Anderson v. Silcox

63 S.E. 128, 82 S.C. 109, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 18, 1908
Docket7088
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 128 (Anderson v. Silcox) 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
Anderson v. Silcox, 63 S.E. 128, 82 S.C. 109, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 315 (S.C. 1908).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

E. A. Silcox died July 1, 1897, leaving a will giving his whole estate to his wife, Carrie O. Silcox, and appointed her sole executrix; but she, having died September 30, 1893, the defendants, A. H. Silcox and H. P. Spear, became administrators with the will annexed of said estate, with the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland as surety on the administration bond. For some years previous, and up to his death, F. A. Silcox conducted, at Charleston, S. C., a large business as cotton factor and commission merchant, and left a large estate, consisting of about $20,000; in quick assets, stocks, bonds, etc., notes and accounts in his business nominally about $112,000, appraised as $40,000; and about sixty pieces of real estate, lying in several counties of the State. Carrie O. Silcox died intestate, leaving an estate of about $12,000. The plaintiffs, except John J. Anderson, are children of F. A. Silcox and Carrie O. Silcox, and sole distributees of said estates.

At the death of F. A. Silcox the plaintiffs, Sarah M., F. Augustus, Carrie O., Martha S., and James H. Silcox, were respectively sixteen, fifteen, thirteen, twelve and nine years of age. In July, 1899, the defendant. H. P. Spear, became guardian of the persons and estates of said plaintiffs, with defendant, Fidelity and Deposit Company, as surety on his bond. The plaintiff, Sarah M. Anderson, on September 12, 1903, intermarried with her co-plaintiff, *112 John J. Anderson, and on coming of age demanded an accounting of her said guardian.

This action was commenced March 31, 1903, for an accounting by administrators and guardian. The issues of law and fact raised by the pleadings were referred to Master Sass, on July 10, 1903, and he made a full report thereof, stating the accounts. Exceptions were taken to the master’s report, and the cause was heard by Judge R. C. Watts, who, on December 21, 190V, made decree modifying the master’s report in certain particulars, and referred the case back to the master to restate the accounts and report the balance due by the defendants, in accordance with the conclusions announced in said decree. From this decree the plaintiffs appeal, on numerous exceptions.

1 With reference to the accounts of the administrators: The master rejected, but the Circuit Court allowed to the administrators, a charge of $1,900', as extra compensation paid themselves, above regular commissions, for the management of the estate. For some time after the death of F. A. Silcox, without obtaining permission of the Court, the administrators undertook to carry on the business, with a view to collect the accounts appertaining thereto, and in this business about $10,000' of the money of the estate was loaned, as advances to customers, mainly on cotton deposited. Besides collecting back the $10,000, the administrators collected about $33,000' on the said accounts. For extra services in this connection the administrators were allowed $1,900 by the Circuit Court.

The matter of allowing extra compensation to fiduciaries is regulated by statute. By sec. 2560 of Civid Code executors and administrators are allowed commissions of two and one-half per cent, on moneys received, and two and one-half per cent, on moneys- paid out, in the administration of the estate, and by section 2590 the same commissions are allowed trustees. Section 2561 provides: *113 “Any executors or administrators who shall have had extraordinary trouble in the management of the estates under their care, and shall not be satisfied with the sums hereinbefore mentioned, may be at liberty to bring an action in the Court of Common Pleas for their services, and the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the Court thereupon shall be final and conclusive in such cases: Provided, always, That no verdict shall be given for more than five per centum over and above the sums allowed by this chapter.”

We construe this to mean that in no case shall the extra compensation allowed exceed in amount a sum equal to the commissions allowed.

The statute requires the amount of extra compensation to be ascertained by verdict of jury and judgment thereon. This would require reversal of the action of the Circuit Court, as in Cunningham v. Cunningham, 81 S. C., 506, unless the trial by jury has been waived by both parties and the issue of fact submitted to the Court. The record, at folio 835, contains this agreement of counsel: “It is understood that the ruling of the master disallowing extra compensation to the administrators and guardian is made by the stipulation of counsel waiving the strict legal right of fiduciaries to apply to the law court for extra compensation, and is considered as having been made on the merits of the application.” The parties having thus waived trial of the issue by jury, and having submitted the same to the Court, sitting as a jury, it was competent for Judge Watts to pass upon the question of extra compensation. But his finding thereon is as final and conclusive as would have been the verdict of a jury. As we cannot say that there is no testimony whatever to support the finding, and as it does not exceed in amount the sum of the regular commissions allowed by the Statute, which were over $3,000, we have no power to disturb the conclusion.

*114 2 With respect to the allowance to the administrators of $650, as disbursement to H. W. Silcox, as bookkeeper, both the master and Circuit Court concur in regarding this as a proper charge, and we are not disposed to disallow it.

Expenditure of the corpus: On the theory that the administrators had trenched upon the corpus of the estate to the amount of $945.67, in expenditures for the support of the plaintiffs, the Circuit Court reversed the master’s court and allowed such expenditure as proper under the circumstances. Since, however, both the master and the Circuit Court concur in rejecting the administrators’ charge of $334.14, premiums on bonds, and $2,201.62, commissions on advances, and no exception is taken thereto in behalf of the administrators, it would seem that the items restored to the estate would bring the expenditures within the income.

3 This matter of expenditure of the corpus of the estate is more material, as applied to the account of the guardian. It appears that the guardian expended on the plaintiffs $6,438.12 beyond the income of the estate. This item was disallowed by the master, but allowed by the Circuit Court. Upon this matter Judge Watts said: “Taking into consideration the extent of the testator’s estate, the condition of life and surroundings in which his children had been raised and brought up during his lifetime, the position in life which they were destined to occupy, and which could reasonably have been anticipated, with the cost of living, and their proper position in society, and the benefit to be derived in the maturity of their years from their education and early surroundings, I am satisfied that this guardian not only acted with good judgment and discretion, but that the expenditure by him of the amount of the corpus for each of the children of his testator was a wise and proper use of such corpus.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 128, 82 S.C. 109, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-silcox-sc-1908.