Alderman v. Cooper

185 S.E.2d 809, 257 S.C. 304, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 14, 1971
Docket19337
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 S.E.2d 809 (Alderman v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alderman v. Cooper, 185 S.E.2d 809, 257 S.C. 304, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 253 (S.C. 1971).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This controversy concerns the Will of the late John Hughes Cooper, a well-known member of the South Carolina Bar, which was admitted to probate in 1945. The Will appointed certain relatives as trustees of testator’s estate and charged all of his property with the payment of monthly income to his brothers and sisters and to their respective spouses during their lives. Upon the death of all of the life beneficiaries (or earlier settlement of the estate as provided by the Will), the remainder of testator’s estate was devised to fourteen nieces and nephews to be equally divided among them.

The plaintiff is a niece, and the defendant Charles F. Cooper is a nephew of the testator. The remaining three defendants are nephews and are trustees of the estate. Hereafter, we refer to Charles F. Cooper as the defendant and the other defendants as trustees.

In 1955 and in 1959 plaintiff executed instruments by which she assigned all of her interest in the estate to the defendant, basically, as security for advances made and to be made by her to him. The second of these instruments provided that the assignment should become absolute unless plaintiff should repay all sums advanced, with interest at *308 6%, by March 1, 1965. Then, on April 27, 1966, plaintiff executed an instrument whereby she undertook to transfer all of her interest in the trust estate to the defendant absolutely.

This instrument recited that pursuant to the previous assignment agreements the defendant had from time to time advanced to plaintiff the sum of $55,800.00, and, quoting from the instrument “the said Margaret D. Alderman has not repaid any of said amount, or any interest thereon.” In this equitable action to set aside this instrument for fraud in its procurement and for an accounting, the circuit court found that this recital “is a completely erroneous and inaccurate statement and is shown to be erroneous and inaccurate by the sworn testimony of Charles F. Cooper. Mr. Cooper had in fact repaid himself large sums of money and large amounts of stqcks by appropriating to himself Margaret Aldermans’ distributive share of the John Hughes Cooper estate. In all probability at the time of the signing of this agreement, if the value of the money and stocks that Mr. Cooper had received that belonged to Margaret Alderman were offset against the alleged debt of Fifty-five Thousand Eight Hundred ($55,800.00) Dollars plus interest, Margaret Alderman would not owe Mr. Cooper anything.”

The 1966 assignment was adjudged void, the 1959 security instrument was reinstated (without its time limitation), and the case was remanded to the master to state the account between the parties. The plaintiff is aggrieved by the failure of the co,urt to calculate, from the evidence reported, the amount due her by the defendant, by the court’s failure to award her judgment against the trustees, and by the instructions given to the master for ascertaining the amount due, and only she has appealed. Plaintiff’s principal complaint is that the court’s instructions to the master permit the defendant to discharge his obligation to her, pro tanto, by surrendering stock which he has received in exchange for her stock pursuant to improvident (in the light of hindsight) corporate mergers, and which is not nearly so valuable as *309 was the stock which the defendant acquired from the trustees some ten years prior to the decree. She contends that the court’s findings import conversion of her property by the defendant, and that she is entitled to its value. We think that the foregoing quotation from the decree, and the following additional passages, fully support this contention.

“The difficulty in this case arises from the fact that when Charles F. Cooper and his first cousin, Margaret D. Aider-man, entered into the agreement dated April 27, 1966, on the day after she returned home from the alcoholic sanitarium, Charles F. Cooper and the Trustees of the John Hughes Cooper estate had some substantial important information concerning the financial status of the John Hughes Cooper estate that Margaret Alderman did not have. In addition to this the Trustees of the John Hughes Cooper estate had distributed substantial sums of money and valuable stock to the contingent beneficiaries under the will of which Margaret Alderman was one. Margaret Alderman was not told of the distribution of money or stock by the Trustees or by Charles F. Cooper. She was not paid any money and she was not issued any stock. Any money o,r stock that she would have been entitled to was paid by the Trustees instead to Charles F. Cooper without her knowledge. Neither he nor the Trustees made any accounting to Margaret Alderman and he did not give her any credit on her indebtedness to him as a result of the money and stock that he received that sho,uld have gone to Margaret Alderman. She knew nothing about these distributions of money and stock to her fellows (sic) heirs. She did not know that Charles F. Cooper had received money and stock from the trustees that belonged to her and should have gone to her. These facts stand uncontradicted in the record of this case. Nowhere in this case does Charles F. Cooper or any of the Trustees of the estate claim that anyone ever told Margaret Alderman of the distribution of money and stock to the heirs or of the financial condition of the estate.

*310 “I am completely satisfied that had Margaret Alderman known that the Trustees of the estate had made these distributions of money and stock on her behalf she would have been able to arrange for the payment of her debt to Charles F. Cooper. In fact, considering the value of the cash and the stocks belonging to Margaret Alderman, that are now in Mr. Cooper’s possession, there is the distinct possibility that the debt has in fact, been repaid in full and extinguished. The Master in Equity stated in his Report that Charles F. Cooper owed no special duty of disclosure to Margaret Alderman. I cannot follow this reasoning. When these distributions of mqney and stock were made by the Trustees of the estate and when Margaret Alderman’s money and stock was given by the Trustees to Charles F. Cooper, both the Trustees and Charles F. Cooper owed a duty to Margaret Alderman to disclose these facts to her and to tell her what they were doing with her money and stock and why they were doing it.”

These findings, not having been challenged by appeal, are conclusive. They clearly import such an appropriation by the defendant of plaintiff’s property as to amount to a conversion. Upon the conversion of her property, a cause of action for its value arose in plaintiff’s favor, which could not have been defeated by tender of a return of the property. 89 C.J.S. Trover and Conversion § 86 (1955) ; 18 Am. Jur. (2d), Conversion, Sec. 75 (1965). “In actions for conversion . . ., the general rule is that the measure of damages is the value of the property with interest thereon, and the jury may give the highest value up to the time of the trial. (Citations omitted).” Royal-Liverpool Insurance Group v. McCarthy, 229 S. C. 72, 75, 91 S. E. (2d) 881, 882 (1956).

A court of equity, having assumed jurisdiction in a case, has the authority to grant complete relief by making an award of compensatory damages where appropriate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 S.E.2d 809, 257 S.C. 304, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alderman-v-cooper-sc-1971.