Brabham v. Crosland

1 S.E. 33, 25 S.C. 525, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 12, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 S.E. 33 (Brabham v. Crosland) 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
Brabham v. Crosland, 1 S.E. 33, 25 S.C. 525, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 170 (S.C. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by '

Mr. Justice McIver.

By this action the plaintiff, as administrator of the deceased ward, demands an account of her estate from her guardian, Crosland, and his co-defendants, sureties on the guardianship bonds. Owing to the fact that one of the defences was in the nature of a plea in bar to the accounting demanded, it became necessary for the Circuit Judge first to determine the issue raised by that defence before any accounting could be ordered, and thus having the case before him he proceeded to determine all the issues involved, without any accounting before the master or a referee. The Circuit Judge, therefore, heard all the testimony in open court, as to the various questions presented, and his conclusions as to the facts were based upon the testimony so heard, and not as reported by the master or a referee. The defence in bar of the accounting having been overruled by the Circuit Judge, to which ruling no exception has been taken, no further notice need be taken of it. We will therefore confine our attention to the several matters presented by the exceptions to the Circuit decree.

The guardian in his answer admits that he received a large amount of money, something over twenty thousand dollars, for his 'ward, but that it was all in Confederate money and was invested by him in Confederate bonds, except some small amounts which came to his hands after the close of the “war between the States,” but as the decree requires him to account for all money received since the war, and there is no appeal from that part of the decree, we may dismiss that from our minds and devote our attention to the transactions of the guardian during the war.

It appears that in January, 1863, the defendant, Crosland, was appointed guardian of plaintiff’s intestate and duly qualified as such. The estate of his ward was derived from two sources — the estate of her father, Isaac Bush, and the estate of her grandfather, David Bush. The former died on January 11, 1860, and the defendant, Crosland, with one Edwai'd B. Bush, administered on his estate; the latter died on November 3, 1860, leaving a will, of which the defendant, Crosland, was the sole executor. It is admitted in the “Case” that the personal estate of Isaac Bush was sold by his administrators under an order from the ordinary [533]*533of Barnwell County, and that on January 7, 1863, the share of the ward, amounting to upwards of twelve thousand dollars, was received by the guardian, “the only question being as to whether he did invest this amount in Confederate bonds.” The ward was also entitled to receive from her mother, Mrs. A. M. Bush, the further sum of something over four thousand dollars, which, upon the partition of the real estate of Isaac Bush, Mrs. A. M. Bush was required to pay to the ward for equality of partition; a.nd this sum also the guardian claims to have received on January 7, 1863, but this is denied by the plaintiff, and is one of the points of controversy in the case. As to the estate of David Bush, the defendant, Crosland, claims that he, as executor, settled up that estate, and paid himself, as guardian of Zilphia E., the sum of twenty-three hundred and thirty-five dollars, her share thereof, on January 7, 1863, and that the further sum of twenty-four hundred and ninety dollars, which was directed to be paid to the ward by Mrs. Crosland, the wife of defendant, Crosland, for equality of partición, was also paid to him and by him charged on his account as guardian on January 7, 1863; but this likewise is denied by the plaintiff' and constitutes another point of controversy.

The plaintiff, on the other hand, in addition to the points of controversy already mentioned as to the two amounts to which the ward was entitled on the partition of the two estates of Isaac Bush and David Bush respectively, contends that the guardian did not receive in Confederate money large amounts which he claimed to have received in that currency, but, on the contrary, that he received them in good money ; that certain other amounts were improperly received by him in Confederate money; that there was no sufficient evidence that any part of the ward’s estate was invested in Confederate bonds, and that, on the contrary, a large amount thereof was invested in the purchase of a tract of land, known as the Stallings place, for which the guardian took title in his own name on December 19, 1863.

The Circuit Judge found as a matter of fact that all the money which came into the hands of the guardian during the war was invested in Confederate bonds; that all the transactions of the guardian, in reference to both of the estates above mentioned in [534]*534the latter part of 1862, and thenceforth to the close of the war, were in reference to Confederate money, the only currency then in use in the State, and that the guardian had a right to receive the amounts above stated as coming to the ward in that currency; that as to the amount which the wife of the defendant, Crosland, was directed to pay to the wai'd for equality of partition, he was “by no means certain that there has ever been any payment of this sum by Mrs. Crosland;” but he held that if it had not been paid, it was still a lien upon Mrs. Crosland’s land, for which the guardian and h-is sureties would not be responsible, and if it had been paid, then it was paid and properly paid in Confederate money and the amount invested in Confederate bonds, and therefore the guardian was not now liable for it; and that the testimony satisfied hirn that the guardian did not use the ward’s money in the purchase of the Stallings place.

From so much of the judgment as is stated above the plaintiff appeals upon the following grounds:

“1. Because the evidence shows that the Stallings place was bought by James E. Crosland with the money of his ward, Zil-phia E. Bush, and his honor erred in not so deciding.
“2. Because from the evidence it appears that the defendant, James E. Crosland, collected a large part of the money coming to his ward from the estate of David Bush in good money, and it was error in the presiding judge in not so deciding — among other debts and money collected, especially the note of Bothwell.
“3. Because it appears from the evidence that the defendant, James E. Crosland, collected in good money from the sale of the effects of the estate of David Bush and also from the sale of the effects of the estate of Isaac Bush large sums which were in part the estate of his ward, and his honor erred in not so deciding.
“4. Because there was no satisfactory evidence that the defendant, James E. Crosland, invested his ward’s money in Confederate bonds, and his honor erred in finding that he had done so.
“5. Because there was no evidence that James E. Crosland and his wife had paid to the defendant, and as guardian, the amount coming to his ward for equality of partition in the real estate of David Bush, and it is further submitted that said amount being well secured by a lien upon real estate, and there being no neces[535]*535sity for the guardian to collect the same, the guardian would not be justified in making such collection, especially as the transaction, if allowed, would be in his own interest and against the interest of his ward’s estate, and it is therefore submitted that his honor erred in allowing said guardian credit for said sum as if paid in Confederate money.
“6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 S.E. 33, 25 S.C. 525, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brabham-v-crosland-sc-1886.