16 S.C. 171 | S.C. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1865, James A. Johns received letters of administration on the personal estate of James Johns, who died intestate in 1863, leaving as his heirs-at-law, his three sons, Samuel H. Johns, James A. Johns and John B. Johns. In 1864, John B. Johns died intestate, leaving as his heirs-at-law, his widow, M. Jane Johns, and infant- daughter, Lila B. Johns. In 1865, this widow became administratrix of his estate, and subsequently ~W. O. Johns joined her in the administration, to wit, in June, 1878, and has been joined as party plaintiff since the institution of this action, which was begun September 27th, A. D. 1875. In 1866, M. Jane Johns intermarried with John Roberts. Lila B. Johns was at first joined as party plaintiff, but on demurrer the complaint was dismissed as to her on the ground that she was an improper party.
The purpose of the action is to compel James A. Johns to
These are all denied by him, and he further claims that he has long since fully administered the personal estate; rendered his final account to the Probate Court; was, by that court, finally discharged in due course of law, and holds the receipt, in full, of M. Jane Eoberts for the distributive share of her deceased intestate. This receipt is urged in bar of this action, and the Statute of Limitations is also interposed as a defense.
The cause was referred to S. P. Dendy, Esq., as special referee, who found, among other facts, that on February 13th, A. D. 1865, James A. Johns, as administrator, sold, by order of the ordinary of Pickens (then embracing Oconee) district, all the personal estate of James Johns, including negro slaves, on a credit of twelve months, for gold or its equivalent, for the sum $3,862.29, of which $2,665 were for negroes; and of these negro slaves the administrator purchased to the amount of $1,365, and seems to have (like other purchasers) given his note on the usual terms, made payable, we presume, to himself, as we find him in possession of it along with the other sales notes.
Early in November, A. d. 1869, James A. Johns applied to the Probate judge of Oconee for leave to sell the choses in action belonging to the estate of James Johns, and among them these sales notes, none of which seem to have been collected, nor even put in suit. He was allowed, on fifteen days’ posted notice, to sell at or near a place called Bachelors’ Eetreat. After posting, and without advertising in a newspaper (that mode being specially dispensed with), the sale was made at McWhorter’s store, in Bachelors’ Eetreat, in the presence of a very small number of. people, but seems to have been made on December 17th instead of November, as was ordered. There is some confusion and uncertainty about these two dates.
At this very quiet sale, the administrator purchased, for fifty cents, the note of $1,365 against himself, and a number of others at the sum, in the aggregate, of $1.67. Sloan Dickson, a friend of the administrator, purchased the balance of the notes for $55.75, and soon thereafter turned them over at said price to
On November 2d, A. d. 1869, the administrator, James A. Johns, published in .the Keowee Courier, a weekly paper, published in the town of Walhalla, that on December 1st then next ensuing, he would apply to the judge of Probate of the county of Oconee for his final discharge. The application, however, was not made until March 7th, 1870, but no other notice than the above was published. On this application, the judge of Probate, without special citation of the parties in interest, who had no notice other than by the aforesaid publication, proceeded to examine the administration accounts of James A. Johns and adjust the same. He decreed that he be finally discharged upon the payment to M. Jane Roberts, then sole administratrix of the personal estate of John B. Johns, deceased, the sum of $179.08, as the balance, less advancements, decreed to be due to the estate of the said John B. Johns. On April 19th following, the payment was made and a receipt taken over the signatures of M. Jane Roberts and her husband, John Roberts. On March 7th, when the accounts were audited by the judge of Probate as aforesaid, he granted to James A. Johns his final discharge.
Mrs. M. Jane Johns had removed to the State of Georgia in 1865, and in 1866 she intermarried with John Roberts. She has resided in Georgia since 1865, but made several visits to South Carolina, and whilst here talked much with her brother-in-law, James A. Johns, about his administration and the condition of the estate. He represented to her the difficulty of collecting the notes, and on more than one occasion offered to divide them with her. He went so far as to place some of them in her hands for collection, but failing in her efforts to induce the makers to pay, she returned them to him. After her return to Georgia she wrote to James A. Johns, urging a settlement, and suggested a sale of the notes. The homestead exemption
It was after the receipt of her letter that the administrator sold the assets and obtained his discharge as aforesaid.
In the testimony reported by the referee it appears that since the sale of these assets and their purchase by the administrator he has realized a considerable amount of money from collections thereof — perhaps ten times the amount which he paid for these notes — and has a fair prospect of realizing still greater amounts.
As matter of fact, the referee finds further that the administrator, James A. Johns, was not guilty of fraud in procuring his final discharge, but that the proceedings were irregular and do not estop her.
He concludes, as matters of law, that the Statute of Limitations began to run from March 7th, 1870, when the final discharge was rendered, and that, having six years to run, the plaintiff is not barred, she having commenced her action September 27th, 1875 ; that the letters dismissory cannot act as an estoppel within the period fixed by the statute against allegations of fraud and mistake, and that the same are void for irregularity in procuring the final decree and discharge; that the defendant, Samuel H. Johns, is concluded by the arbitration and settlement with the administrator; that the sale of the choses in action, December 17th, 1869, whilst not fraudulent, was irregular, without- authority of law and void, and, finally, that the administrator, James A. Johns, is liable to account to the plaintiffs, M. Jane Roberts and W. O. Johns, for the share of John B. Johns, deceased, in the personal estate of his father, James Johns.
On reviewing this judgment of the referee, the Circuit judge, agreeing with him in his findings of fact, overrules the referee in his conclusions of law. He holds with the referee that S. H. Johns is bound by the settlement made by him with the administrator upon an arbitration had between them, and duly accepted and carried out. As S. H. Johns does not appeal, this
As to Mrs. M. Jane Roberts, the Circuit judge holds that she is bound by the settlement of April, 1870, when she acknowledged to have received payment in full of the share of the personal estate of James Johns to which her deceased husband, John B. Johns, was entitled. He says that “ she cannot now claim that the sale of the assets was without authority of law and void, because she previously assented to and requested it.” He further holds that the Statute of Limitations began to run against her, not from the date of the alleged final discharge of the administrator, nor from the date of the receipt which she gave him, but from December 17th, A. D. 1869, when the assets were sold by him; this being, as he says, the only fraudulent act alleged by her against him.
For these reasons the complaint is dismissed. From this judgment the appeal of the plaintiffs brings the cause to this court.
The Circuit judge does not pretend to vindicate the conduct of the administrator, James A. Johns, nor to uphold his settlement with M. Jane Roberts as fair and just. This cannot be successfully done. The facts as stated above, if they do not shock our sense of fair dealing and good faith, certainly do show a maladministration and mismanagement of a high trust at variance with the fundamental rules of law by which a fiduciary must be controlled in the performance of duty. And whilst both referee and judge concur in exonerating James A. Johns from fraud in his administration, it is evident from the testimony that it is charity to the administrator to discharge him from actual or positive fraud. But from the charge of that constructive fraud arising from neglect of duty and mismanagement of his trust, he cannot escape. Whether intentionally or not, he has, under the pretended forms of judicial proceedings, so administered his trust as to derive very great profit to himself and to inflict serious injury upon the estate of John B. Johns. Under no circumstances will the law sanction this, but will readily grant relief to the losing party, unless that party has, by imprudent conduct, willfully closed the doors of justice,
The application for the order of sale was ex parte and furnishes no such protection to him at whose instance alone it was procured as will shield him from the claim of those who were not parties to it to have its good faith investigated. He was at that time clearly chargeable with the $1,365 and interest — the amount of his purchase of negro slaves at his own sale — and no request of Mrs. Roberts to sell the notes, nor order of the Probate judge, can be construed to authorize or to contemplate the sale of this debt.
So far as this administration is concerned, it is manifest that, in the opinion of the administrator at least, it was to his personal advantage that contracts for the sale of negro slaves should be deemed invalid. He had an interest and a motive, therefore, not to urge other purchasers to pay such claims, and to this motive may be referred his utter failure to use diligence in striving to enforce payment by suits. Nor can his apparent frankness in placing some of these claims in the hands of Mrs. Roberts for collection be advanced in his defense when we consider that she was without authority to collect, and her foreseen failure in her efforts to do so was well calculated to elicit from her a request to sell, or, in any manner available, to realize whatever might be from them.
In the eye of the law this administration was conducted in a
The Statute of Limitations did not begin to run against the plaintiffs’ right to an accounting until the administrator had done some positive act manifesting a clear intention to terminate his trust. This was never done until March 7th, 1870, when he obtained from the Court of Probate his final discharge, and within the statutory period from that date this action was begun, as is admitted by counsel for both plaintiffs and defendant.
It is error to hold that the statute began to run from the date of the alleged fraudulent sale of notes. That was but a single act of administration, and how the administrator himself would deal with it, and what position in regard thereto any of the parties in interest would take, could not be certainly known, nor need be made known until the attempted putting off the trust. Then, and not till then, are parties in interest presumed to have knowledge of the claim of the administrator as to any and all' items of his account and special 'acts of administration. Any other rule would subject cestuis que trust to serious hazards in suffering administrations to progress to maturity before demanding a general and full accounting.
We are likewise of opinion that Mrs. Roberts is not concluded by her receipt of April 19th, 1870. A receipt and release are always open to explanation and impeachable for fraud or mistake.
This receipt, covering the share due to the estate of John B. Johns, as ascertained in the ex parte accounting of March 7th, 1870, was prepared by the administrator and forwarded to Mrs. Roberts at her home in Georgia. She was greatly in need of money, and had, for some time, been importuning James A. Johns for a settlement. She sent her husband with the receipt, signed by her and him, to "Walhalla. On his arrival there,
Upon a careful review of the testimony, we do not think that this settlement, so disadvantageous to the plaintiffs, and so favorable to the administrator, James A. Johns, was made upon a fair disclosure of the facts, nor can we avoid the conclusion that much tact was exercised by the administrator in effecting a . settlement known by him to be profitable to himself at the expense of his cestui que trust, whom he well knew to be ignorant of important facts and not informed of her full legal rights.
To put aside such a settlement, it is not necessary that there should be actual fraud or intended wrong where the parties occupy a fiduciary relation. The advantage reaped by the trustee at the expense of an uninformed beneficiary is sufficient ground to justify the opening of the accounts. Under the circumstances of this case, this receipt is not an estoppel, and must be disregarded as a settlement.
But it is urged that the final discharge by the Court of Probate, after the required statutory notice, has the force of a final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, and, unappealed from, is binding upon the plaintiff, M. Jane Roberts. She resided in the State of Georgia, and it is not pretended that she was cited, or in any other way, actually or constructively, notified to appear and show cause, except by this publication.
The language of the act is as follows: “It shall not be lawful for any of the judges of Probate in this State to grant a final discharge to any executor or executrix, administrator or administratrix, trustee, guardian or committee, without he, she or they first giving notice in some county newspaper, (if there should be no newspaper published in the county, then in some public journal having the greatest circulation therein,) for the space of at least one month, that on a day certain, he, she or they will apply to the judge of Probate of the county wherein his, her or their bond is filed, for a final discharge.” Gen. 8tat., Ch. XXIV., § 4.
It is contended by the defendant’s counsel that this notice is all the citation of parties in interest necessary to be given, and
This is not the construction proper to be given to this act. Such an interpretation would evidently lead to mischief, whereas the purpose of the act is to guard against hasty and premature discharges from the serious office of a trustee.
The act makes this publication of notice a condition precedent to such discharge, but in no way dispenses with the important proceedings on final accounting required by law before this act. It does not dispense with any formalities previously required, but prescribes this one in addition to existing prerequisites. Persons, to be bound by the judgment of the Probate Court upon the final accounts of a fiduciary, must be made parties thereto by proper proceedings and established forms of citation or summons. At the end of such proceedings, a final discharge is still not to be granted by this court of limited jurisdiction unless this prescribed notice, by publication, shall be or shall have been given. That legislation would be open to grave objection which should provide that any persons, but especially infants, lunatics and non-residents, may be made parties to an action in a court, and bound by its judgment, by the simple publication for one month of a notice in a newspaper requiring them to appear and show cause. Yet this act makes no exception in favor of infants, lunatics, parties under disabilities and non-residents.
An act will not be so construed as to increase rather than correct an evil intended to be remedied, unless the words of the act, in plain language, or by necessary implication, exclude a more reasonable interpretation. There is no such difficulty here, because the words of this act, their implication, as well as the mischief to be remedied, all concur in leading to the construction we have given it. The law here is evidently intended as an additional protection to cestuis que trust, instead of a deprivation of the protection they already enjoyed against trustees, under well-considered acts of legislation, and under the wise rules by which the practice of our courts were and are and ought to be regulated.
It is not intended, however, that this judgment shall do more than determine the liability of the defendant, James A. Johns, to account to the plaintiffs. The principles by which the details •of that accounting are to be governed are all left 'open for •adjudication by the court below in passing upon the itemized account.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded to that court for such orders and proceedings as may be necessary to carry into effect this judgment.