Cooner v. May

22 S.C. Eq. 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 22 S.C. Eq. 185 (Cooner v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooner v. May, 22 S.C. Eq. 185 (S.C. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

Curia, per

JohnstoN, Ch.

The interest of the principal question involved in this appeal, is heightened by the consideration that it is, now, presented for the first time, for adjudication in this State.

It has been said, that the English statute of distributions was founded, in a good measure, upon the custom of London, the analogies of which have been freely and beneficially resorted to, as aids, in its construction. In the interpretation of our own statute of 1791, our Courts have hitherto derived much assistance from the adjudications upon the English statute, to which it bears a general analogy, though, occasionally, differing from it in phraseology, and in some of its substantial provisions. But, upon the point now submitted to us, though we may look, with advantage, to the English decisions and authorities, we are free, the matter being res inte-gra, to follow such of them, only, as appear most conform[188]*188able to sound general principles, and to harmonize best with the terms of our own Act; — which, after all, is the true and only subject of construction.

Vide McCaw v. Elewit, 2 McCord’s Ch. Rep. 91. 3 Eden, 180.

The third section of this celebrated statute provides that “nothing herein contained shall be construed to give to any child*** of the intestate, a share of his *** estate, where such child *** shall have been advanced by the intestate, in his lifetime, by portion or portions equal to the share which shall be allotted to the other children. But, in case any child, *** who shall have been so advanced, shall not have received a portion equal to the share which shall be due to the other children, (the value of which portion being estimated at the death of the ancestor, but so that neither the improvement of the real estate, by such child, **'* nor the increase of the personal property, shall be taken into the computation;) then, so much of the estate of the intestate shall be distributed to such child*** as shall make the estate of all the children to be equal.”

The first impression produced by the terms which I have just recited, is, that the advancements contemplated by them, and required to be brought into hotch pot, must possess something of a tangible character, — or the qualities oí property, to such an extent, at least, that their value may be measured by the common standards of value, applicable to the estate left by the intestate, and without resorting to speculation or conjecture. These advancements are spoken of as portions,” and as “recti estate,” and 11 personal property,” susceptible of “ improvement” and “ increase,” which physical additions, apart from the inhibitions of the statute, might have been “ taken into the computation”

It will be found, 1 think, that any other construction would be unsafe, unreasonable, inconvenient, if not impracticable, and contrary to the current of decisions on the English Statutes and the custom of London.

It is a very current fallacy, hardly worth noticing, — that the statute of ’91 was intended to effect what is nowhere avowed on its face, as coming within the design of its framers; to wit, that it was intended to equalise the distributees, by deducting, from the share of each child, the expenses to which his parent may have been put on his account. To say nothing of the endless investigations and intolerable litigation to which this must necessarily have led, nothing could be more repugnant to justice. Should the misfortunes of the sickly or feeble child be aggravated by reducing his portion below that of his more robust brother? or should the infant, incapacitated from contracting with any other person, be charged by its own father to the same extent as if it were able to contract, and as if the expenditures made for it were made upon the legal discretion of the child, and not of the parent 1 “If,” as was said, with a somewhat different view, in Wy[189]*189cherly v. Wycherly, “ I could charge my son with his schooling, his education at the University, and the expenses of veiling, <fec. it would be to say the son might contract debts with his father, at a time when he could contract with no other person.”

McCaw v. Blewit.

Whatever sums may be expended for a child, must, if chargeable at all, be charged either as a debt or as an advancement. As a debt, they cannot be charged, unless the child was, at the time, capable of contracting. Nor can the expenditure, as an expenditure, rank as an advancement.

It is not the sum expended, but the thing which is bought with it, — the thing received by the child, — which constitutes the advancement; nor is the cost of the purchase the measure of the value of the thing advanced. The rule of the statute is that the advancement is to be estimated, not at what it cost, nor even at its value when given by the parent, but according to its value at the párent’s death. No matter whether the negro which a' father bestows on his son, cost him much or little ; it is the value of such a negro at the father’s death which is to be charged to the son. So here, if the education of young May, general or professional, is to be considered an advancement, its value is to be estimated by its intrinsic worth, and not by the money expended in procuring it. Such is the imperative direction of the statute ; and I am at a loss for any rule by which a money valuation can be placed upon the mental proficiency resulting from education, whether of the one kind or the other.

The utter absurdity of making the expenses of education the standard of the value of the education itself, may be^easily demonstrated. Suppose the same sum expended upon two children of manifestly unequal capacity; will each of them have received an equal benefit ? It is equally easy to shew the gross injustice of charging indiscriminately even a professional education as an advancement to the child upon whom it has been bestowed. Suppose a misjudging father, for the gratification of his pride, or from any other motive, compels his son to undergo the studies preparatory to a profession or an art, for which, upon attempting its duties, he proves utterly unfitted; shall he, in addition to the loss of his time, and the indiscribable mortification arising from his position, be saddled with the expense of bringing him into it?

There can be no such principle as that the mental accomplishments with which a child is furnished for the duties of life are to be considered in the light of advancements. And there can be no distinction between a general or a professional education, in this respect. Whatever instruction, whether of the one kind or the other, is given, the object is equally to advance the child in life. And, indeed, when we consider the superiority of moral over merely intellectual training, [190]*190aS ^urn^ure ^01’ duties, and to a successful and happy and acceptable career in life, why shall not the one be regarded an estate as.well as the other? — And then we shall have tne task of instituting a comparison in every case between the moral advantages afforded to the respective children, and of putting a money value upon them. Why should we adopt a principle leading to such consequences, and attended with such difficulties ?

Morris v. Burroughs. 3P. Wms.317. Toller’s Law of Ex’rs. book 3d, ch.6.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.C. Eq. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooner-v-may-scctapp-1849.