13 S.E.2d 124 | S.C. | 1941
In making this order, to clearly present the situation, the facts and the law upon which it is based, it will be necessary to outline and repeat certain portions of prior orders issued by me herein.
It appears from the record and the testimony herein that Homer H. Peeples died on May 3, 1930, leaving of force his last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate in the office of the Judge of Probate for Hampton County. This will appointed Thomas R. Peeples, Walter C. Peeples and Thornwell K. Peeples as executors and all three
This action was commenced by the plaintiff above named on June 28, 1939, and the lis pendens in the action was filed with the Clerk of Court on the same date. Among other things, the action was primarily to require the executors to make a full and complete accounting of their acts and doings, to make disbursement of the money and property of said estate, and for partition in kind or a sale for division of the Homer PI. Peeples fourteen hundred (1,400) acre tract of land situated in Hampton County. The record shows that all defendants were properly served. The action was also for the appointment of a Receiver for said estate returnable before me on July 6, 1939.
On said date, George Warren, Esq., appeared for plaintiff, Eugene M. Dickinson, and for the defendants, PI. E. Dickinson and H. G. Dickinson. Thornwell K. Peeples appeared in person for himself and also J. W. Manuel, Esq., appeared for him. Messrs. Perry Brannen and Hugh O. Hanna appeared for the remaining six defendants and also for Thomas R. Peeples and Walter C. Peeples as executors. Also the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, filed his reply
At said hearing, Thomas R. Peeples and Walter C. Peeples, the two active executors, stated that they would be glad to make a full, complete and true accounting and offered to have an audit made by a public accountant and filed in the case.
In the order signed by me on July 21, 1939, a Receiver was denied and said two executors ordered within thirty days from the date of the order to make a full and complete accounting- of their acts and doings as executors aforesaid and to file a copy of said return and accounting with the Clerk of this Court and a copy thereof with the plaintiff or his attorney.
Within the time provided, the firm of Eaton, Saussy & Company, public accountants, made up an audit dated August 18, 1939, which covered the period from May 3, 1930, to July 31, 1939. This audit was filed with the Clerk of Court in due time and Mr. Hanna stated before me on the hearing on May 8th, that he delivered a copy of said audit to J. W. Manuel, Esq., and that J. W. Manuel, Esq., had stated to him that he in turn made a copy and delivered same to Thornwell K. Peeples, which was a long time prior to the reference held in this matter. The return of Thornwell K. Peeples filed on May 8, 1940, shows that he had a copy of this audit and there was no denial by him that it was furnished to him, through his attorney, J. W. Manuel, Esq., a long time prior to the reference held in this matter.
The record next discloses that a notice was issued by Messrs. Brannen and Hanna, for the six defendants represented by them and as attorneys for the two executors, directed to George Warren, Esq., attorney for the three Dickinsons, and directed to the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, giving notice that they would apply before me at eleven o’clock A. M., on December 19, 1939, at Allendale, South Carolina, and would at said hearing offer testimony to show that the lands could not be partitioned in kind and would
“You will please take further notice: that an order of reference as to all other issues pending and involved in this action will be applied for and that a motion will be made that B. T. DeLoaeh, Clerk of this Court, or some other suitable person, be appointed as Special Master to take all testimony, pass upon said matters of law and fact and report the same back to this Court at an early date.”
A notice was issued at the same time directed to all parties plaintiff and defendants, that Hugh O. Hanna, as attorney for certain judgment creditors, would apply at the same time to have said three judgment creditors of the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, made parties to this action to the end that these three judgments against Thornwell K. Peeples and the lien of said judgments as against the interests of Thornwell K. Peeples in the real estate be determined, passed upon and adjudicated in this action. George Warren, Esq., attorney for the three Dickinsons, made answer and return to said notice, consenting that the order of reference be made and consenting that an order be issued providing for sale of the tract of land and division of the proceeds among the parties according to their rights, provided the order provide that the tract of land be sold for not less than Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars.
The record shows that both of these notices with reference to having three judgment creditors of the defendant,' Thornwell K. Peeples, made parties to the action and the notice of application for order of sale of the' tract of land and for the appointment of a special Master and reference as to all other issues was served upon the defendant, Thorn-well K. Peeples, at his residence at 210 E. Gaston Street,
The record shows that the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, was properly served and these records were before me in the hearing on May 8, 1940, and Thornwell K. Peeples was present and no denial or contention was made by him that he was served with this notice and I find and hold from the record that he was properly served with said two notices.
Pursuant to said two notices, the matter came before me at eleven A. M., at Allendale, S. C., on December 12, 1939'. On said date I issued a lengthy order, reciting all happenings and events until this date and reciting that the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, did not appear at said hearing and the hearing was held up by me from eleven A. M., until eleven-thirty A. M., and that at twelve M.- the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, had not appeared or filed any pleadings to the notice. Affidavit of Hugh O. Hanna, Esq., is in the file showing that he was in default thereto. This order issued by me on December 12, 1939, authorized B. T. De-Eoach, Clerk of Court, to make proper sale of the home tract of land, after due advertisement, etc., on first Monday in January, 1940, and that the tract of land be sold for not less than the sum of Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars. This further,
“Ordered, adjudged and decreed, that all other questions involved and arising in this action be and same hereby are referred to B. T. DeLoach, Clerk of Court, as special Master, to pass upon the same, to take testimony and report the same to this Court with his findings of fact and conclusions of law, together with any special matter.”
That said order further specifically set eleven o’clock A. M., December 21, 1939', at the Court House at Hampton, 5. C., as the date for said reference as special Master, had been filed and that my order dated January 6, 1940, was filed in this cause with the Clerk of Court on January 10, 1940, and notice that a copy of my said order of January 6, 1940, was attached to the notice. The file shows that this
The record shows that on or about March 5, 1940, Walter C. Peeples and Thomas R. Peeples, said two executors, filed with the Clerk of Court in this cause a supplementary return and statement of income and disbursements as executors of the Homer PI. Peeples’ estate from the date of the audit to the date of the return, which was filed as a final accounting. A notice directed to George Warren, Esq., attorney for the three Dickinsons, and to the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, was given stating that this final return had been filed, and copy of same was attached to the notice, with further notice that application would be made before me at Allendale, S. C., at ten A. M., on March 16, 1940, for an order approving said accounting in full and for an order of full and complete discharge. The return of the defendant, Thorn-well K. Peeples, before me on May 8, 1940, shows that he received copy of this notice and copy of the statement on March 13, 1940. Before March 16, 1940, Thornwell K. Peeples interviewed me in person and stated that he wanted to be present at said hearing or desired to file return and ob
After reading the return and objections of the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, Mr. Hanna first stated that his position was that any of the matters with reference to the accounting that was made prior to August 18, 1939, the date of the audit, was res adjudicata and could not now properly be raised or considered and that any matters covered in the final and supplementary return could be considered or passed upon at the time of the hearing and further orally stated that the position of the executors was that all matters had been properly accounted for and that the several matters referred to by Thornwell K. Peeples during the period covered in the audit had been fully gone into at the reference and the books produced showing proper accounting for these several matters, including, by way of specific reference, for illustration, the pension item of One Hundred Thirty-three ($133.00) Dollars. During the hearing before me the original books of accounting were produced showing the credit
The records show that Peeples Hardware Company is a corporation of Savannah, Georgia, and that Thomas R. Peeples is secretary and treasurer, and that Walter C. Peeples, the other executor, is an officer and director thereof, and that Homer H. Peeples had left to each of his eight children an equal number of shares of stock in said corporation, to wit: one hundred twenty (120) shares each and that Peeples Hardware Company, Inc., acted as depository of all estate funds and that the accounts of the executors of the estate were kept with or in the corporation books. The record further shows that Homer H. Peeples kept no bank account but that Peeples Hardware Company acted as his depository or bank and the audit and return of the executors shows that at his death, among the assets accounted for by them, was the sum of Twenty-three Thousand ($23,000.00) Dollars on deposit with said corporation. The attorney for the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, stressed that the books of the corporation were furnished and not the books of the executors for the audit to be made. The record shows that the books of the corporation contained and reflected the accounting of Thomas R. Peeples and Walter C. Peeples, active executors of the estate.
As pointed out above, the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples, was in default when the order for sale of the home place was taken, and when the order refer
This brings us then to the supplementary or final return as the only matter properly before the Court at the time of the hearing. This covers three items of income, the sale of the home place, the sale of the personal property of Homer IT. Peeples and rentals for the year 1939. While this final return as a matter of bookkeeping has included all income and disbursements, the record as a matter of fact shows that,
Ordered, adjudged and decreed, that Thomas R. Peeples and Walter C. Peeples, as executors of the last will and testament of Homer H. Peeples, be and they hereby are discharged as said executors and their bond is hereby exonerated and cancelled. Further
Ordered, that a certified copy of this order be filed in the office of the Judge of Probate for Hampton County, South Carolina, and that a copy be served upon F. M. Oliver, Esq., attorney for' the defendant, Thornwell K. Peeples.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by Mr. Ci-iiEE Justice Bonham.
This is an action the primary purpose of which was to require the executors of the will of Homer H. Peeples to make an accounting of their acts and doings, to make disbursements of the money and other property of the estate, and for the appointment of a Receiver. A rule was issued to show cause why a Receiver should not be appointed. The return to the rule was heard by Honorable J. Henry Johnson, Judge of the Fourteenth Circuit, who made an order dated July 21, 1939, by which he refused to appoint a Receiver, but directed the executors to make a full and complete re
The order further provided that all other questions involved in the action be referred to the Clerk of Court of Hampton County, as special Master. The special Master filed his report January 8, 1940. March 9, 1940, the executors filed a supplementary report, May 13, 1940, Judge Johnson issued a final order in the matter which contains such a full and clear statement of the history of the case and the litigation that we need not set out the proceedings which preceded this final order. Let it be reported.
It is from this order that the appeal comes to this Court, upon exceptions made by Thornwell K. Peeples. They are six in number and are treated by his counsel, in his brief, as making seven questions.
We are satisfied with the decree of the Circuit Judge, except in one particular: His Plonor ordered that the executors be discharged. It is stated in the order appealed from: “ * * * The sworn return of the Executors and final accounting reports that the interest of Thornwell K. Peeples and funds in the hands of said two Executors due to Thornwell K. Peeples has been subjected to the jurisdiction of the City Court of Savannah, Georgia, through service of summons and garnishment directed to said Executors in a suit pending in said Court in Savannah, Georgia. I, therefore, find and hold that a full, true and correct accounting has been made by Thomas R. Peeples and Walter C. Peeples, as active Executors of the last Will and Testament of Plomer PI. Peeples and that the balance in the hands of them as Executors of said Estate now due to the defend
It is apparent that until this matter now in the jurisdiction of the City Court of Savannah, Georgia, is finally disposed of, it cannot be said that the estate has been finally settled by the executors. The action of that Court might entail further action on their part. It was, therefore, error to give them a final discharge.
For that reason, and that only, the order appealed from is modified; but as it affects all other matters passed on by it, it is affirmed.