proper receipts and discharges. The executor receiving no reply to these communications, again wrote said legatees on April 3, 1885, to the similar effect. On April 10, 1885, the executor was formally notified of the claim of the plaintiff in this action against the estate of his testator, which she had neglected to present within the time preseribedby law under the advertisement to creditors which had been duly published by the executor. Thereupon the executor promptly
Subsequent to the commencement of this action, it seems that Samuel W. Forsythe, not being very successful in the management of the mercantile business, ivas induced to secure to his brother, J. Adger Forsythe, the amount which he had become responsible to him for on account of his legacy. Accordingly on May 6, 1885, Samuel W. Forsythe executed a new note to J. Adger Forsythe, in lieu of the one given in June, 1884, in satisfaction of his legacy, and secured the same by a mortgage on his stock of goods. It is alleged, and the fact is so found by the master, that at the time this mortgage was executed it was the understanding of the parties that it should operate as a security to indemnify Mrs. Rosetta S. Forsythe against certain liabilities which she had assumed for one McComb, though this understanding was not incorporated in the mortgage. In pursuance of this agreement, when the mortgage was foreclosed and the stock of goods sold under it in June, 1885, for the gross sum of four thousand dollars, the sum of two thousand dollars was applied to the relief of Mrs. Rosetta S. Forsythe from her liability above mentioned, and after the payment of sundry expenses, only fourteen hundred dollars remained for J. Adger Forsythe, which is the total amount of cash actually received by him on account of his legacy.
One of the facts found by the master upon the undisputed evidence adduced in the cause, was that J. Adger Forsythe “has
It appears that the executor has fully accounted, and the balance found to be in his hands, amounting to about two thousand dollars, has been, under an order in this cause, deposited in bank to the credit of this case, subject to the order of the court herein.
The master, to whom it was referred to hear and determine the issues in this case, made his report, finding that the plaintiff had established her claim to the amount of $1,999.04, with interest from June 1, 1883 ; that she Avas entitled to payment out of the fund now under the control of the court; and that the legatees, Alexander W. Forsythe and Ellen Jane Forsythe were entitled to a decree against J. Adger Forsythe for contribution in the proportion Avhich $1,400 bears to $2,000, the amount actually received in cash by J. Adger Forsythe being only $1,400. This report, with the exceptions thereto, was heard by Judge Witherspoon, who, in a short order, overruled the exceptions and confirmed the report, making it the judgment of the court.'
From this judgment the defendants, Alexander W. Forsythe
Before entering upon the consideration of these questions it is, perhaps, proper first to determine what weight, if any, shall be given to the additional fact presented since the argument here in the agreement filed by the counsel, a copy of which is set out above. Whether an appellate tribunal, whose jurisdiction is limited to a review of what occurred in the court below, is at liberty to consider any fact, even though admitted by counsel, which was not presented to that court, may admit of grave question. This court has no original jurisdiction, except in certain cases, of which this is certainly not one; and if we were to undertake to decide a case upon facts not presented to the tribunal wdiose judgment we are called upon to review, we might be regarded as usurping a jurisdiction not conferred upon us by the constitution. This seems to us very much like a case of after-discovered testimony, in which it has been held that this court has no jurisdiction, the extent to which we have gone being to suspend the appeal, upon a proper application and a proper showing for that purpose, to enable a.party to move the Circuit Court — the proper tribunal to which such a motion should be addresed — for a new trial upon the ground of after-discovered testimony. But in this case no such application, and no such showing, has been made. Inasmuch, however, as the question has not been argued, and
Proceeding, then, to those questions, it seems to us that the first raises only an issue of fact. For although the statute of limitations was pleaded in the answer of the appellants, yet it is not mentioned either in the exceptions to the master’s report or in the grounds of appeal, and is not pressed in the argument. We presume, therefore, that the plea of the statute was abandoned as untenable; but whether abandoned or not, we think it quite clear that it could not be sustained under the facts established in the case. Regarding the first question, then, as one of fact, under the well settled rule which has been so often applied that we need only make a passing allusion to it, we think it manifest that there is no ground upon which we can disturb the finding of the master concurred in by the Circuit Judge. There certainly was testimony which, if believed, would be abundantly sufficient to sustain the plaintiff’s claim, and when that is the case, this court would rarely, if ever,-interfere with the finding below.
As to the second question, there can be no doubt that a creditor may, when necessary to secure satisfaction of his claim, pursue a legacy even after it has been actually paid over to the legatee. We do not, therefore, think it material to inquire whether the executor had assented to the legacies to these appellants, or as to the effect of his recall of such assent, after he was informed of the plaintiff’s claim, and before the money was actually -paid over. Here is the fund in the hands and under the control of the court, and it is needless to inquire who may have the strict legal title to it; for if it is to be regarded as still rightfully in the hands of the executor, then unquestionably it is applicable to the payment of the plaintiff’s debt; and if, on the other hand, the legatees should be regarded as having acquired the legal title to it by the assent of the executor to their legacies, it may still, either in whole or in part, be made applicable to the payment of the debt.
Recognizing this superior right of the creditor, and that no legatee is entitled to receive any portion of his legacy to the detriment of a creditor, the Court of Equity will not remit a creditor to an uncertain and, perhaps, vain pursuit of other legatees, when it has in its hands and under its control a fund from which the debt can be promptly realized, but will require the legatee, who would otherwise be entitled to the fund, to seek contribution from his co-legatee. These views, we think, are fully supported by the authorities cited by counsel, especially the cases of Fripp v. Talbird, 1 Hill Ch., 142; McMullin v. Brown, 2 Id., 457; and Singleton v. Moore, Rice Ch., 110. We do not think, therefore, that there was any error in adjudging that the plaintiff was entitled to payment of her claim out of
The only remaining inquiry is as to the proportion of such contribution. We have seen the amount of the legacy Avhich J. Adger Forsythe Avas entitled to receive under the terms of the Avill, and being sui juris there is no doubt that he could accept in satisfaction of the amount due him, either the note of the executor or the note of any other person, or any other species of property ; and if he did so, it would as effectually extinguish his claim as legatee against the estate of the testator as if he had received satisfaction in gold or silver dollars. True, he might have demanded that the amount of his legacy should be paid to him by the executor in actual cash, but he was not compelled to do so; and Avhen he voluntarily received the note of his brother Samuel in satisfaction of Ms legacy, and acknoAvledged the same in Avriting by his release under seal to the executor, whereby the executor was authorized to charge, and did charge, the same as actual cash in his accounts as such executor, upon which he has been alloAYed the usual commissions upon money received and paid out, Ave think the transaction must be regarded as a payment in full of the legacy. The fact that by reason of the vicissitudes of trade, or from other causes, the thing received as money has, in the course of time, turned out to be of much less value than it was supposed to be at the time it was taken, cannot affect the legal aspect of the transaction. Its character Avas fixed on June 16, 1884, when J. Adger Forsythe accepted the note of his brother as cash in full payment of his legacy, and acknowledged the same by his release under seal, and what has subsequently occurred cannot be allowed to alter its legal character.
Suppose that J. Adger Forsythe, instead of accepting the note of his brother in satisfaction of his legacy, had received from him a conveyance of a lot on Avhich there was a fine building, the value of ivhich was fairly estimated at five thousand dollars, and the building should be destroyed within tAvelve months after the transaction was consummated, whereby the value of the property became seriously impaired, surely the Joss would fall entirely upon J. Adger Forsythe, and he Avould have no right to
Now, if it had been made to appear, and the master had so found as a fact, that at the time when these legacies became payable, the assets applicable for that purpose were insufficient to pay the same, then, perhaps, the legatee, J. Adger • Forsythe, Avould not be held accountable for more than what he actually received, or what he might, by the exercise of due diligence, have realized, even though he may have previously accepted the note for the full amount under the belief that the assets would prove sufficient to pay all the legacies in full. But there is no such finding by the master, and the testimony does not warrant such a conclusion. On the contrary, the inventory and appraisement showed that the assets were sufficient, and such appears to have been the belief of both the executor and Samuel W. Forsythe, judging from their representations to the appellants, when they were endeavoring to induce the appellants to accept the notes of Samuel W. Forsythe in satisfaction of their legacies. It is true that the executor was not then aware of the existence of the plaintiff’s claim, and may not have known of the purpose of the two brothers to divert a portion of the assets to the relief of their mother, but Samuel was aware of all this. It may be, therefore, that the deficiency in the assets, which has led to this controversy, may have been due entirely to the kindly, but what has proved to be injudicious, indulgence extended to Samuel W. Forsythe by J. Adger Forsythe, and their commendable desire to relieve their mother from a liability which was pressing upon her. If so, however much we may be disposed to sympathize with such an exhi
The executor, understanding his duties as such fully, was proceeding properly and promptly to the settlement of the estate according to the terms of the will, and while unwilling to throw any obstacles in the way of any family arrangements the parties might be disposed to make for the relief of one of them, and, on the contrary, showing every disposition to facilitate such arrangements as far as he could safely and properly do so, is certainly not in default. He stood ready to enforce the payment of the amount necessary to satisfy the legacies, and was only deterred from doing so by the voluntary acceptance by J. Adger Forsythe of his brother’s note in lieu of the money, when he very properly demanded and received from him the proper evidence of satisfaction in full. And'when the appellants demanded their money, declining the proposition made to them in behalf of Samuel, he at once collected the money and promptly notified the appellants. And, as the event has proved, it would probably have been much better for all parties concerned if the executor had been allowed to proceed in the usual way to the settlement of the estate, without any attempt on the part of Samuel W. Forsythe to obtain further time for the payment of the amount due by him, by the arrangement made with his brother.
Under this view of the case, we do not deem it necessary to consider the question raised in the argument of counsel for appellants, whether it was competent to show by parol evidence that the mortgage given by Samuel W. Forsythe to J. Adger Forsythe, though not so appearing on its face, was really intended to secure Mrs. Rosetta S. Forsythe as well as J. Adger Forsythe. For, even granting that such was the understanding of the parties at the time the mortgage was executed, we do not see how it could affect the question which we are called upon to determine. The fundamental inquiry is, whether J. Adger Forsythe is to be regarded as having received payment in full of his legacy ; and as we have said that must be determined by what occurred on June 16, 1884, when he accepted the note in payment of his legacy, and acknowledged satisfaction in full by his release under seal.
But in addition to this, even assuming that .the agreement was made as claimed, and that it had the same force and effect as if it had been formally incorporated in the mortgage, we do not see how it could benefit J. Adger Forsythe. The liability which that agreement was designed to secure through the mortgage was a liability of Mrs. Rosetta S. Forsythe, with which, so far as the evidence discloses, neither J. Adger Forsythe nor Samuel W. Forsythe had any legal concern. It was, therefore, an arrangement by which these-two brothers voluntarily allowed a large portion of the assets (as it happens, exactly the amount of the two legacies to appellants — two thousand dollars) to be diverted from the payment of a debt, for which such assets were liable, to the payment of the debt of a third person for which neither of them were responsible. ■ It was practically a gift to Mrs. R. S. Forsythe of that much money, which was properly applicable to the note of J. Adger Forsythe.
But we again repeat, we do not think that the taking of the mortgage, or what was done under it, has any real bearing on the question we are called upon to determine. The real inquiry being whether J. Adger Forsythe has received payment in full of his legacy or only in part, we think it must be determined adversely to the position taken by him, upon the principle that anything is payment which is accepted as such; and the testimony conclusively showing that on June 16, 1884, he did accept the note of his brother for five thousand dollars in full payment and satisfaction of his legacy for that amount, and acknowledged the same by his writing under seal, he must be regarded as having received the full amount of his legacy, and therefore liable to contribution upon that basis.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be so modified as that the appellants shall be entitled to a decree for contribution against their co-defendant, J. Adger