Allen v. Ruddell

29 S.E. 198, 51 S.C. 366, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 25, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 198 (Allen v. Ruddell) 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
Allen v. Ruddell, 29 S.E. 198, 51 S.C. 366, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 27 (S.C. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

Mrs. Hattie C. Ruddell died about the 31st of March, 1877, seized and possessed of a considerable estate, both real and personal, which she disposed of by her will, bearing date the 26th of March, 1877, a copy of which, as set out in the “Case,” should be incorporated in the report of this case. Of this will the defendant, J. H. Ruddell, was appointed executor and duly qualified as such. The testatrix left surviving her her husband, the said J. H. Ruddell, and four children, viz: Walter G., Alice Norma (who has since intermarried with Paul H. Allen), Julian Munford, and Malcolm Feonard, the last two of whom have died since the death of the testatrix, unmarried and childless, and their shares, by terms of the will, became vested in their surviving brother, Walter G. Ruddell, and their sister, Alice Norma Allen; and thus the plaintiff and the defendant, Walter G. Ruddell, are now entitled to the property devised by the testatrix to her four children.

In the first item of the will, the testatrix directs that her debts and funeral expenses shall be paid by her executor out of her estate as soon after her decease as he may find it convenient to do so. The next item reads as follows: “I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved husband, John H. Rud-dell, $7,000, $4,000 cash, balance in annual instalments from net proceeds from estate.” In the next item she gives, devises and bequeaths to her four children, naming them, and such [371]*371child or children as may thereafter be born to her, “all the balance of my estate, real and personal, and mixed, to be divided in equal proportions, share and share alike, as hereinafter directed, said estate consisting of all the following parcels or tracts of land:” first, a place known as “Joint Stock;” second, a place known as “New Castle;” third, a place known as “Sandy Hook;” fourth, a place originally cut off from Sandy Hook, known as “Ivanhoe;” together wfith “all the stock, provisions, horses and mules, farming implements, gears, wagons, and all the goods and chattels connected with or attached to the aforesaid plantations, and all the buildings and appurtenances thereon, and also balance of stock, monies on hand and due me at the time of my decease.” The will also contains the following provisions: “I also direct, and fully empower and authorize, that my executor shall, at any time previous to the twenty-first birthday of my youngest child, sell or dispose of any portion of my above devised and bequeathed premises (except the plantation known as ‘New Castle,’ and except the place known as ‘Ivanhoe’), and reinvest in such manner as his discretion shall suggest for the best interests of said beloved children;” and proceeds to forbid, expressly, the executor from selling or otherwise disposing of, either “New Castle” or “Ivanhoe.” The will further provides that no division of her estate shall be made until the youngest child attains the age of twenty-one years; but authorizes the executor to deliver to each child, as he or she arrives at the age of twenty-one years, the share or proportion of the estate to which such child may be entitled, if, in the judgment of the executor, the interests of such child shall be thus best subserved.

It appears from the testimony that the executor, upon the death of this wife, took charge of the entire estate and managed it very much as if it had been his own; and to say the least of it, his management was far from conducive to the interests of the persons entitled thereto. He allowed one of the places — “Sandy Hook” — to be sold for taxes, and bid off by his counsel, the late Jeff. Warren, Esq., and on the 1st [372]*372day of November, 1889, he, as executor, made a deed therefor to Mr. Warren, in which, the consideration recited was $7,000; and in a short time thereafter, to wit: on the 14th of December, 1889, Mr. Warren reconveyed the place to the said J. H. Ruddell, individually, by deed, in which the consideration recited was $8,000; but Mr. Ruddell, in his testimony, says that no money passed between Mr. Warren and himself, when these deeds were made. Again, it appears that the said J. H. Ruddell borrowed from the Mutual Rife Insurance Company the sum of $1,500, securing the payment thereof by a mortgage on the “Sandy Hook” place, bearing date 11th of April, 1890, and subsequently borrowed another sum of $1,500 from the same company, securing the payment of the same by another mortgage on “Sandy Hook,” bearing date 4th April, 1891; and when these debts became payable, the said J. H. Ruddell made a deed for the “Sandy Hook” place to the defendant, WT. W. Morris, the secretary of said insurance company, in satisfaction of the debts secured by the said mortgages. It further appears that the said J. H. Ruddell, at some time, when does not appear, except that it was while the plaintiff herein was a minor, had three commissioners to lay off to the defendant, W. G. Ruddell, a portion of the place known as “New Castle,” as “a fair proportion of the remaining estate,” under the will of his mother. These three commissioners, in signing the return, if it can be so called, professed to represent, one of them W. G. Ruddell, another J. H. Ruddell, and the other the plaintiff, Mrs. Allen. About the same time, according to the testimony of John H. Ruddell, he gave to the plaintiff the place known as “Ivanhoe,” together with 150 acres to be cut off from the place called “Sandy Hook;” and this he says gave W. G. Ruddell about 450 acres, the plaintiff about 250 acres, and he reserved for himself about 1,000 acres, which he says was satisfactory to all the parties; but this is denied by the other parties, who testify that they never did agree to accept it as their share of their mother’s estate. Inasmuch, however, as it is admitted that the plain[373]*373tiff was a minor at the time of this so-called partition, and there is no evidence that she ratified it after she attained her majority, this conflict in the testimony becomes unimportant. It does not appear what were the respective ages of the children of the testatrix, except that the testimony shows that the plaintiff was born on the 9th of February, 1870; and she, we presume, was the youngest child, as she is so spoken of in the Circuit decree.

The main object of this action is to have the mortgages above referred to, and the deed from J. H. Ruddell to W. W. Morris, declared void and set aside, and for a partition of the land between the plaintiff and the defendant, W. G. Ruddell, according to their respective rights. It is true, that in the complaint there is a demand that J. H. Ruddell shall account, as executor, and for judgment for any balance that may be found against him on such accounting; but that matter does not appear to have been considered or passed upon by the Circuit Judge, and there is no exception to his failure to do so, and hence it is not before us for consideration. The case was heard by the late Judge Farle upon the testimony as reported by the master, which is set out in the “Case,” and he rendered his decree, in which, without stating the facts, he simply states the questions involved, and renders judgment that the said mortgages and the deed from J. H. Ruddell to W. W. Morris be cancelled and set aside; that the legacy to the defendant, J. H. Rud-dell, is not a charge upon the real estate devised to the children of testatrix; and that plaintiff is entitled to partition, but he adds: “The rights of said cotenants (the plaintiff and defendant, W. G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 198, 51 S.C. 366, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-ruddell-sc-1898.