20 S.C. 412 | S.C. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by the plaintiff to subject a tract of land, in the possession of the defendants, to the payment of an alleged debt of their ancestress, Elizabeth Day, deceased. The demand was stated in the complaint to have arisen out of the following facts, in effect: That Elizabeth Day had been the guardian of Mary Jackson, her granddaughter, and S. D. Day, her son, and received their estates; that T. S. Powers, John Day and plaintiff were sureties on the guardianship bond, of whom plaintiff alone survived; that she made no settlement with her wards, and died on or about
B. F. Day and Rebecca Moore answered the complaint, denying that they were in possession of the land, and demanded, for that reason, that the action be dismissed as against them. Mary Sheppard did not answer, and S. D. Day alone resisted the demands of plaintiff. There was no personal property left by Elizabeth Day, and there has been no administration on her estate.
The answer of S. D. Day raised no issues upon any of the-matters alleged in the complaint, except that he denied information as to the alleged payment to Mary Sheppard, and set up a defense in regard to the effect of the compromise made between him and the plaintiff, denying the allegations of the complaint, in relation thereto. His answer states that the compromise of the indebtedness of the plaintiff was as follows : “ The plaintiff was liable as surety on the bond of Mrs. E. Day, as guardian of the defendant, on which there was due the sum of $741.63, with interest from January 1st, 1872. This indebtedness the defendant agreed to compromise for the sum of $400, to be made up-■to him as follows: The plaintiff was to pay the said defendant. $50 in cash, and the balance, $350, was the sum agreed upon
Upon these issues the cause was heard and determined by the Circuit Court in favor of the plaintiff, who was adjudged entitled to the relief prayed, and the land was ordered to be sold for the payment of his demands. The defendants appealed from this decision, upon the grounds stated in the brief, as follows: “1. Because his Honor erred in ordering the tract of land, containing forty acres, in the possession of S. D. Day, to be sold to refund the amount paid by plaintiff on his liability on the bonds of Mrs. Day, as guardian of S. D. Day and Mary Sheppard. 2. Because his Honor erred in not holding that the said tract of land was part of the estates of the said wards, and not subject to sale for Mrs. Day’s debts. 3. Because his Honor should have dismissed the complaint, as the defendants were not in the possession of any descended estate from Mrs. Day.”
The Circuit Court has determined the questions of fact raised by the pleadings in favor of the plaintiff. The decision is well •sustained by the evidence, and will not be disturbed by this court. From the facts so determined, it follows that the plaintiff has a valid demand against the estate of Elizabeth Day for the sums of money paid him as surety in settlement of her liabilities as guardian.
It is claimed by appellants that no valid claim was established by the plaintiff, for the reason that there must have been an accounting first had before the payment by the surety of the alleged liability of the guardian could operate to charge the latter. There is no doubt that such is the general rule, and if the defendants here were only heirs-at-law, there might have been, under other circumstances, some ground for its application. But the liability of Elizabeth Day, discharged by the plaintiff,
As for the liability of the land, Appellants insist that Elizabeth Day, their guardian, invested the funds of her wards in the purchase of the lands in question, taking titles of the same in her own name, and that a trust resulted to them, in consequence, by virtue of which they claim the land, not as heirs-at-law, but in their own right under this trust. This ground was not taken in the Circuit Court, and there is no foundation for it in the pleadings, and objection is máde by the counsel for the respondents, that the questions so raised cannot now be considered. The authorities cited in support of the objection would seem to support it, but we prefer to dispose of the subject upon its merits. The evidence upon this point, as contained in the “Case,” is as follows: “That Elizabeth Day executed her note on December 4th, 1860, to Walter S. Richardson, agent for James Richardson, for the sum of $1,278.75, for the purchase-money of the land in question, with T. S. Powers and John Day as sureties; that she took title to herself and lived on the land till her death in 1874 • that she was appointed guardian of her wards, and gave bond February 28th, 1861; that among other things, W. S. Richardson testified that he knew that Mrs. Day had invested in the land, said forty-four acres, her wards’ money; that S. D. Day and Mary Jackson lived with their mother and grandmother, on the land, till her death ; that Mary Jackson, now Sheppard, continued to do so till her marriage in 1880, when she left, and that S. D. Day has, since the death of his mother, continued to live on the land, and is now in possession of it.”
It will be seen that the purchase of the land was made by Mrs. Day, and the title vested in her before she became the guardian of defendants. This, therefore, is not a case of a trust
Nevertheless, it appears that this land was paid for, in part at least, with money of the wards of Mrs. Day. Under such circumstances the cestui que trust is entitled to the 'money or the the land, at his' option. Lench v. Lench, 10 Ves. 517 ; Lewis v. Madocks, 17 Id. 58. Says Mr. Story: “ In cases of this sort the cestui que trust is not at all bound by the act of the other party. He has, therefore, an option to insist upon taking the property, or he may disclaim any title thereto, and proceed upon any other remedies to which he is entitled, either in rem, or in personam. The substituted land is only liable to his option. But he cannot insist upon opposite and repugnant rights.” 2 Eq. Jur. 1262.
From the facts here, it appears that the defendants, Mary Sheppard and S. D. Day, elected to proceed against the surety on the guardian’s bond, and have received from that source satisfaction of their claims. It is manifest that this exercise of their right of choice operates to confirm- the title of Mrs. Day, and to divest it of the trust which they might otherwise have enforced against the land. Their possession, therefore, is as heirs-at-law and not under the alleged trust. This being the nature of their possession, they hold as tenants in common with their co-heirs, and the plea of B. F. Day and Rebecca Moore, denying that they are in possession, is negatived, for the possession of one tenant in common is the possession of all. Jefcoat v. Knotts,
"We perceive, therefore, no error in the judgment of the Circuit Court. It having been established that the plaintiff had a valid demand against the estate of Mrs. Day for money paid by him as surety on the guardianship bond in discharge of her liability as guardian; and it also having been established that the land in question was vested in her, and descended to the defendants as heirs-at-law, the judgment of the Circuit Court could not have been otherwise.
It is ordered and adjudged that the appeal be dismissed; that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed, and the case remanded to that court in order that the judgment of the same may be carried into effect.