38 S.C. 41 | S.C. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Thomas M. Peeples departed this life intestate on February 1, 1888, and soon thereafter, February 6, Rowland W. Peeples filed his petition in the Probate Court of the County of Colleton, as follows: “1. That he is a sou of the late Thomas M. Peeples, deceased. 2. That the said Thomas M. Peeples died intestate on February 1,1888, leaving a considerable personal and real property, and that as no one has administered his effects, and they may be wasted, wherefore, your petitioner prays that letters of administration may be granted to him on the said estate. (Signed) Rowland W. Peeples; Edwards, Pro Bet." Whereupon, after due notice in accordance with law, on February 23,1888, letters of administration were granted to the petitioner, to which there was no dissent, and from which there was no appeal.
On May 9, 1888, something more than two months after this
The probate judge heard testimony, including alleged copies (the originals having been destroyed by fire) of a record and decree of divorce rendered in the County of Columbia, of the State of Florida, on December 4,1857, containing, among other things, “An order and decree, that the said Thomas M. Peeples be, and is hereby, forever divorced from the said Caroline Peeples, and the bond of matrimony heretofore existing between them be, and the same is hereby, dissolved and forever annulled,” &c.; and, also, as to the subsequent marriage in form of the said intestate, Thomas M. Peeples, to Sarah Kellar, in the State of Florida, on February 27, 1858, who, after their intermarriage, had born to them a number of children, of whom the said Rowland W. Peeples was one. The judge of probate
From this decree of the probate judge, dismissing the petition, Mrs. White appealed to the Circuit Court of the county; and the case coming on for trial before his honor, Judge Izlar, he pronounced a very learned opinion, principally on the important and interesting subject of the foreign divorce and second marriage in form of the intestate, Thomas M. Peeples, as bearing upon the alleged illegitimacy of the administrator, Rowland W. Peeples, one of the issue of the Florida marriage, concluded as follows: “That the decree of the Probate Court in this case be, and the same is hereby, reversed; and that this decree be certified by the clerk of this court to the Probate Court for Colleton County aforesaid, which court is hereby directed to proceed with the cause in that court, in accordance with the views herein expressed,” &c. From this decree, Rowland W. Peeples, the administrator, appeals to this court
The argument at the bar was unusually full, exhaustive, and instructive upon all the points, including the questions growing out of the foreign divorce and second marriage of the intestate. But from the view which the court takes, the latter question as to the force and effect of the foreign marriage is not necessarily involved. That is a question of the gravest importance, affecting, as it must, the policy of the State in reference to the important subject of marriages contracted within the State; and as the question arises here only incidentally, and is not necessary to the decision of the case, we will not go into the subject now; as Chancellor Dunkin said in Hull v. Hull, 2 Strob. Eq., 1.74: “Few subjects are more difficult, few questions more perplexing, than the effect of a foreign divorce.” The case in hand is simply a claim for administration, in which there is no question as to the right of property, except possibly the commissions of the administrator. It is not even an appeal in a regular contest for the administration; but the letters having been previously granted without objection and without appeal, the subsequent application of Mrs. White is really a direct impeachment of the judgment appointing Peeples — the precise question being, whether the judge of probate erred in refusing to revoke the letters previously granted to Peeples; and as all the facts were perfectly well known to the parties when the letters were granted to Peeples, it would seem that the matter must resolve itself very much into the question whether there was imposition, frand, or essential error in the original grant of the letters of administration to Rowland W. Peeples. In order, however, to prevent any confusion or misunderstanding upon the subject, we state in limine and- distinctly, that nothing contained in this judgment is intended as a ruling in any respect upon the subject of the foreign divorce or its consequences.
In Cole v. Dial, Adm’r, 12 Texas, 100: “Where a stranger and the next of kin filed applications for letters of administration, and the latter withdrew his application, whereupon the former was appointed, it was held that the next of kin thereby waived his right to the administration, and could not come in afterwards, under the statute, and have the first appointee removed and himself substituted.” In this case Judge Wheeler, in delivering the judgment of the court, said: “In the grant of administration, the law gives the preference to the next of kin and certain other enumerated persons, but that is a personal privilege which the party, if he think proper, may decline to exercise. The application of the appellee, in the absence of any one having a legal preference, gave him the right to administer. It appears that his application was pending, when the appellant applied for the grant as next of kin. When the
Without ruling any thing as to the force and effect of the foreign divorce, the judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court, in so far as it required the judge of probate to revolee the letters of administration on the estate of Thomas M. Peeples, deceased, he reversed, and that this decree be certified by the clerk of this court to the Probate Court of Colleton County.